* NEWS: Mention new options "set debug dwarf2-read" and
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / doc / gdb.texinfo
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c906108c 1\input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*-
0b302171 2@c Copyright (C) 1988-1996, 1998-2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
c906108c 3@c
5d161b24 4@c %**start of header
c906108c
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5@c makeinfo ignores cmds prev to setfilename, so its arg cannot make use
6@c of @set vars. However, you can override filename with makeinfo -o.
7@setfilename gdb.info
8@c
9@include gdb-cfg.texi
10@c
c906108c 11@settitle Debugging with @value{GDBN}
c906108c
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12@setchapternewpage odd
13@c %**end of header
14
15@iftex
16@c @smallbook
17@c @cropmarks
18@end iftex
19
20@finalout
21@syncodeindex ky cp
89c73ade 22@syncodeindex tp cp
c906108c 23
41afff9a 24@c readline appendices use @vindex, @findex and @ftable,
48e934c6 25@c annotate.texi and gdbmi use @findex.
c906108c 26@syncodeindex vr cp
41afff9a 27@syncodeindex fn cp
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28
29@c !!set GDB manual's edition---not the same as GDB version!
9fe8321b 30@c This is updated by GNU Press.
26829f2b 31@set EDITION Tenth
c906108c 32
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33@c !!set GDB edit command default editor
34@set EDITOR /bin/ex
c906108c 35
6c0e9fb3 36@c THIS MANUAL REQUIRES TEXINFO 4.0 OR LATER.
c906108c 37
c906108c 38@c This is a dir.info fragment to support semi-automated addition of
6d2ebf8b 39@c manuals to an info tree.
03727ca6 40@dircategory Software development
96a2c332 41@direntry
03727ca6 42* Gdb: (gdb). The GNU debugger.
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43@end direntry
44
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45@copying
46Copyright @copyright{} 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996,
9d2897ad 471998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010
6bd110c5 482011, 2012
a67ec3f4 49Free Software Foundation, Inc.
c906108c 50
e9c75b65 51Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
4f5d9f07 52under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or
e9c75b65 53any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with the
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54Invariant Sections being ``Free Software'' and ``Free Software Needs
55Free Documentation'', with the Front-Cover Texts being ``A GNU Manual,''
56and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below.
c906108c 57
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58(a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: ``You are free to copy and modify
59this GNU Manual. Buying copies from GNU Press supports the FSF in
60developing GNU and promoting software freedom.''
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61@end copying
62
63@ifnottex
64This file documents the @sc{gnu} debugger @value{GDBN}.
65
66This is the @value{EDITION} Edition, of @cite{Debugging with
67@value{GDBN}: the @sc{gnu} Source-Level Debugger} for @value{GDBN}
68@ifset VERSION_PACKAGE
69@value{VERSION_PACKAGE}
70@end ifset
71Version @value{GDBVN}.
72
73@insertcopying
74@end ifnottex
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75
76@titlepage
77@title Debugging with @value{GDBN}
78@subtitle The @sc{gnu} Source-Level Debugger
c906108c 79@sp 1
c906108c 80@subtitle @value{EDITION} Edition, for @value{GDBN} version @value{GDBVN}
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81@ifset VERSION_PACKAGE
82@sp 1
83@subtitle @value{VERSION_PACKAGE}
84@end ifset
9e9c5ae7 85@author Richard Stallman, Roland Pesch, Stan Shebs, et al.
c906108c 86@page
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87@tex
88{\parskip=0pt
c16158bc 89\hfill (Send bugs and comments on @value{GDBN} to @value{BUGURL}.)\par
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90\hfill {\it Debugging with @value{GDBN}}\par
91\hfill \TeX{}info \texinfoversion\par
92}
93@end tex
53a5351d 94
c906108c 95@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
c906108c 96Published by the Free Software Foundation @*
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9751 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor,
98Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA@*
26829f2b 99ISBN 978-0-9831592-3-0 @*
e9c75b65 100
a67ec3f4 101@insertcopying
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102@end titlepage
103@page
104
6c0e9fb3 105@ifnottex
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106@node Top, Summary, (dir), (dir)
107
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108@top Debugging with @value{GDBN}
109
110This file describes @value{GDBN}, the @sc{gnu} symbolic debugger.
111
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112This is the @value{EDITION} Edition, for @value{GDBN}
113@ifset VERSION_PACKAGE
114@value{VERSION_PACKAGE}
115@end ifset
116Version @value{GDBVN}.
c906108c 117
6bd110c5 118Copyright (C) 1988-2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
6d2ebf8b 119
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120This edition of the GDB manual is dedicated to the memory of Fred
121Fish. Fred was a long-standing contributor to GDB and to Free
122software in general. We will miss him.
123
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124@menu
125* Summary:: Summary of @value{GDBN}
126* Sample Session:: A sample @value{GDBN} session
127
128* Invocation:: Getting in and out of @value{GDBN}
129* Commands:: @value{GDBN} commands
130* Running:: Running programs under @value{GDBN}
131* Stopping:: Stopping and continuing
bacec72f 132* Reverse Execution:: Running programs backward
a2311334 133* Process Record and Replay:: Recording inferior's execution and replaying it
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134* Stack:: Examining the stack
135* Source:: Examining source files
136* Data:: Examining data
edb3359d 137* Optimized Code:: Debugging optimized code
e2e0bcd1 138* Macros:: Preprocessor Macros
b37052ae 139* Tracepoints:: Debugging remote targets non-intrusively
df0cd8c5 140* Overlays:: Debugging programs that use overlays
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141
142* Languages:: Using @value{GDBN} with different languages
143
144* Symbols:: Examining the symbol table
145* Altering:: Altering execution
146* GDB Files:: @value{GDBN} files
147* Targets:: Specifying a debugging target
6b2f586d 148* Remote Debugging:: Debugging remote programs
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149* Configurations:: Configuration-specific information
150* Controlling GDB:: Controlling @value{GDBN}
d57a3c85 151* Extending GDB:: Extending @value{GDBN}
21c294e6 152* Interpreters:: Command Interpreters
c8f4133a 153* TUI:: @value{GDBN} Text User Interface
6d2ebf8b 154* Emacs:: Using @value{GDBN} under @sc{gnu} Emacs
7162c0ca 155* GDB/MI:: @value{GDBN}'s Machine Interface.
c8f4133a 156* Annotations:: @value{GDBN}'s annotation interface.
4efc6507 157* JIT Interface:: Using the JIT debugging interface.
d1feda86 158* In-Process Agent:: In-Process Agent
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159
160* GDB Bugs:: Reporting bugs in @value{GDBN}
6d2ebf8b 161
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162@ifset SYSTEM_READLINE
163* Command Line Editing: (rluserman). Command Line Editing
164* Using History Interactively: (history). Using History Interactively
165@end ifset
166@ifclear SYSTEM_READLINE
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167* Command Line Editing:: Command Line Editing
168* Using History Interactively:: Using History Interactively
39037522 169@end ifclear
4ceed123 170* In Memoriam:: In Memoriam
0869d01b 171* Formatting Documentation:: How to format and print @value{GDBN} documentation
6d2ebf8b 172* Installing GDB:: Installing GDB
eb12ee30 173* Maintenance Commands:: Maintenance Commands
e0ce93ac 174* Remote Protocol:: GDB Remote Serial Protocol
f418dd93 175* Agent Expressions:: The GDB Agent Expression Mechanism
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176* Target Descriptions:: How targets can describe themselves to
177 @value{GDBN}
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178* Operating System Information:: Getting additional information from
179 the operating system
00bf0b85 180* Trace File Format:: GDB trace file format
90476074 181* Index Section Format:: .gdb_index section format
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182* Copying:: GNU General Public License says
183 how you can copy and share GDB
6826cf00 184* GNU Free Documentation License:: The license for this documentation
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185* Index:: Index
186@end menu
187
6c0e9fb3 188@end ifnottex
c906108c 189
449f3b6c 190@contents
449f3b6c 191
6d2ebf8b 192@node Summary
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193@unnumbered Summary of @value{GDBN}
194
195The purpose of a debugger such as @value{GDBN} is to allow you to see what is
196going on ``inside'' another program while it executes---or what another
197program was doing at the moment it crashed.
198
199@value{GDBN} can do four main kinds of things (plus other things in support of
200these) to help you catch bugs in the act:
201
202@itemize @bullet
203@item
204Start your program, specifying anything that might affect its behavior.
205
206@item
207Make your program stop on specified conditions.
208
209@item
210Examine what has happened, when your program has stopped.
211
212@item
213Change things in your program, so you can experiment with correcting the
214effects of one bug and go on to learn about another.
215@end itemize
216
49efadf5 217You can use @value{GDBN} to debug programs written in C and C@t{++}.
79a6e687 218For more information, see @ref{Supported Languages,,Supported Languages}.
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219For more information, see @ref{C,,C and C++}.
220
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221Support for D is partial. For information on D, see
222@ref{D,,D}.
223
cce74817 224@cindex Modula-2
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225Support for Modula-2 is partial. For information on Modula-2, see
226@ref{Modula-2,,Modula-2}.
c906108c 227
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228Support for OpenCL C is partial. For information on OpenCL C, see
229@ref{OpenCL C,,OpenCL C}.
230
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231@cindex Pascal
232Debugging Pascal programs which use sets, subranges, file variables, or
233nested functions does not currently work. @value{GDBN} does not support
234entering expressions, printing values, or similar features using Pascal
235syntax.
c906108c 236
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237@cindex Fortran
238@value{GDBN} can be used to debug programs written in Fortran, although
53a5351d 239it may be necessary to refer to some variables with a trailing
cce74817 240underscore.
c906108c 241
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242@value{GDBN} can be used to debug programs written in Objective-C,
243using either the Apple/NeXT or the GNU Objective-C runtime.
244
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245@menu
246* Free Software:: Freely redistributable software
984359d2 247* Free Documentation:: Free Software Needs Free Documentation
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248* Contributors:: Contributors to GDB
249@end menu
250
6d2ebf8b 251@node Free Software
79a6e687 252@unnumberedsec Free Software
c906108c 253
5d161b24 254@value{GDBN} is @dfn{free software}, protected by the @sc{gnu}
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255General Public License
256(GPL). The GPL gives you the freedom to copy or adapt a licensed
257program---but every person getting a copy also gets with it the
258freedom to modify that copy (which means that they must get access to
259the source code), and the freedom to distribute further copies.
260Typical software companies use copyrights to limit your freedoms; the
261Free Software Foundation uses the GPL to preserve these freedoms.
262
263Fundamentally, the General Public License is a license which says that
264you have these freedoms and that you cannot take these freedoms away
265from anyone else.
266
984359d2 267@node Free Documentation
2666264b 268@unnumberedsec Free Software Needs Free Documentation
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269
270The biggest deficiency in the free software community today is not in
271the software---it is the lack of good free documentation that we can
272include with the free software. Many of our most important
273programs do not come with free reference manuals and free introductory
274texts. Documentation is an essential part of any software package;
275when an important free software package does not come with a free
276manual and a free tutorial, that is a major gap. We have many such
277gaps today.
278
279Consider Perl, for instance. The tutorial manuals that people
280normally use are non-free. How did this come about? Because the
281authors of those manuals published them with restrictive terms---no
282copying, no modification, source files not available---which exclude
283them from the free software world.
284
285That wasn't the first time this sort of thing happened, and it was far
286from the last. Many times we have heard a GNU user eagerly describe a
287manual that he is writing, his intended contribution to the community,
288only to learn that he had ruined everything by signing a publication
289contract to make it non-free.
290
291Free documentation, like free software, is a matter of freedom, not
292price. The problem with the non-free manual is not that publishers
293charge a price for printed copies---that in itself is fine. (The Free
294Software Foundation sells printed copies of manuals, too.) The
295problem is the restrictions on the use of the manual. Free manuals
296are available in source code form, and give you permission to copy and
297modify. Non-free manuals do not allow this.
298
299The criteria of freedom for a free manual are roughly the same as for
300free software. Redistribution (including the normal kinds of
301commercial redistribution) must be permitted, so that the manual can
302accompany every copy of the program, both on-line and on paper.
303
304Permission for modification of the technical content is crucial too.
305When people modify the software, adding or changing features, if they
306are conscientious they will change the manual too---so they can
307provide accurate and clear documentation for the modified program. A
308manual that leaves you no choice but to write a new manual to document
309a changed version of the program is not really available to our
310community.
311
312Some kinds of limits on the way modification is handled are
313acceptable. For example, requirements to preserve the original
314author's copyright notice, the distribution terms, or the list of
315authors, are ok. It is also no problem to require modified versions
316to include notice that they were modified. Even entire sections that
317may not be deleted or changed are acceptable, as long as they deal
318with nontechnical topics (like this one). These kinds of restrictions
319are acceptable because they don't obstruct the community's normal use
320of the manual.
321
322However, it must be possible to modify all the @emph{technical}
323content of the manual, and then distribute the result in all the usual
324media, through all the usual channels. Otherwise, the restrictions
325obstruct the use of the manual, it is not free, and we need another
326manual to replace it.
327
328Please spread the word about this issue. Our community continues to
329lose manuals to proprietary publishing. If we spread the word that
330free software needs free reference manuals and free tutorials, perhaps
331the next person who wants to contribute by writing documentation will
332realize, before it is too late, that only free manuals contribute to
333the free software community.
334
335If you are writing documentation, please insist on publishing it under
336the GNU Free Documentation License or another free documentation
337license. Remember that this decision requires your approval---you
338don't have to let the publisher decide. Some commercial publishers
339will use a free license if you insist, but they will not propose the
340option; it is up to you to raise the issue and say firmly that this is
341what you want. If the publisher you are dealing with refuses, please
342try other publishers. If you're not sure whether a proposed license
42584a72 343is free, write to @email{licensing@@gnu.org}.
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344
345You can encourage commercial publishers to sell more free, copylefted
346manuals and tutorials by buying them, and particularly by buying
347copies from the publishers that paid for their writing or for major
348improvements. Meanwhile, try to avoid buying non-free documentation
349at all. Check the distribution terms of a manual before you buy it,
350and insist that whoever seeks your business must respect your freedom.
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351Check the history of the book, and try to reward the publishers that
352have paid or pay the authors to work on it.
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353
354The Free Software Foundation maintains a list of free documentation
355published by other publishers, at
356@url{http://www.fsf.org/doc/other-free-books.html}.
357
6d2ebf8b 358@node Contributors
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359@unnumberedsec Contributors to @value{GDBN}
360
361Richard Stallman was the original author of @value{GDBN}, and of many
362other @sc{gnu} programs. Many others have contributed to its
363development. This section attempts to credit major contributors. One
364of the virtues of free software is that everyone is free to contribute
365to it; with regret, we cannot actually acknowledge everyone here. The
366file @file{ChangeLog} in the @value{GDBN} distribution approximates a
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367blow-by-blow account.
368
369Changes much prior to version 2.0 are lost in the mists of time.
370
371@quotation
372@emph{Plea:} Additions to this section are particularly welcome. If you
373or your friends (or enemies, to be evenhanded) have been unfairly
374omitted from this list, we would like to add your names!
375@end quotation
376
377So that they may not regard their many labors as thankless, we
378particularly thank those who shepherded @value{GDBN} through major
379releases:
7ba3cf9c 380Andrew Cagney (releases 6.3, 6.2, 6.1, 6.0, 5.3, 5.2, 5.1 and 5.0);
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381Jim Blandy (release 4.18);
382Jason Molenda (release 4.17);
383Stan Shebs (release 4.14);
384Fred Fish (releases 4.16, 4.15, 4.13, 4.12, 4.11, 4.10, and 4.9);
385Stu Grossman and John Gilmore (releases 4.8, 4.7, 4.6, 4.5, and 4.4);
386John Gilmore (releases 4.3, 4.2, 4.1, 4.0, and 3.9);
387Jim Kingdon (releases 3.5, 3.4, and 3.3);
388and Randy Smith (releases 3.2, 3.1, and 3.0).
389
390Richard Stallman, assisted at various times by Peter TerMaat, Chris
391Hanson, and Richard Mlynarik, handled releases through 2.8.
392
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393Michael Tiemann is the author of most of the @sc{gnu} C@t{++} support
394in @value{GDBN}, with significant additional contributions from Per
395Bothner and Daniel Berlin. James Clark wrote the @sc{gnu} C@t{++}
396demangler. Early work on C@t{++} was by Peter TerMaat (who also did
397much general update work leading to release 3.0).
c906108c 398
b37052ae 399@value{GDBN} uses the BFD subroutine library to examine multiple
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400object-file formats; BFD was a joint project of David V.
401Henkel-Wallace, Rich Pixley, Steve Chamberlain, and John Gilmore.
402
403David Johnson wrote the original COFF support; Pace Willison did
404the original support for encapsulated COFF.
405
0179ffac 406Brent Benson of Harris Computer Systems contributed DWARF 2 support.
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407
408Adam de Boor and Bradley Davis contributed the ISI Optimum V support.
409Per Bothner, Noboyuki Hikichi, and Alessandro Forin contributed MIPS
410support.
411Jean-Daniel Fekete contributed Sun 386i support.
412Chris Hanson improved the HP9000 support.
413Noboyuki Hikichi and Tomoyuki Hasei contributed Sony/News OS 3 support.
414David Johnson contributed Encore Umax support.
415Jyrki Kuoppala contributed Altos 3068 support.
416Jeff Law contributed HP PA and SOM support.
417Keith Packard contributed NS32K support.
418Doug Rabson contributed Acorn Risc Machine support.
419Bob Rusk contributed Harris Nighthawk CX-UX support.
420Chris Smith contributed Convex support (and Fortran debugging).
421Jonathan Stone contributed Pyramid support.
422Michael Tiemann contributed SPARC support.
423Tim Tucker contributed support for the Gould NP1 and Gould Powernode.
424Pace Willison contributed Intel 386 support.
425Jay Vosburgh contributed Symmetry support.
a37295f9 426Marko Mlinar contributed OpenRISC 1000 support.
c906108c 427
1104b9e7 428Andreas Schwab contributed M68K @sc{gnu}/Linux support.
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429
430Rich Schaefer and Peter Schauer helped with support of SunOS shared
431libraries.
432
433Jay Fenlason and Roland McGrath ensured that @value{GDBN} and GAS agree
434about several machine instruction sets.
435
436Patrick Duval, Ted Goldstein, Vikram Koka and Glenn Engel helped develop
437remote debugging. Intel Corporation, Wind River Systems, AMD, and ARM
438contributed remote debugging modules for the i960, VxWorks, A29K UDI,
439and RDI targets, respectively.
440
441Brian Fox is the author of the readline libraries providing
442command-line editing and command history.
443
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444Andrew Beers of SUNY Buffalo wrote the language-switching code, the
445Modula-2 support, and contributed the Languages chapter of this manual.
c906108c 446
5d161b24 447Fred Fish wrote most of the support for Unix System Vr4.
b37052ae 448He also enhanced the command-completion support to cover C@t{++} overloaded
c906108c 449symbols.
c906108c 450
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451Hitachi America (now Renesas America), Ltd. sponsored the support for
452H8/300, H8/500, and Super-H processors.
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453
454NEC sponsored the support for the v850, Vr4xxx, and Vr5xxx processors.
455
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456Mitsubishi (now Renesas) sponsored the support for D10V, D30V, and M32R/D
457processors.
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458
459Toshiba sponsored the support for the TX39 Mips processor.
460
461Matsushita sponsored the support for the MN10200 and MN10300 processors.
462
96a2c332 463Fujitsu sponsored the support for SPARClite and FR30 processors.
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464
465Kung Hsu, Jeff Law, and Rick Sladkey added support for hardware
466watchpoints.
467
468Michael Snyder added support for tracepoints.
469
470Stu Grossman wrote gdbserver.
471
472Jim Kingdon, Peter Schauer, Ian Taylor, and Stu Grossman made
96a2c332 473nearly innumerable bug fixes and cleanups throughout @value{GDBN}.
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474
475The following people at the Hewlett-Packard Company contributed
476support for the PA-RISC 2.0 architecture, HP-UX 10.20, 10.30, and 11.0
b37052ae 477(narrow mode), HP's implementation of kernel threads, HP's aC@t{++}
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478compiler, and the Text User Interface (nee Terminal User Interface):
479Ben Krepp, Richard Title, John Bishop, Susan Macchia, Kathy Mann,
480Satish Pai, India Paul, Steve Rehrauer, and Elena Zannoni. Kim Haase
481provided HP-specific information in this manual.
c906108c 482
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483DJ Delorie ported @value{GDBN} to MS-DOS, for the DJGPP project.
484Robert Hoehne made significant contributions to the DJGPP port.
485
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486Cygnus Solutions has sponsored @value{GDBN} maintenance and much of its
487development since 1991. Cygnus engineers who have worked on @value{GDBN}
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488fulltime include Mark Alexander, Jim Blandy, Per Bothner, Kevin
489Buettner, Edith Epstein, Chris Faylor, Fred Fish, Martin Hunt, Jim
490Ingham, John Gilmore, Stu Grossman, Kung Hsu, Jim Kingdon, John Metzler,
491Fernando Nasser, Geoffrey Noer, Dawn Perchik, Rich Pixley, Zdenek
492Radouch, Keith Seitz, Stan Shebs, David Taylor, and Elena Zannoni. In
493addition, Dave Brolley, Ian Carmichael, Steve Chamberlain, Nick Clifton,
494JT Conklin, Stan Cox, DJ Delorie, Ulrich Drepper, Frank Eigler, Doug
495Evans, Sean Fagan, David Henkel-Wallace, Richard Henderson, Jeff
496Holcomb, Jeff Law, Jim Lemke, Tom Lord, Bob Manson, Michael Meissner,
497Jason Merrill, Catherine Moore, Drew Moseley, Ken Raeburn, Gavin
498Romig-Koch, Rob Savoye, Jamie Smith, Mike Stump, Ian Taylor, Angela
499Thomas, Michael Tiemann, Tom Tromey, Ron Unrau, Jim Wilson, and David
500Zuhn have made contributions both large and small.
c906108c 501
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502Andrew Cagney, Fernando Nasser, and Elena Zannoni, while working for
503Cygnus Solutions, implemented the original @sc{gdb/mi} interface.
504
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505Jim Blandy added support for preprocessor macros, while working for Red
506Hat.
c906108c 507
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508Andrew Cagney designed @value{GDBN}'s architecture vector. Many
509people including Andrew Cagney, Stephane Carrez, Randolph Chung, Nick
510Duffek, Richard Henderson, Mark Kettenis, Grace Sainsbury, Kei
511Sakamoto, Yoshinori Sato, Michael Snyder, Andreas Schwab, Jason
512Thorpe, Corinna Vinschen, Ulrich Weigand, and Elena Zannoni, helped
513with the migration of old architectures to this new framework.
514
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515Andrew Cagney completely re-designed and re-implemented @value{GDBN}'s
516unwinder framework, this consisting of a fresh new design featuring
517frame IDs, independent frame sniffers, and the sentinel frame. Mark
518Kettenis implemented the @sc{dwarf 2} unwinder, Jeff Johnston the
519libunwind unwinder, and Andrew Cagney the dummy, sentinel, tramp, and
db2e3e2e 520trad unwinders. The architecture-specific changes, each involving a
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521complete rewrite of the architecture's frame code, were carried out by
522Jim Blandy, Joel Brobecker, Kevin Buettner, Andrew Cagney, Stephane
523Carrez, Randolph Chung, Orjan Friberg, Richard Henderson, Daniel
524Jacobowitz, Jeff Johnston, Mark Kettenis, Theodore A. Roth, Kei
525Sakamoto, Yoshinori Sato, Michael Snyder, Corinna Vinschen, and Ulrich
526Weigand.
527
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528Christian Zankel, Ross Morley, Bob Wilson, and Maxim Grigoriev from
529Tensilica, Inc.@: contributed support for Xtensa processors. Others
530who have worked on the Xtensa port of @value{GDBN} in the past include
531Steve Tjiang, John Newlin, and Scott Foehner.
532
08be9d71
ME
533Michael Eager and staff of Xilinx, Inc., contributed support for the
534Xilinx MicroBlaze architecture.
535
6d2ebf8b 536@node Sample Session
c906108c
SS
537@chapter A Sample @value{GDBN} Session
538
539You can use this manual at your leisure to read all about @value{GDBN}.
540However, a handful of commands are enough to get started using the
541debugger. This chapter illustrates those commands.
542
543@iftex
544In this sample session, we emphasize user input like this: @b{input},
545to make it easier to pick out from the surrounding output.
546@end iftex
547
548@c FIXME: this example may not be appropriate for some configs, where
549@c FIXME...primary interest is in remote use.
550
551One of the preliminary versions of @sc{gnu} @code{m4} (a generic macro
552processor) exhibits the following bug: sometimes, when we change its
553quote strings from the default, the commands used to capture one macro
554definition within another stop working. In the following short @code{m4}
555session, we define a macro @code{foo} which expands to @code{0000}; we
556then use the @code{m4} built-in @code{defn} to define @code{bar} as the
557same thing. However, when we change the open quote string to
558@code{<QUOTE>} and the close quote string to @code{<UNQUOTE>}, the same
559procedure fails to define a new synonym @code{baz}:
560
561@smallexample
562$ @b{cd gnu/m4}
563$ @b{./m4}
564@b{define(foo,0000)}
565
566@b{foo}
5670000
568@b{define(bar,defn(`foo'))}
569
570@b{bar}
5710000
572@b{changequote(<QUOTE>,<UNQUOTE>)}
573
574@b{define(baz,defn(<QUOTE>foo<UNQUOTE>))}
575@b{baz}
c8aa23ab 576@b{Ctrl-d}
c906108c
SS
577m4: End of input: 0: fatal error: EOF in string
578@end smallexample
579
580@noindent
581Let us use @value{GDBN} to try to see what is going on.
582
c906108c
SS
583@smallexample
584$ @b{@value{GDBP} m4}
585@c FIXME: this falsifies the exact text played out, to permit smallbook
586@c FIXME... format to come out better.
587@value{GDBN} is free software and you are welcome to distribute copies
5d161b24 588 of it under certain conditions; type "show copying" to see
c906108c 589 the conditions.
5d161b24 590There is absolutely no warranty for @value{GDBN}; type "show warranty"
c906108c
SS
591 for details.
592
593@value{GDBN} @value{GDBVN}, Copyright 1999 Free Software Foundation, Inc...
594(@value{GDBP})
595@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
596
597@noindent
598@value{GDBN} reads only enough symbol data to know where to find the
599rest when needed; as a result, the first prompt comes up very quickly.
600We now tell @value{GDBN} to use a narrower display width than usual, so
601that examples fit in this manual.
602
603@smallexample
604(@value{GDBP}) @b{set width 70}
605@end smallexample
606
607@noindent
608We need to see how the @code{m4} built-in @code{changequote} works.
609Having looked at the source, we know the relevant subroutine is
610@code{m4_changequote}, so we set a breakpoint there with the @value{GDBN}
611@code{break} command.
612
613@smallexample
614(@value{GDBP}) @b{break m4_changequote}
615Breakpoint 1 at 0x62f4: file builtin.c, line 879.
616@end smallexample
617
618@noindent
619Using the @code{run} command, we start @code{m4} running under @value{GDBN}
620control; as long as control does not reach the @code{m4_changequote}
621subroutine, the program runs as usual:
622
623@smallexample
624(@value{GDBP}) @b{run}
625Starting program: /work/Editorial/gdb/gnu/m4/m4
626@b{define(foo,0000)}
627
628@b{foo}
6290000
630@end smallexample
631
632@noindent
633To trigger the breakpoint, we call @code{changequote}. @value{GDBN}
634suspends execution of @code{m4}, displaying information about the
635context where it stops.
636
637@smallexample
638@b{changequote(<QUOTE>,<UNQUOTE>)}
639
5d161b24 640Breakpoint 1, m4_changequote (argc=3, argv=0x33c70)
c906108c
SS
641 at builtin.c:879
642879 if (bad_argc(TOKEN_DATA_TEXT(argv[0]),argc,1,3))
643@end smallexample
644
645@noindent
646Now we use the command @code{n} (@code{next}) to advance execution to
647the next line of the current function.
648
649@smallexample
650(@value{GDBP}) @b{n}
651882 set_quotes((argc >= 2) ? TOKEN_DATA_TEXT(argv[1])\
652 : nil,
653@end smallexample
654
655@noindent
656@code{set_quotes} looks like a promising subroutine. We can go into it
657by using the command @code{s} (@code{step}) instead of @code{next}.
658@code{step} goes to the next line to be executed in @emph{any}
659subroutine, so it steps into @code{set_quotes}.
660
661@smallexample
662(@value{GDBP}) @b{s}
663set_quotes (lq=0x34c78 "<QUOTE>", rq=0x34c88 "<UNQUOTE>")
664 at input.c:530
665530 if (lquote != def_lquote)
666@end smallexample
667
668@noindent
669The display that shows the subroutine where @code{m4} is now
670suspended (and its arguments) is called a stack frame display. It
671shows a summary of the stack. We can use the @code{backtrace}
672command (which can also be spelled @code{bt}), to see where we are
673in the stack as a whole: the @code{backtrace} command displays a
674stack frame for each active subroutine.
675
676@smallexample
677(@value{GDBP}) @b{bt}
678#0 set_quotes (lq=0x34c78 "<QUOTE>", rq=0x34c88 "<UNQUOTE>")
679 at input.c:530
5d161b24 680#1 0x6344 in m4_changequote (argc=3, argv=0x33c70)
c906108c
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681 at builtin.c:882
682#2 0x8174 in expand_macro (sym=0x33320) at macro.c:242
683#3 0x7a88 in expand_token (obs=0x0, t=209696, td=0xf7fffa30)
684 at macro.c:71
685#4 0x79dc in expand_input () at macro.c:40
686#5 0x2930 in main (argc=0, argv=0xf7fffb20) at m4.c:195
687@end smallexample
688
689@noindent
690We step through a few more lines to see what happens. The first two
691times, we can use @samp{s}; the next two times we use @code{n} to avoid
692falling into the @code{xstrdup} subroutine.
693
694@smallexample
695(@value{GDBP}) @b{s}
6960x3b5c 532 if (rquote != def_rquote)
697(@value{GDBP}) @b{s}
6980x3b80 535 lquote = (lq == nil || *lq == '\0') ? \
699def_lquote : xstrdup(lq);
700(@value{GDBP}) @b{n}
701536 rquote = (rq == nil || *rq == '\0') ? def_rquote\
702 : xstrdup(rq);
703(@value{GDBP}) @b{n}
704538 len_lquote = strlen(rquote);
705@end smallexample
706
707@noindent
708The last line displayed looks a little odd; we can examine the variables
709@code{lquote} and @code{rquote} to see if they are in fact the new left
710and right quotes we specified. We use the command @code{p}
711(@code{print}) to see their values.
712
713@smallexample
714(@value{GDBP}) @b{p lquote}
715$1 = 0x35d40 "<QUOTE>"
716(@value{GDBP}) @b{p rquote}
717$2 = 0x35d50 "<UNQUOTE>"
718@end smallexample
719
720@noindent
721@code{lquote} and @code{rquote} are indeed the new left and right quotes.
722To look at some context, we can display ten lines of source
723surrounding the current line with the @code{l} (@code{list}) command.
724
725@smallexample
726(@value{GDBP}) @b{l}
727533 xfree(rquote);
728534
729535 lquote = (lq == nil || *lq == '\0') ? def_lquote\
730 : xstrdup (lq);
731536 rquote = (rq == nil || *rq == '\0') ? def_rquote\
732 : xstrdup (rq);
733537
734538 len_lquote = strlen(rquote);
735539 len_rquote = strlen(lquote);
736540 @}
737541
738542 void
739@end smallexample
740
741@noindent
742Let us step past the two lines that set @code{len_lquote} and
743@code{len_rquote}, and then examine the values of those variables.
744
745@smallexample
746(@value{GDBP}) @b{n}
747539 len_rquote = strlen(lquote);
748(@value{GDBP}) @b{n}
749540 @}
750(@value{GDBP}) @b{p len_lquote}
751$3 = 9
752(@value{GDBP}) @b{p len_rquote}
753$4 = 7
754@end smallexample
755
756@noindent
757That certainly looks wrong, assuming @code{len_lquote} and
758@code{len_rquote} are meant to be the lengths of @code{lquote} and
759@code{rquote} respectively. We can set them to better values using
760the @code{p} command, since it can print the value of
761any expression---and that expression can include subroutine calls and
762assignments.
763
764@smallexample
765(@value{GDBP}) @b{p len_lquote=strlen(lquote)}
766$5 = 7
767(@value{GDBP}) @b{p len_rquote=strlen(rquote)}
768$6 = 9
769@end smallexample
770
771@noindent
772Is that enough to fix the problem of using the new quotes with the
773@code{m4} built-in @code{defn}? We can allow @code{m4} to continue
774executing with the @code{c} (@code{continue}) command, and then try the
775example that caused trouble initially:
776
777@smallexample
778(@value{GDBP}) @b{c}
779Continuing.
780
781@b{define(baz,defn(<QUOTE>foo<UNQUOTE>))}
782
783baz
7840000
785@end smallexample
786
787@noindent
788Success! The new quotes now work just as well as the default ones. The
789problem seems to have been just the two typos defining the wrong
790lengths. We allow @code{m4} exit by giving it an EOF as input:
791
792@smallexample
c8aa23ab 793@b{Ctrl-d}
c906108c
SS
794Program exited normally.
795@end smallexample
796
797@noindent
798The message @samp{Program exited normally.} is from @value{GDBN}; it
799indicates @code{m4} has finished executing. We can end our @value{GDBN}
800session with the @value{GDBN} @code{quit} command.
801
802@smallexample
803(@value{GDBP}) @b{quit}
804@end smallexample
c906108c 805
6d2ebf8b 806@node Invocation
c906108c
SS
807@chapter Getting In and Out of @value{GDBN}
808
809This chapter discusses how to start @value{GDBN}, and how to get out of it.
5d161b24 810The essentials are:
c906108c 811@itemize @bullet
5d161b24 812@item
53a5351d 813type @samp{@value{GDBP}} to start @value{GDBN}.
5d161b24 814@item
c8aa23ab 815type @kbd{quit} or @kbd{Ctrl-d} to exit.
c906108c
SS
816@end itemize
817
818@menu
819* Invoking GDB:: How to start @value{GDBN}
820* Quitting GDB:: How to quit @value{GDBN}
821* Shell Commands:: How to use shell commands inside @value{GDBN}
79a6e687 822* Logging Output:: How to log @value{GDBN}'s output to a file
c906108c
SS
823@end menu
824
6d2ebf8b 825@node Invoking GDB
c906108c
SS
826@section Invoking @value{GDBN}
827
c906108c
SS
828Invoke @value{GDBN} by running the program @code{@value{GDBP}}. Once started,
829@value{GDBN} reads commands from the terminal until you tell it to exit.
830
831You can also run @code{@value{GDBP}} with a variety of arguments and options,
832to specify more of your debugging environment at the outset.
833
c906108c
SS
834The command-line options described here are designed
835to cover a variety of situations; in some environments, some of these
5d161b24 836options may effectively be unavailable.
c906108c
SS
837
838The most usual way to start @value{GDBN} is with one argument,
839specifying an executable program:
840
474c8240 841@smallexample
c906108c 842@value{GDBP} @var{program}
474c8240 843@end smallexample
c906108c 844
c906108c
SS
845@noindent
846You can also start with both an executable program and a core file
847specified:
848
474c8240 849@smallexample
c906108c 850@value{GDBP} @var{program} @var{core}
474c8240 851@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
852
853You can, instead, specify a process ID as a second argument, if you want
854to debug a running process:
855
474c8240 856@smallexample
c906108c 857@value{GDBP} @var{program} 1234
474c8240 858@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
859
860@noindent
861would attach @value{GDBN} to process @code{1234} (unless you also have a file
862named @file{1234}; @value{GDBN} does check for a core file first).
863
c906108c 864Taking advantage of the second command-line argument requires a fairly
2df3850c
JM
865complete operating system; when you use @value{GDBN} as a remote
866debugger attached to a bare board, there may not be any notion of
867``process'', and there is often no way to get a core dump. @value{GDBN}
868will warn you if it is unable to attach or to read core dumps.
c906108c 869
aa26fa3a
TT
870You can optionally have @code{@value{GDBP}} pass any arguments after the
871executable file to the inferior using @code{--args}. This option stops
872option processing.
474c8240 873@smallexample
3f94c067 874@value{GDBP} --args gcc -O2 -c foo.c
474c8240 875@end smallexample
aa26fa3a
TT
876This will cause @code{@value{GDBP}} to debug @code{gcc}, and to set
877@code{gcc}'s command-line arguments (@pxref{Arguments}) to @samp{-O2 -c foo.c}.
878
96a2c332 879You can run @code{@value{GDBP}} without printing the front material, which describes
c906108c
SS
880@value{GDBN}'s non-warranty, by specifying @code{-silent}:
881
882@smallexample
883@value{GDBP} -silent
884@end smallexample
885
886@noindent
887You can further control how @value{GDBN} starts up by using command-line
888options. @value{GDBN} itself can remind you of the options available.
889
890@noindent
891Type
892
474c8240 893@smallexample
c906108c 894@value{GDBP} -help
474c8240 895@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
896
897@noindent
898to display all available options and briefly describe their use
899(@samp{@value{GDBP} -h} is a shorter equivalent).
900
901All options and command line arguments you give are processed
902in sequential order. The order makes a difference when the
903@samp{-x} option is used.
904
905
906@menu
c906108c
SS
907* File Options:: Choosing files
908* Mode Options:: Choosing modes
6fc08d32 909* Startup:: What @value{GDBN} does during startup
c906108c
SS
910@end menu
911
6d2ebf8b 912@node File Options
79a6e687 913@subsection Choosing Files
c906108c 914
2df3850c 915When @value{GDBN} starts, it reads any arguments other than options as
c906108c
SS
916specifying an executable file and core file (or process ID). This is
917the same as if the arguments were specified by the @samp{-se} and
d52fb0e9 918@samp{-c} (or @samp{-p}) options respectively. (@value{GDBN} reads the
19837790
MS
919first argument that does not have an associated option flag as
920equivalent to the @samp{-se} option followed by that argument; and the
921second argument that does not have an associated option flag, if any, as
922equivalent to the @samp{-c}/@samp{-p} option followed by that argument.)
923If the second argument begins with a decimal digit, @value{GDBN} will
924first attempt to attach to it as a process, and if that fails, attempt
925to open it as a corefile. If you have a corefile whose name begins with
b383017d 926a digit, you can prevent @value{GDBN} from treating it as a pid by
c1468174 927prefixing it with @file{./}, e.g.@: @file{./12345}.
7a292a7a
SS
928
929If @value{GDBN} has not been configured to included core file support,
930such as for most embedded targets, then it will complain about a second
931argument and ignore it.
c906108c
SS
932
933Many options have both long and short forms; both are shown in the
934following list. @value{GDBN} also recognizes the long forms if you truncate
935them, so long as enough of the option is present to be unambiguous.
936(If you prefer, you can flag option arguments with @samp{--} rather
937than @samp{-}, though we illustrate the more usual convention.)
938
d700128c
EZ
939@c NOTE: the @cindex entries here use double dashes ON PURPOSE. This
940@c way, both those who look for -foo and --foo in the index, will find
941@c it.
942
c906108c
SS
943@table @code
944@item -symbols @var{file}
945@itemx -s @var{file}
d700128c
EZ
946@cindex @code{--symbols}
947@cindex @code{-s}
c906108c
SS
948Read symbol table from file @var{file}.
949
950@item -exec @var{file}
951@itemx -e @var{file}
d700128c
EZ
952@cindex @code{--exec}
953@cindex @code{-e}
7a292a7a
SS
954Use file @var{file} as the executable file to execute when appropriate,
955and for examining pure data in conjunction with a core dump.
c906108c
SS
956
957@item -se @var{file}
d700128c 958@cindex @code{--se}
c906108c
SS
959Read symbol table from file @var{file} and use it as the executable
960file.
961
c906108c
SS
962@item -core @var{file}
963@itemx -c @var{file}
d700128c
EZ
964@cindex @code{--core}
965@cindex @code{-c}
b383017d 966Use file @var{file} as a core dump to examine.
c906108c 967
19837790
MS
968@item -pid @var{number}
969@itemx -p @var{number}
970@cindex @code{--pid}
971@cindex @code{-p}
972Connect to process ID @var{number}, as with the @code{attach} command.
c906108c
SS
973
974@item -command @var{file}
975@itemx -x @var{file}
d700128c
EZ
976@cindex @code{--command}
977@cindex @code{-x}
95433b34
JB
978Execute commands from file @var{file}. The contents of this file is
979evaluated exactly as the @code{source} command would.
8150ff9c 980@xref{Command Files,, Command files}.
c906108c 981
8a5a3c82
AS
982@item -eval-command @var{command}
983@itemx -ex @var{command}
984@cindex @code{--eval-command}
985@cindex @code{-ex}
986Execute a single @value{GDBN} command.
987
988This option may be used multiple times to call multiple commands. It may
989also be interleaved with @samp{-command} as required.
990
991@smallexample
992@value{GDBP} -ex 'target sim' -ex 'load' \
993 -x setbreakpoints -ex 'run' a.out
994@end smallexample
995
8320cc4f
JK
996@item -init-command @var{file}
997@itemx -ix @var{file}
998@cindex @code{--init-command}
999@cindex @code{-ix}
1000Execute commands from file @var{file} before loading gdbinit files or the
1001inferior.
1002@xref{Startup}.
1003
1004@item -init-eval-command @var{command}
1005@itemx -iex @var{command}
1006@cindex @code{--init-eval-command}
1007@cindex @code{-iex}
1008Execute a single @value{GDBN} command before loading gdbinit files or the
1009inferior.
1010@xref{Startup}.
1011
c906108c
SS
1012@item -directory @var{directory}
1013@itemx -d @var{directory}
d700128c
EZ
1014@cindex @code{--directory}
1015@cindex @code{-d}
4b505b12 1016Add @var{directory} to the path to search for source and script files.
c906108c 1017
c906108c
SS
1018@item -r
1019@itemx -readnow
d700128c
EZ
1020@cindex @code{--readnow}
1021@cindex @code{-r}
c906108c
SS
1022Read each symbol file's entire symbol table immediately, rather than
1023the default, which is to read it incrementally as it is needed.
1024This makes startup slower, but makes future operations faster.
53a5351d 1025
c906108c
SS
1026@end table
1027
6d2ebf8b 1028@node Mode Options
79a6e687 1029@subsection Choosing Modes
c906108c
SS
1030
1031You can run @value{GDBN} in various alternative modes---for example, in
1032batch mode or quiet mode.
1033
1034@table @code
bf88dd68 1035@anchor{-nx}
c906108c
SS
1036@item -nx
1037@itemx -n
d700128c
EZ
1038@cindex @code{--nx}
1039@cindex @code{-n}
96565e91 1040Do not execute commands found in any initialization files. Normally,
2df3850c
JM
1041@value{GDBN} executes the commands in these files after all the command
1042options and arguments have been processed. @xref{Command Files,,Command
79a6e687 1043Files}.
c906108c
SS
1044
1045@item -quiet
d700128c 1046@itemx -silent
c906108c 1047@itemx -q
d700128c
EZ
1048@cindex @code{--quiet}
1049@cindex @code{--silent}
1050@cindex @code{-q}
c906108c
SS
1051``Quiet''. Do not print the introductory and copyright messages. These
1052messages are also suppressed in batch mode.
1053
1054@item -batch
d700128c 1055@cindex @code{--batch}
c906108c
SS
1056Run in batch mode. Exit with status @code{0} after processing all the
1057command files specified with @samp{-x} (and all commands from
1058initialization files, if not inhibited with @samp{-n}). Exit with
1059nonzero status if an error occurs in executing the @value{GDBN} commands
5da1313b
JK
1060in the command files. Batch mode also disables pagination, sets unlimited
1061terminal width and height @pxref{Screen Size}, and acts as if @kbd{set confirm
1062off} were in effect (@pxref{Messages/Warnings}).
c906108c 1063
2df3850c
JM
1064Batch mode may be useful for running @value{GDBN} as a filter, for
1065example to download and run a program on another computer; in order to
1066make this more useful, the message
c906108c 1067
474c8240 1068@smallexample
c906108c 1069Program exited normally.
474c8240 1070@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
1071
1072@noindent
2df3850c
JM
1073(which is ordinarily issued whenever a program running under
1074@value{GDBN} control terminates) is not issued when running in batch
1075mode.
1076
1a088d06
AS
1077@item -batch-silent
1078@cindex @code{--batch-silent}
1079Run in batch mode exactly like @samp{-batch}, but totally silently. All
1080@value{GDBN} output to @code{stdout} is prevented (@code{stderr} is
1081unaffected). This is much quieter than @samp{-silent} and would be useless
1082for an interactive session.
1083
1084This is particularly useful when using targets that give @samp{Loading section}
1085messages, for example.
1086
1087Note that targets that give their output via @value{GDBN}, as opposed to
1088writing directly to @code{stdout}, will also be made silent.
1089
4b0ad762
AS
1090@item -return-child-result
1091@cindex @code{--return-child-result}
1092The return code from @value{GDBN} will be the return code from the child
1093process (the process being debugged), with the following exceptions:
1094
1095@itemize @bullet
1096@item
1097@value{GDBN} exits abnormally. E.g., due to an incorrect argument or an
1098internal error. In this case the exit code is the same as it would have been
1099without @samp{-return-child-result}.
1100@item
1101The user quits with an explicit value. E.g., @samp{quit 1}.
1102@item
1103The child process never runs, or is not allowed to terminate, in which case
1104the exit code will be -1.
1105@end itemize
1106
1107This option is useful in conjunction with @samp{-batch} or @samp{-batch-silent},
1108when @value{GDBN} is being used as a remote program loader or simulator
1109interface.
1110
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JM
1111@item -nowindows
1112@itemx -nw
d700128c
EZ
1113@cindex @code{--nowindows}
1114@cindex @code{-nw}
2df3850c 1115``No windows''. If @value{GDBN} comes with a graphical user interface
96a2c332 1116(GUI) built in, then this option tells @value{GDBN} to only use the command-line
2df3850c
JM
1117interface. If no GUI is available, this option has no effect.
1118
1119@item -windows
1120@itemx -w
d700128c
EZ
1121@cindex @code{--windows}
1122@cindex @code{-w}
2df3850c
JM
1123If @value{GDBN} includes a GUI, then this option requires it to be
1124used if possible.
c906108c
SS
1125
1126@item -cd @var{directory}
d700128c 1127@cindex @code{--cd}
c906108c
SS
1128Run @value{GDBN} using @var{directory} as its working directory,
1129instead of the current directory.
1130
aae1c79a
DE
1131@item -data-directory @var{directory}
1132@cindex @code{--data-directory}
1133Run @value{GDBN} using @var{directory} as its data directory.
1134The data directory is where @value{GDBN} searches for its
1135auxiliary files. @xref{Data Files}.
1136
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SS
1137@item -fullname
1138@itemx -f
d700128c
EZ
1139@cindex @code{--fullname}
1140@cindex @code{-f}
7a292a7a
SS
1141@sc{gnu} Emacs sets this option when it runs @value{GDBN} as a
1142subprocess. It tells @value{GDBN} to output the full file name and line
1143number in a standard, recognizable fashion each time a stack frame is
1144displayed (which includes each time your program stops). This
1145recognizable format looks like two @samp{\032} characters, followed by
1146the file name, line number and character position separated by colons,
1147and a newline. The Emacs-to-@value{GDBN} interface program uses the two
1148@samp{\032} characters as a signal to display the source code for the
1149frame.
c906108c 1150
d700128c
EZ
1151@item -epoch
1152@cindex @code{--epoch}
1153The Epoch Emacs-@value{GDBN} interface sets this option when it runs
1154@value{GDBN} as a subprocess. It tells @value{GDBN} to modify its print
1155routines so as to allow Epoch to display values of expressions in a
1156separate window.
1157
1158@item -annotate @var{level}
1159@cindex @code{--annotate}
1160This option sets the @dfn{annotation level} inside @value{GDBN}. Its
1161effect is identical to using @samp{set annotate @var{level}}
086432e2
AC
1162(@pxref{Annotations}). The annotation @var{level} controls how much
1163information @value{GDBN} prints together with its prompt, values of
1164expressions, source lines, and other types of output. Level 0 is the
1165normal, level 1 is for use when @value{GDBN} is run as a subprocess of
1166@sc{gnu} Emacs, level 3 is the maximum annotation suitable for programs
1167that control @value{GDBN}, and level 2 has been deprecated.
1168
265eeb58 1169The annotation mechanism has largely been superseded by @sc{gdb/mi}
086432e2 1170(@pxref{GDB/MI}).
d700128c 1171
aa26fa3a
TT
1172@item --args
1173@cindex @code{--args}
1174Change interpretation of command line so that arguments following the
1175executable file are passed as command line arguments to the inferior.
1176This option stops option processing.
1177
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JM
1178@item -baud @var{bps}
1179@itemx -b @var{bps}
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EZ
1180@cindex @code{--baud}
1181@cindex @code{-b}
c906108c
SS
1182Set the line speed (baud rate or bits per second) of any serial
1183interface used by @value{GDBN} for remote debugging.
c906108c 1184
f47b1503
AS
1185@item -l @var{timeout}
1186@cindex @code{-l}
1187Set the timeout (in seconds) of any communication used by @value{GDBN}
1188for remote debugging.
1189
c906108c 1190@item -tty @var{device}
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EZ
1191@itemx -t @var{device}
1192@cindex @code{--tty}
1193@cindex @code{-t}
c906108c
SS
1194Run using @var{device} for your program's standard input and output.
1195@c FIXME: kingdon thinks there is more to -tty. Investigate.
c906108c 1196
53a5351d 1197@c resolve the situation of these eventually
c4555f82
SC
1198@item -tui
1199@cindex @code{--tui}
d0d5df6f
AC
1200Activate the @dfn{Text User Interface} when starting. The Text User
1201Interface manages several text windows on the terminal, showing
1202source, assembly, registers and @value{GDBN} command outputs
217bff3e
JK
1203(@pxref{TUI, ,@value{GDBN} Text User Interface}). Do not use this
1204option if you run @value{GDBN} from Emacs (@pxref{Emacs, ,
1205Using @value{GDBN} under @sc{gnu} Emacs}).
53a5351d
JM
1206
1207@c @item -xdb
d700128c 1208@c @cindex @code{--xdb}
53a5351d
JM
1209@c Run in XDB compatibility mode, allowing the use of certain XDB commands.
1210@c For information, see the file @file{xdb_trans.html}, which is usually
1211@c installed in the directory @code{/opt/langtools/wdb/doc} on HP-UX
1212@c systems.
1213
d700128c
EZ
1214@item -interpreter @var{interp}
1215@cindex @code{--interpreter}
1216Use the interpreter @var{interp} for interface with the controlling
1217program or device. This option is meant to be set by programs which
94bbb2c0 1218communicate with @value{GDBN} using it as a back end.
21c294e6 1219@xref{Interpreters, , Command Interpreters}.
94bbb2c0 1220
da0f9dcd 1221@samp{--interpreter=mi} (or @samp{--interpreter=mi2}) causes
2fcf52f0 1222@value{GDBN} to use the @dfn{@sc{gdb/mi} interface} (@pxref{GDB/MI, ,
6b5e8c01 1223The @sc{gdb/mi} Interface}) included since @value{GDBN} version 6.0. The
6c74ac8b
AC
1224previous @sc{gdb/mi} interface, included in @value{GDBN} version 5.3 and
1225selected with @samp{--interpreter=mi1}, is deprecated. Earlier
1226@sc{gdb/mi} interfaces are no longer supported.
d700128c
EZ
1227
1228@item -write
1229@cindex @code{--write}
1230Open the executable and core files for both reading and writing. This
1231is equivalent to the @samp{set write on} command inside @value{GDBN}
1232(@pxref{Patching}).
1233
1234@item -statistics
1235@cindex @code{--statistics}
1236This option causes @value{GDBN} to print statistics about time and
1237memory usage after it completes each command and returns to the prompt.
1238
1239@item -version
1240@cindex @code{--version}
1241This option causes @value{GDBN} to print its version number and
1242no-warranty blurb, and exit.
1243
481860b3
GB
1244@item -use-deprecated-index-sections
1245@cindex @code{--use-deprecated-index-sections}
1246This option causes @value{GDBN} to read and use deprecated
1247@samp{.gdb_index} sections from symbol files. This can speed up
1248startup, but may result in some functionality being lost.
1249@xref{Index Section Format}.
1250
c906108c
SS
1251@end table
1252
6fc08d32 1253@node Startup
79a6e687 1254@subsection What @value{GDBN} Does During Startup
6fc08d32
EZ
1255@cindex @value{GDBN} startup
1256
1257Here's the description of what @value{GDBN} does during session startup:
1258
1259@enumerate
1260@item
1261Sets up the command interpreter as specified by the command line
1262(@pxref{Mode Options, interpreter}).
1263
bf88dd68 1264@anchor{Option -init-eval-command}
8320cc4f
JK
1265@item
1266Executes commands and command files specified by the @samp{-iex} and
1267@samp{-ix} options in their specified order. Usually you should use the
1268@samp{-ex} and @samp{-x} options instead, but this way you can apply
1269settings before @value{GDBN} init files get executed and before inferior
1270gets loaded.
1271
6fc08d32
EZ
1272@item
1273@cindex init file
098b41a6
JG
1274Reads the system-wide @dfn{init file} (if @option{--with-system-gdbinit} was
1275used when building @value{GDBN}; @pxref{System-wide configuration,
1276 ,System-wide configuration and settings}) and executes all the commands in
1277that file.
1278
bf88dd68 1279@anchor{Home Directory Init File}
098b41a6
JG
1280@item
1281Reads the init file (if any) in your home directory@footnote{On
6fc08d32
EZ
1282DOS/Windows systems, the home directory is the one pointed to by the
1283@code{HOME} environment variable.} and executes all the commands in
1284that file.
1285
1286@item
1287Processes command line options and operands.
1288
bf88dd68 1289@anchor{Init File in the Current Directory during Startup}
6fc08d32
EZ
1290@item
1291Reads and executes the commands from init file (if any) in the current
bf88dd68
JK
1292working directory as long as @samp{set auto-load local-gdbinit} is set to
1293@samp{on} (@pxref{Init File in the Current Directory}).
1294This is only done if the current directory is
119b882a
EZ
1295different from your home directory. Thus, you can have more than one
1296init file, one generic in your home directory, and another, specific
1297to the program you are debugging, in the directory where you invoke
6fc08d32
EZ
1298@value{GDBN}.
1299
a86caf66
DE
1300@item
1301If the command line specified a program to debug, or a process to
1302attach to, or a core file, @value{GDBN} loads any auto-loaded
1303scripts provided for the program or for its loaded shared libraries.
1304@xref{Auto-loading}.
1305
1306If you wish to disable the auto-loading during startup,
1307you must do something like the following:
1308
1309@smallexample
bf88dd68 1310$ gdb -iex "set auto-load python-scripts off" myprogram
a86caf66
DE
1311@end smallexample
1312
8320cc4f
JK
1313Option @samp{-ex} does not work because the auto-loading is then turned
1314off too late.
a86caf66 1315
6fc08d32 1316@item
6fe37d23
JK
1317Executes commands and command files specified by the @samp{-ex} and
1318@samp{-x} options in their specified order. @xref{Command Files}, for
1319more details about @value{GDBN} command files.
6fc08d32
EZ
1320
1321@item
1322Reads the command history recorded in the @dfn{history file}.
d620b259 1323@xref{Command History}, for more details about the command history and the
6fc08d32
EZ
1324files where @value{GDBN} records it.
1325@end enumerate
1326
1327Init files use the same syntax as @dfn{command files} (@pxref{Command
1328Files}) and are processed by @value{GDBN} in the same way. The init
1329file in your home directory can set options (such as @samp{set
1330complaints}) that affect subsequent processing of command line options
1331and operands. Init files are not executed if you use the @samp{-nx}
79a6e687 1332option (@pxref{Mode Options, ,Choosing Modes}).
6fc08d32 1333
098b41a6
JG
1334To display the list of init files loaded by gdb at startup, you
1335can use @kbd{gdb --help}.
1336
6fc08d32
EZ
1337@cindex init file name
1338@cindex @file{.gdbinit}
119b882a 1339@cindex @file{gdb.ini}
8807d78b 1340The @value{GDBN} init files are normally called @file{.gdbinit}.
119b882a
EZ
1341The DJGPP port of @value{GDBN} uses the name @file{gdb.ini}, due to
1342the limitations of file names imposed by DOS filesystems. The Windows
1343ports of @value{GDBN} use the standard name, but if they find a
1344@file{gdb.ini} file, they warn you about that and suggest to rename
1345the file to the standard name.
1346
6fc08d32 1347
6d2ebf8b 1348@node Quitting GDB
c906108c
SS
1349@section Quitting @value{GDBN}
1350@cindex exiting @value{GDBN}
1351@cindex leaving @value{GDBN}
1352
1353@table @code
1354@kindex quit @r{[}@var{expression}@r{]}
41afff9a 1355@kindex q @r{(@code{quit})}
96a2c332
SS
1356@item quit @r{[}@var{expression}@r{]}
1357@itemx q
1358To exit @value{GDBN}, use the @code{quit} command (abbreviated
c8aa23ab 1359@code{q}), or type an end-of-file character (usually @kbd{Ctrl-d}). If you
96a2c332
SS
1360do not supply @var{expression}, @value{GDBN} will terminate normally;
1361otherwise it will terminate using the result of @var{expression} as the
1362error code.
c906108c
SS
1363@end table
1364
1365@cindex interrupt
c8aa23ab 1366An interrupt (often @kbd{Ctrl-c}) does not exit from @value{GDBN}, but rather
c906108c
SS
1367terminates the action of any @value{GDBN} command that is in progress and
1368returns to @value{GDBN} command level. It is safe to type the interrupt
1369character at any time because @value{GDBN} does not allow it to take effect
1370until a time when it is safe.
1371
c906108c
SS
1372If you have been using @value{GDBN} to control an attached process or
1373device, you can release it with the @code{detach} command
79a6e687 1374(@pxref{Attach, ,Debugging an Already-running Process}).
c906108c 1375
6d2ebf8b 1376@node Shell Commands
79a6e687 1377@section Shell Commands
c906108c
SS
1378
1379If you need to execute occasional shell commands during your
1380debugging session, there is no need to leave or suspend @value{GDBN}; you can
1381just use the @code{shell} command.
1382
1383@table @code
1384@kindex shell
ed59ded5 1385@kindex !
c906108c 1386@cindex shell escape
ed59ded5
DE
1387@item shell @var{command-string}
1388@itemx !@var{command-string}
1389Invoke a standard shell to execute @var{command-string}.
1390Note that no space is needed between @code{!} and @var{command-string}.
c906108c 1391If it exists, the environment variable @code{SHELL} determines which
d4f3574e
SS
1392shell to run. Otherwise @value{GDBN} uses the default shell
1393(@file{/bin/sh} on Unix systems, @file{COMMAND.COM} on MS-DOS, etc.).
c906108c
SS
1394@end table
1395
1396The utility @code{make} is often needed in development environments.
1397You do not have to use the @code{shell} command for this purpose in
1398@value{GDBN}:
1399
1400@table @code
1401@kindex make
1402@cindex calling make
1403@item make @var{make-args}
1404Execute the @code{make} program with the specified
1405arguments. This is equivalent to @samp{shell make @var{make-args}}.
1406@end table
1407
79a6e687
BW
1408@node Logging Output
1409@section Logging Output
0fac0b41 1410@cindex logging @value{GDBN} output
9c16f35a 1411@cindex save @value{GDBN} output to a file
0fac0b41
DJ
1412
1413You may want to save the output of @value{GDBN} commands to a file.
1414There are several commands to control @value{GDBN}'s logging.
1415
1416@table @code
1417@kindex set logging
1418@item set logging on
1419Enable logging.
1420@item set logging off
1421Disable logging.
9c16f35a 1422@cindex logging file name
0fac0b41
DJ
1423@item set logging file @var{file}
1424Change the name of the current logfile. The default logfile is @file{gdb.txt}.
1425@item set logging overwrite [on|off]
1426By default, @value{GDBN} will append to the logfile. Set @code{overwrite} if
1427you want @code{set logging on} to overwrite the logfile instead.
1428@item set logging redirect [on|off]
1429By default, @value{GDBN} output will go to both the terminal and the logfile.
1430Set @code{redirect} if you want output to go only to the log file.
1431@kindex show logging
1432@item show logging
1433Show the current values of the logging settings.
1434@end table
1435
6d2ebf8b 1436@node Commands
c906108c
SS
1437@chapter @value{GDBN} Commands
1438
1439You can abbreviate a @value{GDBN} command to the first few letters of the command
1440name, if that abbreviation is unambiguous; and you can repeat certain
1441@value{GDBN} commands by typing just @key{RET}. You can also use the @key{TAB}
1442key to get @value{GDBN} to fill out the rest of a word in a command (or to
1443show you the alternatives available, if there is more than one possibility).
1444
1445@menu
1446* Command Syntax:: How to give commands to @value{GDBN}
1447* Completion:: Command completion
1448* Help:: How to ask @value{GDBN} for help
1449@end menu
1450
6d2ebf8b 1451@node Command Syntax
79a6e687 1452@section Command Syntax
c906108c
SS
1453
1454A @value{GDBN} command is a single line of input. There is no limit on
1455how long it can be. It starts with a command name, which is followed by
1456arguments whose meaning depends on the command name. For example, the
1457command @code{step} accepts an argument which is the number of times to
1458step, as in @samp{step 5}. You can also use the @code{step} command
96a2c332 1459with no arguments. Some commands do not allow any arguments.
c906108c
SS
1460
1461@cindex abbreviation
1462@value{GDBN} command names may always be truncated if that abbreviation is
1463unambiguous. Other possible command abbreviations are listed in the
1464documentation for individual commands. In some cases, even ambiguous
1465abbreviations are allowed; for example, @code{s} is specially defined as
1466equivalent to @code{step} even though there are other commands whose
1467names start with @code{s}. You can test abbreviations by using them as
1468arguments to the @code{help} command.
1469
1470@cindex repeating commands
41afff9a 1471@kindex RET @r{(repeat last command)}
c906108c 1472A blank line as input to @value{GDBN} (typing just @key{RET}) means to
96a2c332 1473repeat the previous command. Certain commands (for example, @code{run})
c906108c
SS
1474will not repeat this way; these are commands whose unintentional
1475repetition might cause trouble and which you are unlikely to want to
c45da7e6
EZ
1476repeat. User-defined commands can disable this feature; see
1477@ref{Define, dont-repeat}.
c906108c
SS
1478
1479The @code{list} and @code{x} commands, when you repeat them with
1480@key{RET}, construct new arguments rather than repeating
1481exactly as typed. This permits easy scanning of source or memory.
1482
1483@value{GDBN} can also use @key{RET} in another way: to partition lengthy
1484output, in a way similar to the common utility @code{more}
79a6e687 1485(@pxref{Screen Size,,Screen Size}). Since it is easy to press one
c906108c
SS
1486@key{RET} too many in this situation, @value{GDBN} disables command
1487repetition after any command that generates this sort of display.
1488
41afff9a 1489@kindex # @r{(a comment)}
c906108c
SS
1490@cindex comment
1491Any text from a @kbd{#} to the end of the line is a comment; it does
1492nothing. This is useful mainly in command files (@pxref{Command
79a6e687 1493Files,,Command Files}).
c906108c 1494
88118b3a 1495@cindex repeating command sequences
c8aa23ab
EZ
1496@kindex Ctrl-o @r{(operate-and-get-next)}
1497The @kbd{Ctrl-o} binding is useful for repeating a complex sequence of
7f9087cb 1498commands. This command accepts the current line, like @key{RET}, and
88118b3a
TT
1499then fetches the next line relative to the current line from the history
1500for editing.
1501
6d2ebf8b 1502@node Completion
79a6e687 1503@section Command Completion
c906108c
SS
1504
1505@cindex completion
1506@cindex word completion
1507@value{GDBN} can fill in the rest of a word in a command for you, if there is
1508only one possibility; it can also show you what the valid possibilities
1509are for the next word in a command, at any time. This works for @value{GDBN}
1510commands, @value{GDBN} subcommands, and the names of symbols in your program.
1511
1512Press the @key{TAB} key whenever you want @value{GDBN} to fill out the rest
1513of a word. If there is only one possibility, @value{GDBN} fills in the
1514word, and waits for you to finish the command (or press @key{RET} to
1515enter it). For example, if you type
1516
1517@c FIXME "@key" does not distinguish its argument sufficiently to permit
1518@c complete accuracy in these examples; space introduced for clarity.
1519@c If texinfo enhancements make it unnecessary, it would be nice to
1520@c replace " @key" by "@key" in the following...
474c8240 1521@smallexample
c906108c 1522(@value{GDBP}) info bre @key{TAB}
474c8240 1523@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
1524
1525@noindent
1526@value{GDBN} fills in the rest of the word @samp{breakpoints}, since that is
1527the only @code{info} subcommand beginning with @samp{bre}:
1528
474c8240 1529@smallexample
c906108c 1530(@value{GDBP}) info breakpoints
474c8240 1531@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
1532
1533@noindent
1534You can either press @key{RET} at this point, to run the @code{info
1535breakpoints} command, or backspace and enter something else, if
1536@samp{breakpoints} does not look like the command you expected. (If you
1537were sure you wanted @code{info breakpoints} in the first place, you
1538might as well just type @key{RET} immediately after @samp{info bre},
1539to exploit command abbreviations rather than command completion).
1540
1541If there is more than one possibility for the next word when you press
1542@key{TAB}, @value{GDBN} sounds a bell. You can either supply more
1543characters and try again, or just press @key{TAB} a second time;
1544@value{GDBN} displays all the possible completions for that word. For
1545example, you might want to set a breakpoint on a subroutine whose name
1546begins with @samp{make_}, but when you type @kbd{b make_@key{TAB}} @value{GDBN}
1547just sounds the bell. Typing @key{TAB} again displays all the
1548function names in your program that begin with those characters, for
1549example:
1550
474c8240 1551@smallexample
c906108c
SS
1552(@value{GDBP}) b make_ @key{TAB}
1553@exdent @value{GDBN} sounds bell; press @key{TAB} again, to see:
5d161b24
DB
1554make_a_section_from_file make_environ
1555make_abs_section make_function_type
1556make_blockvector make_pointer_type
1557make_cleanup make_reference_type
c906108c
SS
1558make_command make_symbol_completion_list
1559(@value{GDBP}) b make_
474c8240 1560@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
1561
1562@noindent
1563After displaying the available possibilities, @value{GDBN} copies your
1564partial input (@samp{b make_} in the example) so you can finish the
1565command.
1566
1567If you just want to see the list of alternatives in the first place, you
b37052ae 1568can press @kbd{M-?} rather than pressing @key{TAB} twice. @kbd{M-?}
7a292a7a 1569means @kbd{@key{META} ?}. You can type this either by holding down a
c906108c 1570key designated as the @key{META} shift on your keyboard (if there is
7a292a7a 1571one) while typing @kbd{?}, or as @key{ESC} followed by @kbd{?}.
c906108c
SS
1572
1573@cindex quotes in commands
1574@cindex completion of quoted strings
1575Sometimes the string you need, while logically a ``word'', may contain
7a292a7a
SS
1576parentheses or other characters that @value{GDBN} normally excludes from
1577its notion of a word. To permit word completion to work in this
1578situation, you may enclose words in @code{'} (single quote marks) in
1579@value{GDBN} commands.
c906108c 1580
c906108c 1581The most likely situation where you might need this is in typing the
b37052ae
EZ
1582name of a C@t{++} function. This is because C@t{++} allows function
1583overloading (multiple definitions of the same function, distinguished
1584by argument type). For example, when you want to set a breakpoint you
1585may need to distinguish whether you mean the version of @code{name}
1586that takes an @code{int} parameter, @code{name(int)}, or the version
1587that takes a @code{float} parameter, @code{name(float)}. To use the
1588word-completion facilities in this situation, type a single quote
1589@code{'} at the beginning of the function name. This alerts
1590@value{GDBN} that it may need to consider more information than usual
1591when you press @key{TAB} or @kbd{M-?} to request word completion:
c906108c 1592
474c8240 1593@smallexample
96a2c332 1594(@value{GDBP}) b 'bubble( @kbd{M-?}
c906108c
SS
1595bubble(double,double) bubble(int,int)
1596(@value{GDBP}) b 'bubble(
474c8240 1597@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
1598
1599In some cases, @value{GDBN} can tell that completing a name requires using
1600quotes. When this happens, @value{GDBN} inserts the quote for you (while
1601completing as much as it can) if you do not type the quote in the first
1602place:
1603
474c8240 1604@smallexample
c906108c
SS
1605(@value{GDBP}) b bub @key{TAB}
1606@exdent @value{GDBN} alters your input line to the following, and rings a bell:
1607(@value{GDBP}) b 'bubble(
474c8240 1608@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
1609
1610@noindent
1611In general, @value{GDBN} can tell that a quote is needed (and inserts it) if
1612you have not yet started typing the argument list when you ask for
1613completion on an overloaded symbol.
1614
79a6e687
BW
1615For more information about overloaded functions, see @ref{C Plus Plus
1616Expressions, ,C@t{++} Expressions}. You can use the command @code{set
c906108c 1617overload-resolution off} to disable overload resolution;
79a6e687 1618see @ref{Debugging C Plus Plus, ,@value{GDBN} Features for C@t{++}}.
c906108c 1619
65d12d83
TT
1620@cindex completion of structure field names
1621@cindex structure field name completion
1622@cindex completion of union field names
1623@cindex union field name completion
1624When completing in an expression which looks up a field in a
1625structure, @value{GDBN} also tries@footnote{The completer can be
1626confused by certain kinds of invalid expressions. Also, it only
1627examines the static type of the expression, not the dynamic type.} to
1628limit completions to the field names available in the type of the
1629left-hand-side:
1630
1631@smallexample
1632(@value{GDBP}) p gdb_stdout.@kbd{M-?}
01124a23
DE
1633magic to_fputs to_rewind
1634to_data to_isatty to_write
1635to_delete to_put to_write_async_safe
1636to_flush to_read
65d12d83
TT
1637@end smallexample
1638
1639@noindent
1640This is because the @code{gdb_stdout} is a variable of the type
1641@code{struct ui_file} that is defined in @value{GDBN} sources as
1642follows:
1643
1644@smallexample
1645struct ui_file
1646@{
1647 int *magic;
1648 ui_file_flush_ftype *to_flush;
1649 ui_file_write_ftype *to_write;
01124a23 1650 ui_file_write_async_safe_ftype *to_write_async_safe;
65d12d83
TT
1651 ui_file_fputs_ftype *to_fputs;
1652 ui_file_read_ftype *to_read;
1653 ui_file_delete_ftype *to_delete;
1654 ui_file_isatty_ftype *to_isatty;
1655 ui_file_rewind_ftype *to_rewind;
1656 ui_file_put_ftype *to_put;
1657 void *to_data;
1658@}
1659@end smallexample
1660
c906108c 1661
6d2ebf8b 1662@node Help
79a6e687 1663@section Getting Help
c906108c
SS
1664@cindex online documentation
1665@kindex help
1666
5d161b24 1667You can always ask @value{GDBN} itself for information on its commands,
c906108c
SS
1668using the command @code{help}.
1669
1670@table @code
41afff9a 1671@kindex h @r{(@code{help})}
c906108c
SS
1672@item help
1673@itemx h
1674You can use @code{help} (abbreviated @code{h}) with no arguments to
1675display a short list of named classes of commands:
1676
1677@smallexample
1678(@value{GDBP}) help
1679List of classes of commands:
1680
2df3850c 1681aliases -- Aliases of other commands
c906108c 1682breakpoints -- Making program stop at certain points
2df3850c 1683data -- Examining data
c906108c 1684files -- Specifying and examining files
2df3850c
JM
1685internals -- Maintenance commands
1686obscure -- Obscure features
1687running -- Running the program
1688stack -- Examining the stack
c906108c
SS
1689status -- Status inquiries
1690support -- Support facilities
12c27660 1691tracepoints -- Tracing of program execution without
96a2c332 1692 stopping the program
c906108c 1693user-defined -- User-defined commands
c906108c 1694
5d161b24 1695Type "help" followed by a class name for a list of
c906108c 1696commands in that class.
5d161b24 1697Type "help" followed by command name for full
c906108c
SS
1698documentation.
1699Command name abbreviations are allowed if unambiguous.
1700(@value{GDBP})
1701@end smallexample
96a2c332 1702@c the above line break eliminates huge line overfull...
c906108c
SS
1703
1704@item help @var{class}
1705Using one of the general help classes as an argument, you can get a
1706list of the individual commands in that class. For example, here is the
1707help display for the class @code{status}:
1708
1709@smallexample
1710(@value{GDBP}) help status
1711Status inquiries.
1712
1713List of commands:
1714
1715@c Line break in "show" line falsifies real output, but needed
1716@c to fit in smallbook page size.
2df3850c 1717info -- Generic command for showing things
12c27660 1718 about the program being debugged
2df3850c 1719show -- Generic command for showing things
12c27660 1720 about the debugger
c906108c 1721
5d161b24 1722Type "help" followed by command name for full
c906108c
SS
1723documentation.
1724Command name abbreviations are allowed if unambiguous.
1725(@value{GDBP})
1726@end smallexample
1727
1728@item help @var{command}
1729With a command name as @code{help} argument, @value{GDBN} displays a
1730short paragraph on how to use that command.
1731
6837a0a2
DB
1732@kindex apropos
1733@item apropos @var{args}
09d4efe1 1734The @code{apropos} command searches through all of the @value{GDBN}
6837a0a2 1735commands, and their documentation, for the regular expression specified in
99e008fe 1736@var{args}. It prints out all matches found. For example:
6837a0a2
DB
1737
1738@smallexample
16899756 1739apropos alias
6837a0a2
DB
1740@end smallexample
1741
b37052ae
EZ
1742@noindent
1743results in:
6837a0a2
DB
1744
1745@smallexample
6d2ebf8b 1746@c @group
16899756
DE
1747alias -- Define a new command that is an alias of an existing command
1748aliases -- Aliases of other commands
1749d -- Delete some breakpoints or auto-display expressions
1750del -- Delete some breakpoints or auto-display expressions
1751delete -- Delete some breakpoints or auto-display expressions
6d2ebf8b 1752@c @end group
6837a0a2
DB
1753@end smallexample
1754
c906108c
SS
1755@kindex complete
1756@item complete @var{args}
1757The @code{complete @var{args}} command lists all the possible completions
1758for the beginning of a command. Use @var{args} to specify the beginning of the
1759command you want completed. For example:
1760
1761@smallexample
1762complete i
1763@end smallexample
1764
1765@noindent results in:
1766
1767@smallexample
1768@group
2df3850c
JM
1769if
1770ignore
c906108c
SS
1771info
1772inspect
c906108c
SS
1773@end group
1774@end smallexample
1775
1776@noindent This is intended for use by @sc{gnu} Emacs.
1777@end table
1778
1779In addition to @code{help}, you can use the @value{GDBN} commands @code{info}
1780and @code{show} to inquire about the state of your program, or the state
1781of @value{GDBN} itself. Each command supports many topics of inquiry; this
1782manual introduces each of them in the appropriate context. The listings
1783under @code{info} and under @code{show} in the Index point to
1784all the sub-commands. @xref{Index}.
1785
1786@c @group
1787@table @code
1788@kindex info
41afff9a 1789@kindex i @r{(@code{info})}
c906108c
SS
1790@item info
1791This command (abbreviated @code{i}) is for describing the state of your
cda4ce5a 1792program. For example, you can show the arguments passed to a function
c906108c
SS
1793with @code{info args}, list the registers currently in use with @code{info
1794registers}, or list the breakpoints you have set with @code{info breakpoints}.
1795You can get a complete list of the @code{info} sub-commands with
1796@w{@code{help info}}.
1797
1798@kindex set
1799@item set
5d161b24 1800You can assign the result of an expression to an environment variable with
c906108c
SS
1801@code{set}. For example, you can set the @value{GDBN} prompt to a $-sign with
1802@code{set prompt $}.
1803
1804@kindex show
1805@item show
5d161b24 1806In contrast to @code{info}, @code{show} is for describing the state of
c906108c
SS
1807@value{GDBN} itself.
1808You can change most of the things you can @code{show}, by using the
1809related command @code{set}; for example, you can control what number
1810system is used for displays with @code{set radix}, or simply inquire
1811which is currently in use with @code{show radix}.
1812
1813@kindex info set
1814To display all the settable parameters and their current
1815values, you can use @code{show} with no arguments; you may also use
1816@code{info set}. Both commands produce the same display.
1817@c FIXME: "info set" violates the rule that "info" is for state of
1818@c FIXME...program. Ck w/ GNU: "info set" to be called something else,
1819@c FIXME...or change desc of rule---eg "state of prog and debugging session"?
1820@end table
1821@c @end group
1822
1823Here are three miscellaneous @code{show} subcommands, all of which are
1824exceptional in lacking corresponding @code{set} commands:
1825
1826@table @code
1827@kindex show version
9c16f35a 1828@cindex @value{GDBN} version number
c906108c
SS
1829@item show version
1830Show what version of @value{GDBN} is running. You should include this
2df3850c
JM
1831information in @value{GDBN} bug-reports. If multiple versions of
1832@value{GDBN} are in use at your site, you may need to determine which
1833version of @value{GDBN} you are running; as @value{GDBN} evolves, new
1834commands are introduced, and old ones may wither away. Also, many
1835system vendors ship variant versions of @value{GDBN}, and there are
96a2c332 1836variant versions of @value{GDBN} in @sc{gnu}/Linux distributions as well.
2df3850c
JM
1837The version number is the same as the one announced when you start
1838@value{GDBN}.
c906108c
SS
1839
1840@kindex show copying
09d4efe1 1841@kindex info copying
9c16f35a 1842@cindex display @value{GDBN} copyright
c906108c 1843@item show copying
09d4efe1 1844@itemx info copying
c906108c
SS
1845Display information about permission for copying @value{GDBN}.
1846
1847@kindex show warranty
09d4efe1 1848@kindex info warranty
c906108c 1849@item show warranty
09d4efe1 1850@itemx info warranty
2df3850c 1851Display the @sc{gnu} ``NO WARRANTY'' statement, or a warranty,
96a2c332 1852if your version of @value{GDBN} comes with one.
2df3850c 1853
c906108c
SS
1854@end table
1855
6d2ebf8b 1856@node Running
c906108c
SS
1857@chapter Running Programs Under @value{GDBN}
1858
1859When you run a program under @value{GDBN}, you must first generate
1860debugging information when you compile it.
7a292a7a
SS
1861
1862You may start @value{GDBN} with its arguments, if any, in an environment
1863of your choice. If you are doing native debugging, you may redirect
1864your program's input and output, debug an already running process, or
1865kill a child process.
c906108c
SS
1866
1867@menu
1868* Compilation:: Compiling for debugging
1869* Starting:: Starting your program
c906108c
SS
1870* Arguments:: Your program's arguments
1871* Environment:: Your program's environment
c906108c
SS
1872
1873* Working Directory:: Your program's working directory
1874* Input/Output:: Your program's input and output
1875* Attach:: Debugging an already-running process
1876* Kill Process:: Killing the child process
c906108c 1877
6c95b8df 1878* Inferiors and Programs:: Debugging multiple inferiors and programs
c906108c 1879* Threads:: Debugging programs with multiple threads
6c95b8df 1880* Forks:: Debugging forks
5c95884b 1881* Checkpoint/Restart:: Setting a @emph{bookmark} to return to later
c906108c
SS
1882@end menu
1883
6d2ebf8b 1884@node Compilation
79a6e687 1885@section Compiling for Debugging
c906108c
SS
1886
1887In order to debug a program effectively, you need to generate
1888debugging information when you compile it. This debugging information
1889is stored in the object file; it describes the data type of each
1890variable or function and the correspondence between source line numbers
1891and addresses in the executable code.
1892
1893To request debugging information, specify the @samp{-g} option when you run
1894the compiler.
1895
514c4d71 1896Programs that are to be shipped to your customers are compiled with
edb3359d 1897optimizations, using the @samp{-O} compiler option. However, some
514c4d71
EZ
1898compilers are unable to handle the @samp{-g} and @samp{-O} options
1899together. Using those compilers, you cannot generate optimized
c906108c
SS
1900executables containing debugging information.
1901
514c4d71 1902@value{NGCC}, the @sc{gnu} C/C@t{++} compiler, supports @samp{-g} with or
53a5351d
JM
1903without @samp{-O}, making it possible to debug optimized code. We
1904recommend that you @emph{always} use @samp{-g} whenever you compile a
1905program. You may think your program is correct, but there is no sense
edb3359d 1906in pushing your luck. For more information, see @ref{Optimized Code}.
c906108c
SS
1907
1908Older versions of the @sc{gnu} C compiler permitted a variant option
1909@w{@samp{-gg}} for debugging information. @value{GDBN} no longer supports this
1910format; if your @sc{gnu} C compiler has this option, do not use it.
1911
514c4d71
EZ
1912@value{GDBN} knows about preprocessor macros and can show you their
1913expansion (@pxref{Macros}). Most compilers do not include information
1914about preprocessor macros in the debugging information if you specify
e0f8f636
TT
1915the @option{-g} flag alone. Version 3.1 and later of @value{NGCC},
1916the @sc{gnu} C compiler, provides macro information if you are using
1917the DWARF debugging format, and specify the option @option{-g3}.
1918
1919@xref{Debugging Options,,Options for Debugging Your Program or GCC,
1920gcc.info, Using the @sc{gnu} Compiler Collection (GCC)}, for more
1921information on @value{NGCC} options affecting debug information.
1922
1923You will have the best debugging experience if you use the latest
1924version of the DWARF debugging format that your compiler supports.
1925DWARF is currently the most expressive and best supported debugging
1926format in @value{GDBN}.
514c4d71 1927
c906108c 1928@need 2000
6d2ebf8b 1929@node Starting
79a6e687 1930@section Starting your Program
c906108c
SS
1931@cindex starting
1932@cindex running
1933
1934@table @code
1935@kindex run
41afff9a 1936@kindex r @r{(@code{run})}
c906108c
SS
1937@item run
1938@itemx r
7a292a7a
SS
1939Use the @code{run} command to start your program under @value{GDBN}.
1940You must first specify the program name (except on VxWorks) with an
1941argument to @value{GDBN} (@pxref{Invocation, ,Getting In and Out of
1942@value{GDBN}}), or by using the @code{file} or @code{exec-file} command
79a6e687 1943(@pxref{Files, ,Commands to Specify Files}).
c906108c
SS
1944
1945@end table
1946
c906108c
SS
1947If you are running your program in an execution environment that
1948supports processes, @code{run} creates an inferior process and makes
8edfe269
DJ
1949that process run your program. In some environments without processes,
1950@code{run} jumps to the start of your program. Other targets,
1951like @samp{remote}, are always running. If you get an error
1952message like this one:
1953
1954@smallexample
1955The "remote" target does not support "run".
1956Try "help target" or "continue".
1957@end smallexample
1958
1959@noindent
1960then use @code{continue} to run your program. You may need @code{load}
1961first (@pxref{load}).
c906108c
SS
1962
1963The execution of a program is affected by certain information it
1964receives from its superior. @value{GDBN} provides ways to specify this
1965information, which you must do @emph{before} starting your program. (You
1966can change it after starting your program, but such changes only affect
1967your program the next time you start it.) This information may be
1968divided into four categories:
1969
1970@table @asis
1971@item The @emph{arguments.}
1972Specify the arguments to give your program as the arguments of the
1973@code{run} command. If a shell is available on your target, the shell
1974is used to pass the arguments, so that you may use normal conventions
1975(such as wildcard expansion or variable substitution) in describing
1976the arguments.
1977In Unix systems, you can control which shell is used with the
1978@code{SHELL} environment variable.
79a6e687 1979@xref{Arguments, ,Your Program's Arguments}.
c906108c
SS
1980
1981@item The @emph{environment.}
1982Your program normally inherits its environment from @value{GDBN}, but you can
1983use the @value{GDBN} commands @code{set environment} and @code{unset
1984environment} to change parts of the environment that affect
79a6e687 1985your program. @xref{Environment, ,Your Program's Environment}.
c906108c
SS
1986
1987@item The @emph{working directory.}
1988Your program inherits its working directory from @value{GDBN}. You can set
1989the @value{GDBN} working directory with the @code{cd} command in @value{GDBN}.
79a6e687 1990@xref{Working Directory, ,Your Program's Working Directory}.
c906108c
SS
1991
1992@item The @emph{standard input and output.}
1993Your program normally uses the same device for standard input and
1994standard output as @value{GDBN} is using. You can redirect input and output
1995in the @code{run} command line, or you can use the @code{tty} command to
1996set a different device for your program.
79a6e687 1997@xref{Input/Output, ,Your Program's Input and Output}.
c906108c
SS
1998
1999@cindex pipes
2000@emph{Warning:} While input and output redirection work, you cannot use
2001pipes to pass the output of the program you are debugging to another
2002program; if you attempt this, @value{GDBN} is likely to wind up debugging the
2003wrong program.
2004@end table
c906108c
SS
2005
2006When you issue the @code{run} command, your program begins to execute
79a6e687 2007immediately. @xref{Stopping, ,Stopping and Continuing}, for discussion
c906108c
SS
2008of how to arrange for your program to stop. Once your program has
2009stopped, you may call functions in your program, using the @code{print}
2010or @code{call} commands. @xref{Data, ,Examining Data}.
2011
2012If the modification time of your symbol file has changed since the last
2013time @value{GDBN} read its symbols, @value{GDBN} discards its symbol
2014table, and reads it again. When it does this, @value{GDBN} tries to retain
2015your current breakpoints.
2016
4e8b0763
JB
2017@table @code
2018@kindex start
2019@item start
2020@cindex run to main procedure
2021The name of the main procedure can vary from language to language.
2022With C or C@t{++}, the main procedure name is always @code{main}, but
2023other languages such as Ada do not require a specific name for their
2024main procedure. The debugger provides a convenient way to start the
2025execution of the program and to stop at the beginning of the main
2026procedure, depending on the language used.
2027
2028The @samp{start} command does the equivalent of setting a temporary
2029breakpoint at the beginning of the main procedure and then invoking
2030the @samp{run} command.
2031
f018e82f
EZ
2032@cindex elaboration phase
2033Some programs contain an @dfn{elaboration} phase where some startup code is
2034executed before the main procedure is called. This depends on the
2035languages used to write your program. In C@t{++}, for instance,
4e8b0763
JB
2036constructors for static and global objects are executed before
2037@code{main} is called. It is therefore possible that the debugger stops
2038before reaching the main procedure. However, the temporary breakpoint
2039will remain to halt execution.
2040
2041Specify the arguments to give to your program as arguments to the
2042@samp{start} command. These arguments will be given verbatim to the
2043underlying @samp{run} command. Note that the same arguments will be
2044reused if no argument is provided during subsequent calls to
2045@samp{start} or @samp{run}.
2046
2047It is sometimes necessary to debug the program during elaboration. In
2048these cases, using the @code{start} command would stop the execution of
2049your program too late, as the program would have already completed the
2050elaboration phase. Under these circumstances, insert breakpoints in your
2051elaboration code before running your program.
ccd213ac
DJ
2052
2053@kindex set exec-wrapper
2054@item set exec-wrapper @var{wrapper}
2055@itemx show exec-wrapper
2056@itemx unset exec-wrapper
2057When @samp{exec-wrapper} is set, the specified wrapper is used to
2058launch programs for debugging. @value{GDBN} starts your program
2059with a shell command of the form @kbd{exec @var{wrapper}
2060@var{program}}. Quoting is added to @var{program} and its
2061arguments, but not to @var{wrapper}, so you should add quotes if
2062appropriate for your shell. The wrapper runs until it executes
2063your program, and then @value{GDBN} takes control.
2064
2065You can use any program that eventually calls @code{execve} with
2066its arguments as a wrapper. Several standard Unix utilities do
2067this, e.g.@: @code{env} and @code{nohup}. Any Unix shell script ending
2068with @code{exec "$@@"} will also work.
2069
2070For example, you can use @code{env} to pass an environment variable to
2071the debugged program, without setting the variable in your shell's
2072environment:
2073
2074@smallexample
2075(@value{GDBP}) set exec-wrapper env 'LD_PRELOAD=libtest.so'
2076(@value{GDBP}) run
2077@end smallexample
2078
2079This command is available when debugging locally on most targets, excluding
2080@sc{djgpp}, Cygwin, MS Windows, and QNX Neutrino.
2081
10568435
JK
2082@kindex set disable-randomization
2083@item set disable-randomization
2084@itemx set disable-randomization on
2085This option (enabled by default in @value{GDBN}) will turn off the native
2086randomization of the virtual address space of the started program. This option
2087is useful for multiple debugging sessions to make the execution better
2088reproducible and memory addresses reusable across debugging sessions.
2089
03583c20
UW
2090This feature is implemented only on certain targets, including @sc{gnu}/Linux.
2091On @sc{gnu}/Linux you can get the same behavior using
10568435
JK
2092
2093@smallexample
2094(@value{GDBP}) set exec-wrapper setarch `uname -m` -R
2095@end smallexample
2096
2097@item set disable-randomization off
2098Leave the behavior of the started executable unchanged. Some bugs rear their
2099ugly heads only when the program is loaded at certain addresses. If your bug
2100disappears when you run the program under @value{GDBN}, that might be because
2101@value{GDBN} by default disables the address randomization on platforms, such
2102as @sc{gnu}/Linux, which do that for stand-alone programs. Use @kbd{set
2103disable-randomization off} to try to reproduce such elusive bugs.
2104
03583c20
UW
2105On targets where it is available, virtual address space randomization
2106protects the programs against certain kinds of security attacks. In these
10568435
JK
2107cases the attacker needs to know the exact location of a concrete executable
2108code. Randomizing its location makes it impossible to inject jumps misusing
2109a code at its expected addresses.
2110
2111Prelinking shared libraries provides a startup performance advantage but it
2112makes addresses in these libraries predictable for privileged processes by
2113having just unprivileged access at the target system. Reading the shared
2114library binary gives enough information for assembling the malicious code
2115misusing it. Still even a prelinked shared library can get loaded at a new
2116random address just requiring the regular relocation process during the
2117startup. Shared libraries not already prelinked are always loaded at
2118a randomly chosen address.
2119
2120Position independent executables (PIE) contain position independent code
2121similar to the shared libraries and therefore such executables get loaded at
2122a randomly chosen address upon startup. PIE executables always load even
2123already prelinked shared libraries at a random address. You can build such
2124executable using @command{gcc -fPIE -pie}.
2125
2126Heap (malloc storage), stack and custom mmap areas are always placed randomly
2127(as long as the randomization is enabled).
2128
2129@item show disable-randomization
2130Show the current setting of the explicit disable of the native randomization of
2131the virtual address space of the started program.
2132
4e8b0763
JB
2133@end table
2134
6d2ebf8b 2135@node Arguments
79a6e687 2136@section Your Program's Arguments
c906108c
SS
2137
2138@cindex arguments (to your program)
2139The arguments to your program can be specified by the arguments of the
5d161b24 2140@code{run} command.
c906108c
SS
2141They are passed to a shell, which expands wildcard characters and
2142performs redirection of I/O, and thence to your program. Your
2143@code{SHELL} environment variable (if it exists) specifies what shell
2144@value{GDBN} uses. If you do not define @code{SHELL}, @value{GDBN} uses
d4f3574e
SS
2145the default shell (@file{/bin/sh} on Unix).
2146
2147On non-Unix systems, the program is usually invoked directly by
2148@value{GDBN}, which emulates I/O redirection via the appropriate system
2149calls, and the wildcard characters are expanded by the startup code of
2150the program, not by the shell.
c906108c
SS
2151
2152@code{run} with no arguments uses the same arguments used by the previous
2153@code{run}, or those set by the @code{set args} command.
2154
c906108c 2155@table @code
41afff9a 2156@kindex set args
c906108c
SS
2157@item set args
2158Specify the arguments to be used the next time your program is run. If
2159@code{set args} has no arguments, @code{run} executes your program
2160with no arguments. Once you have run your program with arguments,
2161using @code{set args} before the next @code{run} is the only way to run
2162it again without arguments.
2163
2164@kindex show args
2165@item show args
2166Show the arguments to give your program when it is started.
2167@end table
2168
6d2ebf8b 2169@node Environment
79a6e687 2170@section Your Program's Environment
c906108c
SS
2171
2172@cindex environment (of your program)
2173The @dfn{environment} consists of a set of environment variables and
2174their values. Environment variables conventionally record such things as
2175your user name, your home directory, your terminal type, and your search
2176path for programs to run. Usually you set up environment variables with
2177the shell and they are inherited by all the other programs you run. When
2178debugging, it can be useful to try running your program with a modified
2179environment without having to start @value{GDBN} over again.
2180
2181@table @code
2182@kindex path
2183@item path @var{directory}
2184Add @var{directory} to the front of the @code{PATH} environment variable
17cc6a06
EZ
2185(the search path for executables) that will be passed to your program.
2186The value of @code{PATH} used by @value{GDBN} does not change.
d4f3574e
SS
2187You may specify several directory names, separated by whitespace or by a
2188system-dependent separator character (@samp{:} on Unix, @samp{;} on
2189MS-DOS and MS-Windows). If @var{directory} is already in the path, it
2190is moved to the front, so it is searched sooner.
c906108c
SS
2191
2192You can use the string @samp{$cwd} to refer to whatever is the current
2193working directory at the time @value{GDBN} searches the path. If you
2194use @samp{.} instead, it refers to the directory where you executed the
2195@code{path} command. @value{GDBN} replaces @samp{.} in the
2196@var{directory} argument (with the current path) before adding
2197@var{directory} to the search path.
2198@c 'path' is explicitly nonrepeatable, but RMS points out it is silly to
2199@c document that, since repeating it would be a no-op.
2200
2201@kindex show paths
2202@item show paths
2203Display the list of search paths for executables (the @code{PATH}
2204environment variable).
2205
2206@kindex show environment
2207@item show environment @r{[}@var{varname}@r{]}
2208Print the value of environment variable @var{varname} to be given to
2209your program when it starts. If you do not supply @var{varname},
2210print the names and values of all environment variables to be given to
2211your program. You can abbreviate @code{environment} as @code{env}.
2212
2213@kindex set environment
53a5351d 2214@item set environment @var{varname} @r{[}=@var{value}@r{]}
c906108c
SS
2215Set environment variable @var{varname} to @var{value}. The value
2216changes for your program only, not for @value{GDBN} itself. @var{value} may
2217be any string; the values of environment variables are just strings, and
2218any interpretation is supplied by your program itself. The @var{value}
2219parameter is optional; if it is eliminated, the variable is set to a
2220null value.
2221@c "any string" here does not include leading, trailing
2222@c blanks. Gnu asks: does anyone care?
2223
2224For example, this command:
2225
474c8240 2226@smallexample
c906108c 2227set env USER = foo
474c8240 2228@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
2229
2230@noindent
d4f3574e 2231tells the debugged program, when subsequently run, that its user is named
c906108c
SS
2232@samp{foo}. (The spaces around @samp{=} are used for clarity here; they
2233are not actually required.)
2234
2235@kindex unset environment
2236@item unset environment @var{varname}
2237Remove variable @var{varname} from the environment to be passed to your
2238program. This is different from @samp{set env @var{varname} =};
2239@code{unset environment} removes the variable from the environment,
2240rather than assigning it an empty value.
2241@end table
2242
d4f3574e
SS
2243@emph{Warning:} On Unix systems, @value{GDBN} runs your program using
2244the shell indicated
c906108c
SS
2245by your @code{SHELL} environment variable if it exists (or
2246@code{/bin/sh} if not). If your @code{SHELL} variable names a shell
2247that runs an initialization file---such as @file{.cshrc} for C-shell, or
2248@file{.bashrc} for BASH---any variables you set in that file affect
2249your program. You may wish to move setting of environment variables to
2250files that are only run when you sign on, such as @file{.login} or
2251@file{.profile}.
2252
6d2ebf8b 2253@node Working Directory
79a6e687 2254@section Your Program's Working Directory
c906108c
SS
2255
2256@cindex working directory (of your program)
2257Each time you start your program with @code{run}, it inherits its
2258working directory from the current working directory of @value{GDBN}.
2259The @value{GDBN} working directory is initially whatever it inherited
2260from its parent process (typically the shell), but you can specify a new
2261working directory in @value{GDBN} with the @code{cd} command.
2262
2263The @value{GDBN} working directory also serves as a default for the commands
2264that specify files for @value{GDBN} to operate on. @xref{Files, ,Commands to
79a6e687 2265Specify Files}.
c906108c
SS
2266
2267@table @code
2268@kindex cd
721c2651 2269@cindex change working directory
c906108c
SS
2270@item cd @var{directory}
2271Set the @value{GDBN} working directory to @var{directory}.
2272
2273@kindex pwd
2274@item pwd
2275Print the @value{GDBN} working directory.
2276@end table
2277
60bf7e09
EZ
2278It is generally impossible to find the current working directory of
2279the process being debugged (since a program can change its directory
2280during its run). If you work on a system where @value{GDBN} is
2281configured with the @file{/proc} support, you can use the @code{info
2282proc} command (@pxref{SVR4 Process Information}) to find out the
2283current working directory of the debuggee.
2284
6d2ebf8b 2285@node Input/Output
79a6e687 2286@section Your Program's Input and Output
c906108c
SS
2287
2288@cindex redirection
2289@cindex i/o
2290@cindex terminal
2291By default, the program you run under @value{GDBN} does input and output to
5d161b24 2292the same terminal that @value{GDBN} uses. @value{GDBN} switches the terminal
c906108c
SS
2293to its own terminal modes to interact with you, but it records the terminal
2294modes your program was using and switches back to them when you continue
2295running your program.
2296
2297@table @code
2298@kindex info terminal
2299@item info terminal
2300Displays information recorded by @value{GDBN} about the terminal modes your
2301program is using.
2302@end table
2303
2304You can redirect your program's input and/or output using shell
2305redirection with the @code{run} command. For example,
2306
474c8240 2307@smallexample
c906108c 2308run > outfile
474c8240 2309@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
2310
2311@noindent
2312starts your program, diverting its output to the file @file{outfile}.
2313
2314@kindex tty
2315@cindex controlling terminal
2316Another way to specify where your program should do input and output is
2317with the @code{tty} command. This command accepts a file name as
2318argument, and causes this file to be the default for future @code{run}
2319commands. It also resets the controlling terminal for the child
2320process, for future @code{run} commands. For example,
2321
474c8240 2322@smallexample
c906108c 2323tty /dev/ttyb
474c8240 2324@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
2325
2326@noindent
2327directs that processes started with subsequent @code{run} commands
2328default to do input and output on the terminal @file{/dev/ttyb} and have
2329that as their controlling terminal.
2330
2331An explicit redirection in @code{run} overrides the @code{tty} command's
2332effect on the input/output device, but not its effect on the controlling
2333terminal.
2334
2335When you use the @code{tty} command or redirect input in the @code{run}
2336command, only the input @emph{for your program} is affected. The input
3cb3b8df
BR
2337for @value{GDBN} still comes from your terminal. @code{tty} is an alias
2338for @code{set inferior-tty}.
2339
2340@cindex inferior tty
2341@cindex set inferior controlling terminal
2342You can use the @code{show inferior-tty} command to tell @value{GDBN} to
2343display the name of the terminal that will be used for future runs of your
2344program.
2345
2346@table @code
2347@item set inferior-tty /dev/ttyb
2348@kindex set inferior-tty
2349Set the tty for the program being debugged to /dev/ttyb.
2350
2351@item show inferior-tty
2352@kindex show inferior-tty
2353Show the current tty for the program being debugged.
2354@end table
c906108c 2355
6d2ebf8b 2356@node Attach
79a6e687 2357@section Debugging an Already-running Process
c906108c
SS
2358@kindex attach
2359@cindex attach
2360
2361@table @code
2362@item attach @var{process-id}
2363This command attaches to a running process---one that was started
2364outside @value{GDBN}. (@code{info files} shows your active
2365targets.) The command takes as argument a process ID. The usual way to
09d4efe1 2366find out the @var{process-id} of a Unix process is with the @code{ps} utility,
c906108c
SS
2367or with the @samp{jobs -l} shell command.
2368
2369@code{attach} does not repeat if you press @key{RET} a second time after
2370executing the command.
2371@end table
2372
2373To use @code{attach}, your program must be running in an environment
2374which supports processes; for example, @code{attach} does not work for
2375programs on bare-board targets that lack an operating system. You must
2376also have permission to send the process a signal.
2377
2378When you use @code{attach}, the debugger finds the program running in
2379the process first by looking in the current working directory, then (if
2380the program is not found) by using the source file search path
79a6e687 2381(@pxref{Source Path, ,Specifying Source Directories}). You can also use
c906108c
SS
2382the @code{file} command to load the program. @xref{Files, ,Commands to
2383Specify Files}.
2384
2385The first thing @value{GDBN} does after arranging to debug the specified
2386process is to stop it. You can examine and modify an attached process
53a5351d
JM
2387with all the @value{GDBN} commands that are ordinarily available when
2388you start processes with @code{run}. You can insert breakpoints; you
2389can step and continue; you can modify storage. If you would rather the
2390process continue running, you may use the @code{continue} command after
c906108c
SS
2391attaching @value{GDBN} to the process.
2392
2393@table @code
2394@kindex detach
2395@item detach
2396When you have finished debugging the attached process, you can use the
2397@code{detach} command to release it from @value{GDBN} control. Detaching
2398the process continues its execution. After the @code{detach} command,
2399that process and @value{GDBN} become completely independent once more, and you
2400are ready to @code{attach} another process or start one with @code{run}.
2401@code{detach} does not repeat if you press @key{RET} again after
2402executing the command.
2403@end table
2404
159fcc13
JK
2405If you exit @value{GDBN} while you have an attached process, you detach
2406that process. If you use the @code{run} command, you kill that process.
2407By default, @value{GDBN} asks for confirmation if you try to do either of these
2408things; you can control whether or not you need to confirm by using the
2409@code{set confirm} command (@pxref{Messages/Warnings, ,Optional Warnings and
79a6e687 2410Messages}).
c906108c 2411
6d2ebf8b 2412@node Kill Process
79a6e687 2413@section Killing the Child Process
c906108c
SS
2414
2415@table @code
2416@kindex kill
2417@item kill
2418Kill the child process in which your program is running under @value{GDBN}.
2419@end table
2420
2421This command is useful if you wish to debug a core dump instead of a
2422running process. @value{GDBN} ignores any core dump file while your program
2423is running.
2424
2425On some operating systems, a program cannot be executed outside @value{GDBN}
2426while you have breakpoints set on it inside @value{GDBN}. You can use the
2427@code{kill} command in this situation to permit running your program
2428outside the debugger.
2429
2430The @code{kill} command is also useful if you wish to recompile and
2431relink your program, since on many systems it is impossible to modify an
2432executable file while it is running in a process. In this case, when you
2433next type @code{run}, @value{GDBN} notices that the file has changed, and
2434reads the symbol table again (while trying to preserve your current
2435breakpoint settings).
2436
6c95b8df
PA
2437@node Inferiors and Programs
2438@section Debugging Multiple Inferiors and Programs
b77209e0 2439
6c95b8df
PA
2440@value{GDBN} lets you run and debug multiple programs in a single
2441session. In addition, @value{GDBN} on some systems may let you run
2442several programs simultaneously (otherwise you have to exit from one
2443before starting another). In the most general case, you can have
2444multiple threads of execution in each of multiple processes, launched
2445from multiple executables.
b77209e0
PA
2446
2447@cindex inferior
2448@value{GDBN} represents the state of each program execution with an
2449object called an @dfn{inferior}. An inferior typically corresponds to
2450a process, but is more general and applies also to targets that do not
2451have processes. Inferiors may be created before a process runs, and
6c95b8df
PA
2452may be retained after a process exits. Inferiors have unique
2453identifiers that are different from process ids. Usually each
2454inferior will also have its own distinct address space, although some
2455embedded targets may have several inferiors running in different parts
2456of a single address space. Each inferior may in turn have multiple
2457threads running in it.
b77209e0 2458
6c95b8df
PA
2459To find out what inferiors exist at any moment, use @w{@code{info
2460inferiors}}:
b77209e0
PA
2461
2462@table @code
2463@kindex info inferiors
2464@item info inferiors
2465Print a list of all inferiors currently being managed by @value{GDBN}.
3a1ff0b6
PA
2466
2467@value{GDBN} displays for each inferior (in this order):
2468
2469@enumerate
2470@item
2471the inferior number assigned by @value{GDBN}
2472
2473@item
2474the target system's inferior identifier
6c95b8df
PA
2475
2476@item
2477the name of the executable the inferior is running.
2478
3a1ff0b6
PA
2479@end enumerate
2480
2481@noindent
2482An asterisk @samp{*} preceding the @value{GDBN} inferior number
2483indicates the current inferior.
2484
2485For example,
2277426b 2486@end table
3a1ff0b6
PA
2487@c end table here to get a little more width for example
2488
2489@smallexample
2490(@value{GDBP}) info inferiors
6c95b8df
PA
2491 Num Description Executable
2492 2 process 2307 hello
2493* 1 process 3401 goodbye
3a1ff0b6 2494@end smallexample
2277426b
PA
2495
2496To switch focus between inferiors, use the @code{inferior} command:
2497
2498@table @code
3a1ff0b6
PA
2499@kindex inferior @var{infno}
2500@item inferior @var{infno}
2501Make inferior number @var{infno} the current inferior. The argument
2502@var{infno} is the inferior number assigned by @value{GDBN}, as shown
2503in the first field of the @samp{info inferiors} display.
2277426b
PA
2504@end table
2505
6c95b8df
PA
2506
2507You can get multiple executables into a debugging session via the
2508@code{add-inferior} and @w{@code{clone-inferior}} commands. On some
2509systems @value{GDBN} can add inferiors to the debug session
2510automatically by following calls to @code{fork} and @code{exec}. To
2511remove inferiors from the debugging session use the
af624141 2512@w{@code{remove-inferiors}} command.
6c95b8df
PA
2513
2514@table @code
2515@kindex add-inferior
2516@item add-inferior [ -copies @var{n} ] [ -exec @var{executable} ]
2517Adds @var{n} inferiors to be run using @var{executable} as the
2518executable. @var{n} defaults to 1. If no executable is specified,
2519the inferiors begins empty, with no program. You can still assign or
2520change the program assigned to the inferior at any time by using the
2521@code{file} command with the executable name as its argument.
2522
2523@kindex clone-inferior
2524@item clone-inferior [ -copies @var{n} ] [ @var{infno} ]
2525Adds @var{n} inferiors ready to execute the same program as inferior
2526@var{infno}. @var{n} defaults to 1. @var{infno} defaults to the
2527number of the current inferior. This is a convenient command when you
2528want to run another instance of the inferior you are debugging.
2529
2530@smallexample
2531(@value{GDBP}) info inferiors
2532 Num Description Executable
2533* 1 process 29964 helloworld
2534(@value{GDBP}) clone-inferior
2535Added inferior 2.
25361 inferiors added.
2537(@value{GDBP}) info inferiors
2538 Num Description Executable
2539 2 <null> helloworld
2540* 1 process 29964 helloworld
2541@end smallexample
2542
2543You can now simply switch focus to inferior 2 and run it.
2544
af624141
MS
2545@kindex remove-inferiors
2546@item remove-inferiors @var{infno}@dots{}
2547Removes the inferior or inferiors @var{infno}@dots{}. It is not
2548possible to remove an inferior that is running with this command. For
2549those, use the @code{kill} or @code{detach} command first.
6c95b8df
PA
2550
2551@end table
2552
2553To quit debugging one of the running inferiors that is not the current
2554inferior, you can either detach from it by using the @w{@code{detach
2555inferior}} command (allowing it to run independently), or kill it
af624141 2556using the @w{@code{kill inferiors}} command:
2277426b
PA
2557
2558@table @code
af624141
MS
2559@kindex detach inferiors @var{infno}@dots{}
2560@item detach inferior @var{infno}@dots{}
2561Detach from the inferior or inferiors identified by @value{GDBN}
5e30da2c 2562inferior number(s) @var{infno}@dots{}. Note that the inferior's entry
af624141
MS
2563still stays on the list of inferiors shown by @code{info inferiors},
2564but its Description will show @samp{<null>}.
2565
2566@kindex kill inferiors @var{infno}@dots{}
2567@item kill inferiors @var{infno}@dots{}
2568Kill the inferior or inferiors identified by @value{GDBN} inferior
2569number(s) @var{infno}@dots{}. Note that the inferior's entry still
2570stays on the list of inferiors shown by @code{info inferiors}, but its
2571Description will show @samp{<null>}.
2277426b
PA
2572@end table
2573
6c95b8df 2574After the successful completion of a command such as @code{detach},
af624141 2575@code{detach inferiors}, @code{kill} or @code{kill inferiors}, or after
6c95b8df
PA
2576a normal process exit, the inferior is still valid and listed with
2577@code{info inferiors}, ready to be restarted.
2578
2579
2277426b
PA
2580To be notified when inferiors are started or exit under @value{GDBN}'s
2581control use @w{@code{set print inferior-events}}:
b77209e0 2582
2277426b 2583@table @code
b77209e0
PA
2584@kindex set print inferior-events
2585@cindex print messages on inferior start and exit
2586@item set print inferior-events
2587@itemx set print inferior-events on
2588@itemx set print inferior-events off
2589The @code{set print inferior-events} command allows you to enable or
2590disable printing of messages when @value{GDBN} notices that new
2591inferiors have started or that inferiors have exited or have been
2592detached. By default, these messages will not be printed.
2593
2594@kindex show print inferior-events
2595@item show print inferior-events
2596Show whether messages will be printed when @value{GDBN} detects that
2597inferiors have started, exited or have been detached.
2598@end table
2599
6c95b8df
PA
2600Many commands will work the same with multiple programs as with a
2601single program: e.g., @code{print myglobal} will simply display the
2602value of @code{myglobal} in the current inferior.
2603
2604
2605Occasionaly, when debugging @value{GDBN} itself, it may be useful to
2606get more info about the relationship of inferiors, programs, address
2607spaces in a debug session. You can do that with the @w{@code{maint
2608info program-spaces}} command.
2609
2610@table @code
2611@kindex maint info program-spaces
2612@item maint info program-spaces
2613Print a list of all program spaces currently being managed by
2614@value{GDBN}.
2615
2616@value{GDBN} displays for each program space (in this order):
2617
2618@enumerate
2619@item
2620the program space number assigned by @value{GDBN}
2621
2622@item
2623the name of the executable loaded into the program space, with e.g.,
2624the @code{file} command.
2625
2626@end enumerate
2627
2628@noindent
2629An asterisk @samp{*} preceding the @value{GDBN} program space number
2630indicates the current program space.
2631
2632In addition, below each program space line, @value{GDBN} prints extra
2633information that isn't suitable to display in tabular form. For
2634example, the list of inferiors bound to the program space.
2635
2636@smallexample
2637(@value{GDBP}) maint info program-spaces
2638 Id Executable
2639 2 goodbye
2640 Bound inferiors: ID 1 (process 21561)
2641* 1 hello
2642@end smallexample
2643
2644Here we can see that no inferior is running the program @code{hello},
2645while @code{process 21561} is running the program @code{goodbye}. On
2646some targets, it is possible that multiple inferiors are bound to the
2647same program space. The most common example is that of debugging both
2648the parent and child processes of a @code{vfork} call. For example,
2649
2650@smallexample
2651(@value{GDBP}) maint info program-spaces
2652 Id Executable
2653* 1 vfork-test
2654 Bound inferiors: ID 2 (process 18050), ID 1 (process 18045)
2655@end smallexample
2656
2657Here, both inferior 2 and inferior 1 are running in the same program
2658space as a result of inferior 1 having executed a @code{vfork} call.
2659@end table
2660
6d2ebf8b 2661@node Threads
79a6e687 2662@section Debugging Programs with Multiple Threads
c906108c
SS
2663
2664@cindex threads of execution
2665@cindex multiple threads
2666@cindex switching threads
2667In some operating systems, such as HP-UX and Solaris, a single program
2668may have more than one @dfn{thread} of execution. The precise semantics
2669of threads differ from one operating system to another, but in general
2670the threads of a single program are akin to multiple processes---except
2671that they share one address space (that is, they can all examine and
2672modify the same variables). On the other hand, each thread has its own
2673registers and execution stack, and perhaps private memory.
2674
2675@value{GDBN} provides these facilities for debugging multi-thread
2676programs:
2677
2678@itemize @bullet
2679@item automatic notification of new threads
2680@item @samp{thread @var{threadno}}, a command to switch among threads
2681@item @samp{info threads}, a command to inquire about existing threads
5d161b24 2682@item @samp{thread apply [@var{threadno}] [@var{all}] @var{args}},
c906108c
SS
2683a command to apply a command to a list of threads
2684@item thread-specific breakpoints
93815fbf
VP
2685@item @samp{set print thread-events}, which controls printing of
2686messages on thread start and exit.
17a37d48
PP
2687@item @samp{set libthread-db-search-path @var{path}}, which lets
2688the user specify which @code{libthread_db} to use if the default choice
2689isn't compatible with the program.
c906108c
SS
2690@end itemize
2691
c906108c
SS
2692@quotation
2693@emph{Warning:} These facilities are not yet available on every
2694@value{GDBN} configuration where the operating system supports threads.
2695If your @value{GDBN} does not support threads, these commands have no
2696effect. For example, a system without thread support shows no output
2697from @samp{info threads}, and always rejects the @code{thread} command,
2698like this:
2699
2700@smallexample
2701(@value{GDBP}) info threads
2702(@value{GDBP}) thread 1
2703Thread ID 1 not known. Use the "info threads" command to
2704see the IDs of currently known threads.
2705@end smallexample
2706@c FIXME to implementors: how hard would it be to say "sorry, this GDB
2707@c doesn't support threads"?
2708@end quotation
c906108c
SS
2709
2710@cindex focus of debugging
2711@cindex current thread
2712The @value{GDBN} thread debugging facility allows you to observe all
2713threads while your program runs---but whenever @value{GDBN} takes
2714control, one thread in particular is always the focus of debugging.
2715This thread is called the @dfn{current thread}. Debugging commands show
2716program information from the perspective of the current thread.
2717
41afff9a 2718@cindex @code{New} @var{systag} message
c906108c
SS
2719@cindex thread identifier (system)
2720@c FIXME-implementors!! It would be more helpful if the [New...] message
2721@c included GDB's numeric thread handle, so you could just go to that
2722@c thread without first checking `info threads'.
2723Whenever @value{GDBN} detects a new thread in your program, it displays
2724the target system's identification for the thread with a message in the
2725form @samp{[New @var{systag}]}. @var{systag} is a thread identifier
2726whose form varies depending on the particular system. For example, on
8807d78b 2727@sc{gnu}/Linux, you might see
c906108c 2728
474c8240 2729@smallexample
08e796bc 2730[New Thread 0x41e02940 (LWP 25582)]
474c8240 2731@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
2732
2733@noindent
2734when @value{GDBN} notices a new thread. In contrast, on an SGI system,
2735the @var{systag} is simply something like @samp{process 368}, with no
2736further qualifier.
2737
2738@c FIXME!! (1) Does the [New...] message appear even for the very first
2739@c thread of a program, or does it only appear for the
6ca652b0 2740@c second---i.e.@: when it becomes obvious we have a multithread
c906108c
SS
2741@c program?
2742@c (2) *Is* there necessarily a first thread always? Or do some
2743@c multithread systems permit starting a program with multiple
5d161b24 2744@c threads ab initio?
c906108c
SS
2745
2746@cindex thread number
2747@cindex thread identifier (GDB)
2748For debugging purposes, @value{GDBN} associates its own thread
2749number---always a single integer---with each thread in your program.
2750
2751@table @code
2752@kindex info threads
60f98dde
MS
2753@item info threads @r{[}@var{id}@dots{}@r{]}
2754Display a summary of all threads currently in your program. Optional
2755argument @var{id}@dots{} is one or more thread ids separated by spaces, and
2756means to print information only about the specified thread or threads.
2757@value{GDBN} displays for each thread (in this order):
c906108c
SS
2758
2759@enumerate
09d4efe1
EZ
2760@item
2761the thread number assigned by @value{GDBN}
c906108c 2762
09d4efe1
EZ
2763@item
2764the target system's thread identifier (@var{systag})
c906108c 2765
4694da01
TT
2766@item
2767the thread's name, if one is known. A thread can either be named by
2768the user (see @code{thread name}, below), or, in some cases, by the
2769program itself.
2770
09d4efe1
EZ
2771@item
2772the current stack frame summary for that thread
c906108c
SS
2773@end enumerate
2774
2775@noindent
2776An asterisk @samp{*} to the left of the @value{GDBN} thread number
2777indicates the current thread.
2778
5d161b24 2779For example,
c906108c
SS
2780@end table
2781@c end table here to get a little more width for example
2782
2783@smallexample
2784(@value{GDBP}) info threads
13fd8b81
TT
2785 Id Target Id Frame
2786 3 process 35 thread 27 0x34e5 in sigpause ()
2787 2 process 35 thread 23 0x34e5 in sigpause ()
2788* 1 process 35 thread 13 main (argc=1, argv=0x7ffffff8)
c906108c
SS
2789 at threadtest.c:68
2790@end smallexample
53a5351d 2791
c45da7e6
EZ
2792On Solaris, you can display more information about user threads with a
2793Solaris-specific command:
2794
2795@table @code
2796@item maint info sol-threads
2797@kindex maint info sol-threads
2798@cindex thread info (Solaris)
2799Display info on Solaris user threads.
2800@end table
2801
c906108c
SS
2802@table @code
2803@kindex thread @var{threadno}
2804@item thread @var{threadno}
2805Make thread number @var{threadno} the current thread. The command
2806argument @var{threadno} is the internal @value{GDBN} thread number, as
2807shown in the first field of the @samp{info threads} display.
2808@value{GDBN} responds by displaying the system identifier of the thread
2809you selected, and its current stack frame summary:
2810
2811@smallexample
c906108c 2812(@value{GDBP}) thread 2
13fd8b81
TT
2813[Switching to thread 2 (Thread 0xb7fdab70 (LWP 12747))]
2814#0 some_function (ignore=0x0) at example.c:8
28158 printf ("hello\n");
c906108c
SS
2816@end smallexample
2817
2818@noindent
2819As with the @samp{[New @dots{}]} message, the form of the text after
2820@samp{Switching to} depends on your system's conventions for identifying
5d161b24 2821threads.
c906108c 2822
6aed2dbc
SS
2823@vindex $_thread@r{, convenience variable}
2824The debugger convenience variable @samp{$_thread} contains the number
2825of the current thread. You may find this useful in writing breakpoint
2826conditional expressions, command scripts, and so forth. See
2827@xref{Convenience Vars,, Convenience Variables}, for general
2828information on convenience variables.
2829
9c16f35a 2830@kindex thread apply
638ac427 2831@cindex apply command to several threads
13fd8b81 2832@item thread apply [@var{threadno} | all] @var{command}
839c27b7
EZ
2833The @code{thread apply} command allows you to apply the named
2834@var{command} to one or more threads. Specify the numbers of the
2835threads that you want affected with the command argument
2836@var{threadno}. It can be a single thread number, one of the numbers
2837shown in the first field of the @samp{info threads} display; or it
2838could be a range of thread numbers, as in @code{2-4}. To apply a
2839command to all threads, type @kbd{thread apply all @var{command}}.
93815fbf 2840
4694da01
TT
2841@kindex thread name
2842@cindex name a thread
2843@item thread name [@var{name}]
2844This command assigns a name to the current thread. If no argument is
2845given, any existing user-specified name is removed. The thread name
2846appears in the @samp{info threads} display.
2847
2848On some systems, such as @sc{gnu}/Linux, @value{GDBN} is able to
2849determine the name of the thread as given by the OS. On these
2850systems, a name specified with @samp{thread name} will override the
2851system-give name, and removing the user-specified name will cause
2852@value{GDBN} to once again display the system-specified name.
2853
60f98dde
MS
2854@kindex thread find
2855@cindex search for a thread
2856@item thread find [@var{regexp}]
2857Search for and display thread ids whose name or @var{systag}
2858matches the supplied regular expression.
2859
2860As well as being the complement to the @samp{thread name} command,
2861this command also allows you to identify a thread by its target
2862@var{systag}. For instance, on @sc{gnu}/Linux, the target @var{systag}
2863is the LWP id.
2864
2865@smallexample
2866(@value{GDBN}) thread find 26688
2867Thread 4 has target id 'Thread 0x41e02940 (LWP 26688)'
2868(@value{GDBN}) info thread 4
2869 Id Target Id Frame
2870 4 Thread 0x41e02940 (LWP 26688) 0x00000031ca6cd372 in select ()
2871@end smallexample
2872
93815fbf
VP
2873@kindex set print thread-events
2874@cindex print messages on thread start and exit
2875@item set print thread-events
2876@itemx set print thread-events on
2877@itemx set print thread-events off
2878The @code{set print thread-events} command allows you to enable or
2879disable printing of messages when @value{GDBN} notices that new threads have
2880started or that threads have exited. By default, these messages will
2881be printed if detection of these events is supported by the target.
2882Note that these messages cannot be disabled on all targets.
2883
2884@kindex show print thread-events
2885@item show print thread-events
2886Show whether messages will be printed when @value{GDBN} detects that threads
2887have started and exited.
c906108c
SS
2888@end table
2889
79a6e687 2890@xref{Thread Stops,,Stopping and Starting Multi-thread Programs}, for
c906108c
SS
2891more information about how @value{GDBN} behaves when you stop and start
2892programs with multiple threads.
2893
79a6e687 2894@xref{Set Watchpoints,,Setting Watchpoints}, for information about
c906108c 2895watchpoints in programs with multiple threads.
c906108c 2896
bf88dd68 2897@anchor{set libthread-db-search-path}
17a37d48
PP
2898@table @code
2899@kindex set libthread-db-search-path
2900@cindex search path for @code{libthread_db}
2901@item set libthread-db-search-path @r{[}@var{path}@r{]}
2902If this variable is set, @var{path} is a colon-separated list of
2903directories @value{GDBN} will use to search for @code{libthread_db}.
2904If you omit @var{path}, @samp{libthread-db-search-path} will be reset to
98a5dd13 2905its default value (@code{$sdir:$pdir} on @sc{gnu}/Linux and Solaris systems).
7e0396aa
DE
2906Internally, the default value comes from the @code{LIBTHREAD_DB_SEARCH_PATH}
2907macro.
17a37d48
PP
2908
2909On @sc{gnu}/Linux and Solaris systems, @value{GDBN} uses a ``helper''
2910@code{libthread_db} library to obtain information about threads in the
2911inferior process. @value{GDBN} will use @samp{libthread-db-search-path}
bf88dd68
JK
2912to find @code{libthread_db}. @value{GDBN} also consults first if inferior
2913specific thread debugging library loading is enabled
2914by @samp{set auto-load libthread-db} (@pxref{libthread_db.so.1 file}).
98a5dd13
DE
2915
2916A special entry @samp{$sdir} for @samp{libthread-db-search-path}
2917refers to the default system directories that are
bf88dd68
JK
2918normally searched for loading shared libraries. The @samp{$sdir} entry
2919is the only kind not needing to be enabled by @samp{set auto-load libthread-db}
2920(@pxref{libthread_db.so.1 file}).
98a5dd13
DE
2921
2922A special entry @samp{$pdir} for @samp{libthread-db-search-path}
2923refers to the directory from which @code{libpthread}
2924was loaded in the inferior process.
17a37d48
PP
2925
2926For any @code{libthread_db} library @value{GDBN} finds in above directories,
2927@value{GDBN} attempts to initialize it with the current inferior process.
2928If this initialization fails (which could happen because of a version
2929mismatch between @code{libthread_db} and @code{libpthread}), @value{GDBN}
2930will unload @code{libthread_db}, and continue with the next directory.
2931If none of @code{libthread_db} libraries initialize successfully,
2932@value{GDBN} will issue a warning and thread debugging will be disabled.
2933
2934Setting @code{libthread-db-search-path} is currently implemented
2935only on some platforms.
2936
2937@kindex show libthread-db-search-path
2938@item show libthread-db-search-path
2939Display current libthread_db search path.
02d868e8
PP
2940
2941@kindex set debug libthread-db
2942@kindex show debug libthread-db
2943@cindex debugging @code{libthread_db}
2944@item set debug libthread-db
2945@itemx show debug libthread-db
2946Turns on or off display of @code{libthread_db}-related events.
2947Use @code{1} to enable, @code{0} to disable.
17a37d48
PP
2948@end table
2949
6c95b8df
PA
2950@node Forks
2951@section Debugging Forks
c906108c
SS
2952
2953@cindex fork, debugging programs which call
2954@cindex multiple processes
2955@cindex processes, multiple
53a5351d
JM
2956On most systems, @value{GDBN} has no special support for debugging
2957programs which create additional processes using the @code{fork}
2958function. When a program forks, @value{GDBN} will continue to debug the
2959parent process and the child process will run unimpeded. If you have
2960set a breakpoint in any code which the child then executes, the child
2961will get a @code{SIGTRAP} signal which (unless it catches the signal)
2962will cause it to terminate.
c906108c
SS
2963
2964However, if you want to debug the child process there is a workaround
2965which isn't too painful. Put a call to @code{sleep} in the code which
2966the child process executes after the fork. It may be useful to sleep
2967only if a certain environment variable is set, or a certain file exists,
2968so that the delay need not occur when you don't want to run @value{GDBN}
2969on the child. While the child is sleeping, use the @code{ps} program to
2970get its process ID. Then tell @value{GDBN} (a new invocation of
2971@value{GDBN} if you are also debugging the parent process) to attach to
d4f3574e 2972the child process (@pxref{Attach}). From that point on you can debug
c906108c 2973the child process just like any other process which you attached to.
c906108c 2974
b51970ac
DJ
2975On some systems, @value{GDBN} provides support for debugging programs that
2976create additional processes using the @code{fork} or @code{vfork} functions.
2977Currently, the only platforms with this feature are HP-UX (11.x and later
a6b151f1 2978only?) and @sc{gnu}/Linux (kernel version 2.5.60 and later).
c906108c
SS
2979
2980By default, when a program forks, @value{GDBN} will continue to debug
2981the parent process and the child process will run unimpeded.
2982
2983If you want to follow the child process instead of the parent process,
2984use the command @w{@code{set follow-fork-mode}}.
2985
2986@table @code
2987@kindex set follow-fork-mode
2988@item set follow-fork-mode @var{mode}
2989Set the debugger response to a program call of @code{fork} or
2990@code{vfork}. A call to @code{fork} or @code{vfork} creates a new
9c16f35a 2991process. The @var{mode} argument can be:
c906108c
SS
2992
2993@table @code
2994@item parent
2995The original process is debugged after a fork. The child process runs
2df3850c 2996unimpeded. This is the default.
c906108c
SS
2997
2998@item child
2999The new process is debugged after a fork. The parent process runs
3000unimpeded.
3001
c906108c
SS
3002@end table
3003
9c16f35a 3004@kindex show follow-fork-mode
c906108c 3005@item show follow-fork-mode
2df3850c 3006Display the current debugger response to a @code{fork} or @code{vfork} call.
c906108c
SS
3007@end table
3008
5c95884b
MS
3009@cindex debugging multiple processes
3010On Linux, if you want to debug both the parent and child processes, use the
3011command @w{@code{set detach-on-fork}}.
3012
3013@table @code
3014@kindex set detach-on-fork
3015@item set detach-on-fork @var{mode}
3016Tells gdb whether to detach one of the processes after a fork, or
3017retain debugger control over them both.
3018
3019@table @code
3020@item on
3021The child process (or parent process, depending on the value of
3022@code{follow-fork-mode}) will be detached and allowed to run
3023independently. This is the default.
3024
3025@item off
3026Both processes will be held under the control of @value{GDBN}.
3027One process (child or parent, depending on the value of
3028@code{follow-fork-mode}) is debugged as usual, while the other
3029is held suspended.
3030
3031@end table
3032
11310833
NR
3033@kindex show detach-on-fork
3034@item show detach-on-fork
3035Show whether detach-on-fork mode is on/off.
5c95884b
MS
3036@end table
3037
2277426b
PA
3038If you choose to set @samp{detach-on-fork} mode off, then @value{GDBN}
3039will retain control of all forked processes (including nested forks).
3040You can list the forked processes under the control of @value{GDBN} by
3041using the @w{@code{info inferiors}} command, and switch from one fork
6c95b8df
PA
3042to another by using the @code{inferior} command (@pxref{Inferiors and
3043Programs, ,Debugging Multiple Inferiors and Programs}).
5c95884b
MS
3044
3045To quit debugging one of the forked processes, you can either detach
af624141
MS
3046from it by using the @w{@code{detach inferiors}} command (allowing it
3047to run independently), or kill it using the @w{@code{kill inferiors}}
6c95b8df
PA
3048command. @xref{Inferiors and Programs, ,Debugging Multiple Inferiors
3049and Programs}.
5c95884b 3050
c906108c
SS
3051If you ask to debug a child process and a @code{vfork} is followed by an
3052@code{exec}, @value{GDBN} executes the new target up to the first
3053breakpoint in the new target. If you have a breakpoint set on
3054@code{main} in your original program, the breakpoint will also be set on
3055the child process's @code{main}.
3056
2277426b
PA
3057On some systems, when a child process is spawned by @code{vfork}, you
3058cannot debug the child or parent until an @code{exec} call completes.
c906108c
SS
3059
3060If you issue a @code{run} command to @value{GDBN} after an @code{exec}
6c95b8df
PA
3061call executes, the new target restarts. To restart the parent
3062process, use the @code{file} command with the parent executable name
3063as its argument. By default, after an @code{exec} call executes,
3064@value{GDBN} discards the symbols of the previous executable image.
3065You can change this behaviour with the @w{@code{set follow-exec-mode}}
3066command.
3067
3068@table @code
3069@kindex set follow-exec-mode
3070@item set follow-exec-mode @var{mode}
3071
3072Set debugger response to a program call of @code{exec}. An
3073@code{exec} call replaces the program image of a process.
3074
3075@code{follow-exec-mode} can be:
3076
3077@table @code
3078@item new
3079@value{GDBN} creates a new inferior and rebinds the process to this
3080new inferior. The program the process was running before the
3081@code{exec} call can be restarted afterwards by restarting the
3082original inferior.
3083
3084For example:
3085
3086@smallexample
3087(@value{GDBP}) info inferiors
3088(gdb) info inferior
3089 Id Description Executable
3090* 1 <null> prog1
3091(@value{GDBP}) run
3092process 12020 is executing new program: prog2
3093Program exited normally.
3094(@value{GDBP}) info inferiors
3095 Id Description Executable
3096* 2 <null> prog2
3097 1 <null> prog1
3098@end smallexample
3099
3100@item same
3101@value{GDBN} keeps the process bound to the same inferior. The new
3102executable image replaces the previous executable loaded in the
3103inferior. Restarting the inferior after the @code{exec} call, with
3104e.g., the @code{run} command, restarts the executable the process was
3105running after the @code{exec} call. This is the default mode.
3106
3107For example:
3108
3109@smallexample
3110(@value{GDBP}) info inferiors
3111 Id Description Executable
3112* 1 <null> prog1
3113(@value{GDBP}) run
3114process 12020 is executing new program: prog2
3115Program exited normally.
3116(@value{GDBP}) info inferiors
3117 Id Description Executable
3118* 1 <null> prog2
3119@end smallexample
3120
3121@end table
3122@end table
c906108c
SS
3123
3124You can use the @code{catch} command to make @value{GDBN} stop whenever
3125a @code{fork}, @code{vfork}, or @code{exec} call is made. @xref{Set
79a6e687 3126Catchpoints, ,Setting Catchpoints}.
c906108c 3127
5c95884b 3128@node Checkpoint/Restart
79a6e687 3129@section Setting a @emph{Bookmark} to Return to Later
5c95884b
MS
3130
3131@cindex checkpoint
3132@cindex restart
3133@cindex bookmark
3134@cindex snapshot of a process
3135@cindex rewind program state
3136
3137On certain operating systems@footnote{Currently, only
3138@sc{gnu}/Linux.}, @value{GDBN} is able to save a @dfn{snapshot} of a
3139program's state, called a @dfn{checkpoint}, and come back to it
3140later.
3141
3142Returning to a checkpoint effectively undoes everything that has
3143happened in the program since the @code{checkpoint} was saved. This
3144includes changes in memory, registers, and even (within some limits)
3145system state. Effectively, it is like going back in time to the
3146moment when the checkpoint was saved.
3147
3148Thus, if you're stepping thru a program and you think you're
3149getting close to the point where things go wrong, you can save
3150a checkpoint. Then, if you accidentally go too far and miss
3151the critical statement, instead of having to restart your program
3152from the beginning, you can just go back to the checkpoint and
3153start again from there.
3154
3155This can be especially useful if it takes a lot of time or
3156steps to reach the point where you think the bug occurs.
3157
3158To use the @code{checkpoint}/@code{restart} method of debugging:
3159
3160@table @code
3161@kindex checkpoint
3162@item checkpoint
3163Save a snapshot of the debugged program's current execution state.
3164The @code{checkpoint} command takes no arguments, but each checkpoint
3165is assigned a small integer id, similar to a breakpoint id.
3166
3167@kindex info checkpoints
3168@item info checkpoints
3169List the checkpoints that have been saved in the current debugging
3170session. For each checkpoint, the following information will be
3171listed:
3172
3173@table @code
3174@item Checkpoint ID
3175@item Process ID
3176@item Code Address
3177@item Source line, or label
3178@end table
3179
3180@kindex restart @var{checkpoint-id}
3181@item restart @var{checkpoint-id}
3182Restore the program state that was saved as checkpoint number
3183@var{checkpoint-id}. All program variables, registers, stack frames
3184etc.@: will be returned to the values that they had when the checkpoint
3185was saved. In essence, gdb will ``wind back the clock'' to the point
3186in time when the checkpoint was saved.
3187
3188Note that breakpoints, @value{GDBN} variables, command history etc.
3189are not affected by restoring a checkpoint. In general, a checkpoint
3190only restores things that reside in the program being debugged, not in
3191the debugger.
3192
b8db102d
MS
3193@kindex delete checkpoint @var{checkpoint-id}
3194@item delete checkpoint @var{checkpoint-id}
5c95884b
MS
3195Delete the previously-saved checkpoint identified by @var{checkpoint-id}.
3196
3197@end table
3198
3199Returning to a previously saved checkpoint will restore the user state
3200of the program being debugged, plus a significant subset of the system
3201(OS) state, including file pointers. It won't ``un-write'' data from
3202a file, but it will rewind the file pointer to the previous location,
3203so that the previously written data can be overwritten. For files
3204opened in read mode, the pointer will also be restored so that the
3205previously read data can be read again.
3206
3207Of course, characters that have been sent to a printer (or other
3208external device) cannot be ``snatched back'', and characters received
3209from eg.@: a serial device can be removed from internal program buffers,
3210but they cannot be ``pushed back'' into the serial pipeline, ready to
3211be received again. Similarly, the actual contents of files that have
3212been changed cannot be restored (at this time).
3213
3214However, within those constraints, you actually can ``rewind'' your
3215program to a previously saved point in time, and begin debugging it
3216again --- and you can change the course of events so as to debug a
3217different execution path this time.
3218
3219@cindex checkpoints and process id
3220Finally, there is one bit of internal program state that will be
3221different when you return to a checkpoint --- the program's process
3222id. Each checkpoint will have a unique process id (or @var{pid}),
3223and each will be different from the program's original @var{pid}.
3224If your program has saved a local copy of its process id, this could
3225potentially pose a problem.
3226
79a6e687 3227@subsection A Non-obvious Benefit of Using Checkpoints
5c95884b
MS
3228
3229On some systems such as @sc{gnu}/Linux, address space randomization
3230is performed on new processes for security reasons. This makes it
3231difficult or impossible to set a breakpoint, or watchpoint, on an
3232absolute address if you have to restart the program, since the
3233absolute location of a symbol will change from one execution to the
3234next.
3235
3236A checkpoint, however, is an @emph{identical} copy of a process.
3237Therefore if you create a checkpoint at (eg.@:) the start of main,
3238and simply return to that checkpoint instead of restarting the
3239process, you can avoid the effects of address randomization and
3240your symbols will all stay in the same place.
3241
6d2ebf8b 3242@node Stopping
c906108c
SS
3243@chapter Stopping and Continuing
3244
3245The principal purposes of using a debugger are so that you can stop your
3246program before it terminates; or so that, if your program runs into
3247trouble, you can investigate and find out why.
3248
7a292a7a
SS
3249Inside @value{GDBN}, your program may stop for any of several reasons,
3250such as a signal, a breakpoint, or reaching a new line after a
3251@value{GDBN} command such as @code{step}. You may then examine and
3252change variables, set new breakpoints or remove old ones, and then
3253continue execution. Usually, the messages shown by @value{GDBN} provide
3254ample explanation of the status of your program---but you can also
3255explicitly request this information at any time.
c906108c
SS
3256
3257@table @code
3258@kindex info program
3259@item info program
3260Display information about the status of your program: whether it is
7a292a7a 3261running or not, what process it is, and why it stopped.
c906108c
SS
3262@end table
3263
3264@menu
3265* Breakpoints:: Breakpoints, watchpoints, and catchpoints
3266* Continuing and Stepping:: Resuming execution
aad1c02c
TT
3267* Skipping Over Functions and Files::
3268 Skipping over functions and files
c906108c 3269* Signals:: Signals
c906108c 3270* Thread Stops:: Stopping and starting multi-thread programs
c906108c
SS
3271@end menu
3272
6d2ebf8b 3273@node Breakpoints
79a6e687 3274@section Breakpoints, Watchpoints, and Catchpoints
c906108c
SS
3275
3276@cindex breakpoints
3277A @dfn{breakpoint} makes your program stop whenever a certain point in
3278the program is reached. For each breakpoint, you can add conditions to
3279control in finer detail whether your program stops. You can set
3280breakpoints with the @code{break} command and its variants (@pxref{Set
79a6e687 3281Breaks, ,Setting Breakpoints}), to specify the place where your program
c906108c
SS
3282should stop by line number, function name or exact address in the
3283program.
3284
09d4efe1
EZ
3285On some systems, you can set breakpoints in shared libraries before
3286the executable is run. There is a minor limitation on HP-UX systems:
3287you must wait until the executable is run in order to set breakpoints
3288in shared library routines that are not called directly by the program
3289(for example, routines that are arguments in a @code{pthread_create}
3290call).
c906108c
SS
3291
3292@cindex watchpoints
fd60e0df 3293@cindex data breakpoints
c906108c
SS
3294@cindex memory tracing
3295@cindex breakpoint on memory address
3296@cindex breakpoint on variable modification
3297A @dfn{watchpoint} is a special breakpoint that stops your program
fd60e0df 3298when the value of an expression changes. The expression may be a value
0ced0c34 3299of a variable, or it could involve values of one or more variables
fd60e0df
EZ
3300combined by operators, such as @samp{a + b}. This is sometimes called
3301@dfn{data breakpoints}. You must use a different command to set
79a6e687 3302watchpoints (@pxref{Set Watchpoints, ,Setting Watchpoints}), but aside
fd60e0df
EZ
3303from that, you can manage a watchpoint like any other breakpoint: you
3304enable, disable, and delete both breakpoints and watchpoints using the
3305same commands.
c906108c
SS
3306
3307You can arrange to have values from your program displayed automatically
3308whenever @value{GDBN} stops at a breakpoint. @xref{Auto Display,,
79a6e687 3309Automatic Display}.
c906108c
SS
3310
3311@cindex catchpoints
3312@cindex breakpoint on events
3313A @dfn{catchpoint} is another special breakpoint that stops your program
b37052ae 3314when a certain kind of event occurs, such as the throwing of a C@t{++}
c906108c
SS
3315exception or the loading of a library. As with watchpoints, you use a
3316different command to set a catchpoint (@pxref{Set Catchpoints, ,Setting
79a6e687 3317Catchpoints}), but aside from that, you can manage a catchpoint like any
c906108c 3318other breakpoint. (To stop when your program receives a signal, use the
d4f3574e 3319@code{handle} command; see @ref{Signals, ,Signals}.)
c906108c
SS
3320
3321@cindex breakpoint numbers
3322@cindex numbers for breakpoints
3323@value{GDBN} assigns a number to each breakpoint, watchpoint, or
3324catchpoint when you create it; these numbers are successive integers
3325starting with one. In many of the commands for controlling various
3326features of breakpoints you use the breakpoint number to say which
3327breakpoint you want to change. Each breakpoint may be @dfn{enabled} or
3328@dfn{disabled}; if disabled, it has no effect on your program until you
3329enable it again.
3330
c5394b80
JM
3331@cindex breakpoint ranges
3332@cindex ranges of breakpoints
3333Some @value{GDBN} commands accept a range of breakpoints on which to
3334operate. A breakpoint range is either a single breakpoint number, like
3335@samp{5}, or two such numbers, in increasing order, separated by a
3336hyphen, like @samp{5-7}. When a breakpoint range is given to a command,
d52fb0e9 3337all breakpoints in that range are operated on.
c5394b80 3338
c906108c
SS
3339@menu
3340* Set Breaks:: Setting breakpoints
3341* Set Watchpoints:: Setting watchpoints
3342* Set Catchpoints:: Setting catchpoints
3343* Delete Breaks:: Deleting breakpoints
3344* Disabling:: Disabling breakpoints
3345* Conditions:: Break conditions
3346* Break Commands:: Breakpoint command lists
e7e0cddf 3347* Dynamic Printf:: Dynamic printf
6149aea9 3348* Save Breakpoints:: How to save breakpoints in a file
62e5f89c 3349* Static Probe Points:: Listing static probe points
d4f3574e 3350* Error in Breakpoints:: ``Cannot insert breakpoints''
79a6e687 3351* Breakpoint-related Warnings:: ``Breakpoint address adjusted...''
c906108c
SS
3352@end menu
3353
6d2ebf8b 3354@node Set Breaks
79a6e687 3355@subsection Setting Breakpoints
c906108c 3356
5d161b24 3357@c FIXME LMB what does GDB do if no code on line of breakpt?
c906108c
SS
3358@c consider in particular declaration with/without initialization.
3359@c
3360@c FIXME 2 is there stuff on this already? break at fun start, already init?
3361
3362@kindex break
41afff9a
EZ
3363@kindex b @r{(@code{break})}
3364@vindex $bpnum@r{, convenience variable}
c906108c
SS
3365@cindex latest breakpoint
3366Breakpoints are set with the @code{break} command (abbreviated
5d161b24 3367@code{b}). The debugger convenience variable @samp{$bpnum} records the
f3b28801 3368number of the breakpoint you've set most recently; see @ref{Convenience
79a6e687 3369Vars,, Convenience Variables}, for a discussion of what you can do with
c906108c
SS
3370convenience variables.
3371
c906108c 3372@table @code
2a25a5ba
EZ
3373@item break @var{location}
3374Set a breakpoint at the given @var{location}, which can specify a
3375function name, a line number, or an address of an instruction.
3376(@xref{Specify Location}, for a list of all the possible ways to
3377specify a @var{location}.) The breakpoint will stop your program just
3378before it executes any of the code in the specified @var{location}.
3379
c906108c 3380When using source languages that permit overloading of symbols, such as
2a25a5ba 3381C@t{++}, a function name may refer to more than one possible place to break.
6ba66d6a
JB
3382@xref{Ambiguous Expressions,,Ambiguous Expressions}, for a discussion of
3383that situation.
c906108c 3384
45ac276d 3385It is also possible to insert a breakpoint that will stop the program
2c88c651
JB
3386only if a specific thread (@pxref{Thread-Specific Breakpoints})
3387or a specific task (@pxref{Ada Tasks}) hits that breakpoint.
45ac276d 3388
c906108c
SS
3389@item break
3390When called without any arguments, @code{break} sets a breakpoint at
3391the next instruction to be executed in the selected stack frame
3392(@pxref{Stack, ,Examining the Stack}). In any selected frame but the
3393innermost, this makes your program stop as soon as control
3394returns to that frame. This is similar to the effect of a
3395@code{finish} command in the frame inside the selected frame---except
3396that @code{finish} does not leave an active breakpoint. If you use
3397@code{break} without an argument in the innermost frame, @value{GDBN} stops
3398the next time it reaches the current location; this may be useful
3399inside loops.
3400
3401@value{GDBN} normally ignores breakpoints when it resumes execution, until at
3402least one instruction has been executed. If it did not do this, you
3403would be unable to proceed past a breakpoint without first disabling the
3404breakpoint. This rule applies whether or not the breakpoint already
3405existed when your program stopped.
3406
3407@item break @dots{} if @var{cond}
3408Set a breakpoint with condition @var{cond}; evaluate the expression
3409@var{cond} each time the breakpoint is reached, and stop only if the
3410value is nonzero---that is, if @var{cond} evaluates as true.
3411@samp{@dots{}} stands for one of the possible arguments described
3412above (or no argument) specifying where to break. @xref{Conditions,
79a6e687 3413,Break Conditions}, for more information on breakpoint conditions.
c906108c
SS
3414
3415@kindex tbreak
3416@item tbreak @var{args}
3417Set a breakpoint enabled only for one stop. @var{args} are the
3418same as for the @code{break} command, and the breakpoint is set in the same
3419way, but the breakpoint is automatically deleted after the first time your
79a6e687 3420program stops there. @xref{Disabling, ,Disabling Breakpoints}.
c906108c 3421
c906108c 3422@kindex hbreak
ba04e063 3423@cindex hardware breakpoints
c906108c 3424@item hbreak @var{args}
d4f3574e
SS
3425Set a hardware-assisted breakpoint. @var{args} are the same as for the
3426@code{break} command and the breakpoint is set in the same way, but the
c906108c
SS
3427breakpoint requires hardware support and some target hardware may not
3428have this support. The main purpose of this is EPROM/ROM code
d4f3574e
SS
3429debugging, so you can set a breakpoint at an instruction without
3430changing the instruction. This can be used with the new trap-generation
09d4efe1 3431provided by SPARClite DSU and most x86-based targets. These targets
d4f3574e
SS
3432will generate traps when a program accesses some data or instruction
3433address that is assigned to the debug registers. However the hardware
3434breakpoint registers can take a limited number of breakpoints. For
3435example, on the DSU, only two data breakpoints can be set at a time, and
3436@value{GDBN} will reject this command if more than two are used. Delete
3437or disable unused hardware breakpoints before setting new ones
79a6e687
BW
3438(@pxref{Disabling, ,Disabling Breakpoints}).
3439@xref{Conditions, ,Break Conditions}.
9c16f35a
EZ
3440For remote targets, you can restrict the number of hardware
3441breakpoints @value{GDBN} will use, see @ref{set remote
3442hardware-breakpoint-limit}.
501eef12 3443
c906108c
SS
3444@kindex thbreak
3445@item thbreak @var{args}
3446Set a hardware-assisted breakpoint enabled only for one stop. @var{args}
3447are the same as for the @code{hbreak} command and the breakpoint is set in
5d161b24 3448the same way. However, like the @code{tbreak} command,
c906108c
SS
3449the breakpoint is automatically deleted after the
3450first time your program stops there. Also, like the @code{hbreak}
5d161b24 3451command, the breakpoint requires hardware support and some target hardware
79a6e687
BW
3452may not have this support. @xref{Disabling, ,Disabling Breakpoints}.
3453See also @ref{Conditions, ,Break Conditions}.
c906108c
SS
3454
3455@kindex rbreak
3456@cindex regular expression
8bd10a10 3457@cindex breakpoints at functions matching a regexp
c45da7e6 3458@cindex set breakpoints in many functions
c906108c 3459@item rbreak @var{regex}
c906108c 3460Set breakpoints on all functions matching the regular expression
11cf8741
JM
3461@var{regex}. This command sets an unconditional breakpoint on all
3462matches, printing a list of all breakpoints it set. Once these
3463breakpoints are set, they are treated just like the breakpoints set with
3464the @code{break} command. You can delete them, disable them, or make
3465them conditional the same way as any other breakpoint.
3466
3467The syntax of the regular expression is the standard one used with tools
3468like @file{grep}. Note that this is different from the syntax used by
3469shells, so for instance @code{foo*} matches all functions that include
3470an @code{fo} followed by zero or more @code{o}s. There is an implicit
3471@code{.*} leading and trailing the regular expression you supply, so to
3472match only functions that begin with @code{foo}, use @code{^foo}.
c906108c 3473
f7dc1244 3474@cindex non-member C@t{++} functions, set breakpoint in
b37052ae 3475When debugging C@t{++} programs, @code{rbreak} is useful for setting
c906108c
SS
3476breakpoints on overloaded functions that are not members of any special
3477classes.
c906108c 3478
f7dc1244
EZ
3479@cindex set breakpoints on all functions
3480The @code{rbreak} command can be used to set breakpoints in
3481@strong{all} the functions in a program, like this:
3482
3483@smallexample
3484(@value{GDBP}) rbreak .
3485@end smallexample
3486
8bd10a10
CM
3487@item rbreak @var{file}:@var{regex}
3488If @code{rbreak} is called with a filename qualification, it limits
3489the search for functions matching the given regular expression to the
3490specified @var{file}. This can be used, for example, to set breakpoints on
3491every function in a given file:
3492
3493@smallexample
3494(@value{GDBP}) rbreak file.c:.
3495@end smallexample
3496
3497The colon separating the filename qualifier from the regex may
3498optionally be surrounded by spaces.
3499
c906108c
SS
3500@kindex info breakpoints
3501@cindex @code{$_} and @code{info breakpoints}
e5a67952
MS
3502@item info breakpoints @r{[}@var{n}@dots{}@r{]}
3503@itemx info break @r{[}@var{n}@dots{}@r{]}
c906108c 3504Print a table of all breakpoints, watchpoints, and catchpoints set and
45ac1734 3505not deleted. Optional argument @var{n} means print information only
e5a67952
MS
3506about the specified breakpoint(s) (or watchpoint(s) or catchpoint(s)).
3507For each breakpoint, following columns are printed:
c906108c
SS
3508
3509@table @emph
3510@item Breakpoint Numbers
3511@item Type
3512Breakpoint, watchpoint, or catchpoint.
3513@item Disposition
3514Whether the breakpoint is marked to be disabled or deleted when hit.
3515@item Enabled or Disabled
3516Enabled breakpoints are marked with @samp{y}. @samp{n} marks breakpoints
b3db7447 3517that are not enabled.
c906108c 3518@item Address
fe6fbf8b 3519Where the breakpoint is in your program, as a memory address. For a
b3db7447
NR
3520pending breakpoint whose address is not yet known, this field will
3521contain @samp{<PENDING>}. Such breakpoint won't fire until a shared
3522library that has the symbol or line referred by breakpoint is loaded.
3523See below for details. A breakpoint with several locations will
3b784c4f 3524have @samp{<MULTIPLE>} in this field---see below for details.
c906108c
SS
3525@item What
3526Where the breakpoint is in the source for your program, as a file and
2650777c
JJ
3527line number. For a pending breakpoint, the original string passed to
3528the breakpoint command will be listed as it cannot be resolved until
3529the appropriate shared library is loaded in the future.
c906108c
SS
3530@end table
3531
3532@noindent
83364271
LM
3533If a breakpoint is conditional, there are two evaluation modes: ``host'' and
3534``target''. If mode is ``host'', breakpoint condition evaluation is done by
3535@value{GDBN} on the host's side. If it is ``target'', then the condition
3536is evaluated by the target. The @code{info break} command shows
3537the condition on the line following the affected breakpoint, together with
3538its condition evaluation mode in between parentheses.
3539
3540Breakpoint commands, if any, are listed after that. A pending breakpoint is
3541allowed to have a condition specified for it. The condition is not parsed for
3542validity until a shared library is loaded that allows the pending
3543breakpoint to resolve to a valid location.
c906108c
SS
3544
3545@noindent
3546@code{info break} with a breakpoint
3547number @var{n} as argument lists only that breakpoint. The
3548convenience variable @code{$_} and the default examining-address for
3549the @code{x} command are set to the address of the last breakpoint
79a6e687 3550listed (@pxref{Memory, ,Examining Memory}).
c906108c
SS
3551
3552@noindent
3553@code{info break} displays a count of the number of times the breakpoint
3554has been hit. This is especially useful in conjunction with the
3555@code{ignore} command. You can ignore a large number of breakpoint
3556hits, look at the breakpoint info to see how many times the breakpoint
3557was hit, and then run again, ignoring one less than that number. This
3558will get you quickly to the last hit of that breakpoint.
816338b5
SS
3559
3560@noindent
3561For a breakpoints with an enable count (xref) greater than 1,
3562@code{info break} also displays that count.
3563
c906108c
SS
3564@end table
3565
3566@value{GDBN} allows you to set any number of breakpoints at the same place in
3567your program. There is nothing silly or meaningless about this. When
3568the breakpoints are conditional, this is even useful
79a6e687 3569(@pxref{Conditions, ,Break Conditions}).
c906108c 3570
2e9132cc
EZ
3571@cindex multiple locations, breakpoints
3572@cindex breakpoints, multiple locations
fcda367b 3573It is possible that a breakpoint corresponds to several locations
fe6fbf8b
VP
3574in your program. Examples of this situation are:
3575
3576@itemize @bullet
f8eba3c6
TT
3577@item
3578Multiple functions in the program may have the same name.
3579
fe6fbf8b
VP
3580@item
3581For a C@t{++} constructor, the @value{NGCC} compiler generates several
3582instances of the function body, used in different cases.
3583
3584@item
3585For a C@t{++} template function, a given line in the function can
3586correspond to any number of instantiations.
3587
3588@item
3589For an inlined function, a given source line can correspond to
3590several places where that function is inlined.
fe6fbf8b
VP
3591@end itemize
3592
3593In all those cases, @value{GDBN} will insert a breakpoint at all
f8eba3c6 3594the relevant locations.
fe6fbf8b 3595
3b784c4f
EZ
3596A breakpoint with multiple locations is displayed in the breakpoint
3597table using several rows---one header row, followed by one row for
3598each breakpoint location. The header row has @samp{<MULTIPLE>} in the
3599address column. The rows for individual locations contain the actual
3600addresses for locations, and show the functions to which those
3601locations belong. The number column for a location is of the form
fe6fbf8b
VP
3602@var{breakpoint-number}.@var{location-number}.
3603
3604For example:
3b784c4f 3605
fe6fbf8b
VP
3606@smallexample
3607Num Type Disp Enb Address What
36081 breakpoint keep y <MULTIPLE>
3609 stop only if i==1
3610 breakpoint already hit 1 time
36111.1 y 0x080486a2 in void foo<int>() at t.cc:8
36121.2 y 0x080486ca in void foo<double>() at t.cc:8
3613@end smallexample
3614
3615Each location can be individually enabled or disabled by passing
3616@var{breakpoint-number}.@var{location-number} as argument to the
3b784c4f
EZ
3617@code{enable} and @code{disable} commands. Note that you cannot
3618delete the individual locations from the list, you can only delete the
16bfc218 3619entire list of locations that belong to their parent breakpoint (with
3b784c4f
EZ
3620the @kbd{delete @var{num}} command, where @var{num} is the number of
3621the parent breakpoint, 1 in the above example). Disabling or enabling
3622the parent breakpoint (@pxref{Disabling}) affects all of the locations
3623that belong to that breakpoint.
fe6fbf8b 3624
2650777c 3625@cindex pending breakpoints
fe6fbf8b 3626It's quite common to have a breakpoint inside a shared library.
3b784c4f 3627Shared libraries can be loaded and unloaded explicitly,
fe6fbf8b
VP
3628and possibly repeatedly, as the program is executed. To support
3629this use case, @value{GDBN} updates breakpoint locations whenever
3630any shared library is loaded or unloaded. Typically, you would
fcda367b 3631set a breakpoint in a shared library at the beginning of your
fe6fbf8b
VP
3632debugging session, when the library is not loaded, and when the
3633symbols from the library are not available. When you try to set
3634breakpoint, @value{GDBN} will ask you if you want to set
3b784c4f 3635a so called @dfn{pending breakpoint}---breakpoint whose address
fe6fbf8b
VP
3636is not yet resolved.
3637
3638After the program is run, whenever a new shared library is loaded,
3639@value{GDBN} reevaluates all the breakpoints. When a newly loaded
3640shared library contains the symbol or line referred to by some
3641pending breakpoint, that breakpoint is resolved and becomes an
3642ordinary breakpoint. When a library is unloaded, all breakpoints
3643that refer to its symbols or source lines become pending again.
3644
3645This logic works for breakpoints with multiple locations, too. For
3646example, if you have a breakpoint in a C@t{++} template function, and
3647a newly loaded shared library has an instantiation of that template,
3648a new location is added to the list of locations for the breakpoint.
3649
3650Except for having unresolved address, pending breakpoints do not
3651differ from regular breakpoints. You can set conditions or commands,
3652enable and disable them and perform other breakpoint operations.
3653
3654@value{GDBN} provides some additional commands for controlling what
3655happens when the @samp{break} command cannot resolve breakpoint
3656address specification to an address:
dd79a6cf
JJ
3657
3658@kindex set breakpoint pending
3659@kindex show breakpoint pending
3660@table @code
3661@item set breakpoint pending auto
3662This is the default behavior. When @value{GDBN} cannot find the breakpoint
3663location, it queries you whether a pending breakpoint should be created.
3664
3665@item set breakpoint pending on
3666This indicates that an unrecognized breakpoint location should automatically
3667result in a pending breakpoint being created.
3668
3669@item set breakpoint pending off
3670This indicates that pending breakpoints are not to be created. Any
3671unrecognized breakpoint location results in an error. This setting does
3672not affect any pending breakpoints previously created.
3673
3674@item show breakpoint pending
3675Show the current behavior setting for creating pending breakpoints.
3676@end table
2650777c 3677
fe6fbf8b
VP
3678The settings above only affect the @code{break} command and its
3679variants. Once breakpoint is set, it will be automatically updated
3680as shared libraries are loaded and unloaded.
2650777c 3681
765dc015
VP
3682@cindex automatic hardware breakpoints
3683For some targets, @value{GDBN} can automatically decide if hardware or
3684software breakpoints should be used, depending on whether the
3685breakpoint address is read-only or read-write. This applies to
3686breakpoints set with the @code{break} command as well as to internal
3687breakpoints set by commands like @code{next} and @code{finish}. For
fcda367b 3688breakpoints set with @code{hbreak}, @value{GDBN} will always use hardware
765dc015
VP
3689breakpoints.
3690
3691You can control this automatic behaviour with the following commands::
3692
3693@kindex set breakpoint auto-hw
3694@kindex show breakpoint auto-hw
3695@table @code
3696@item set breakpoint auto-hw on
3697This is the default behavior. When @value{GDBN} sets a breakpoint, it
3698will try to use the target memory map to decide if software or hardware
3699breakpoint must be used.
3700
3701@item set breakpoint auto-hw off
3702This indicates @value{GDBN} should not automatically select breakpoint
3703type. If the target provides a memory map, @value{GDBN} will warn when
3704trying to set software breakpoint at a read-only address.
3705@end table
3706
74960c60
VP
3707@value{GDBN} normally implements breakpoints by replacing the program code
3708at the breakpoint address with a special instruction, which, when
3709executed, given control to the debugger. By default, the program
3710code is so modified only when the program is resumed. As soon as
3711the program stops, @value{GDBN} restores the original instructions. This
3712behaviour guards against leaving breakpoints inserted in the
3713target should gdb abrubptly disconnect. However, with slow remote
3714targets, inserting and removing breakpoint can reduce the performance.
3715This behavior can be controlled with the following commands::
3716
3717@kindex set breakpoint always-inserted
3718@kindex show breakpoint always-inserted
3719@table @code
3720@item set breakpoint always-inserted off
33e5cbd6
PA
3721All breakpoints, including newly added by the user, are inserted in
3722the target only when the target is resumed. All breakpoints are
3723removed from the target when it stops.
74960c60
VP
3724
3725@item set breakpoint always-inserted on
3726Causes all breakpoints to be inserted in the target at all times. If
3727the user adds a new breakpoint, or changes an existing breakpoint, the
3728breakpoints in the target are updated immediately. A breakpoint is
3729removed from the target only when breakpoint itself is removed.
33e5cbd6
PA
3730
3731@cindex non-stop mode, and @code{breakpoint always-inserted}
3732@item set breakpoint always-inserted auto
3733This is the default mode. If @value{GDBN} is controlling the inferior
3734in non-stop mode (@pxref{Non-Stop Mode}), gdb behaves as if
3735@code{breakpoint always-inserted} mode is on. If @value{GDBN} is
3736controlling the inferior in all-stop mode, @value{GDBN} behaves as if
3737@code{breakpoint always-inserted} mode is off.
74960c60 3738@end table
765dc015 3739
83364271
LM
3740@value{GDBN} handles conditional breakpoints by evaluating these conditions
3741when a breakpoint breaks. If the condition is true, then the process being
3742debugged stops, otherwise the process is resumed.
3743
3744If the target supports evaluating conditions on its end, @value{GDBN} may
3745download the breakpoint, together with its conditions, to it.
3746
3747This feature can be controlled via the following commands:
3748
3749@kindex set breakpoint condition-evaluation
3750@kindex show breakpoint condition-evaluation
3751@table @code
3752@item set breakpoint condition-evaluation host
3753This option commands @value{GDBN} to evaluate the breakpoint
3754conditions on the host's side. Unconditional breakpoints are sent to
3755the target which in turn receives the triggers and reports them back to GDB
3756for condition evaluation. This is the standard evaluation mode.
3757
3758@item set breakpoint condition-evaluation target
3759This option commands @value{GDBN} to download breakpoint conditions
3760to the target at the moment of their insertion. The target
3761is responsible for evaluating the conditional expression and reporting
3762breakpoint stop events back to @value{GDBN} whenever the condition
3763is true. Due to limitations of target-side evaluation, some conditions
3764cannot be evaluated there, e.g., conditions that depend on local data
3765that is only known to the host. Examples include
3766conditional expressions involving convenience variables, complex types
3767that cannot be handled by the agent expression parser and expressions
3768that are too long to be sent over to the target, specially when the
3769target is a remote system. In these cases, the conditions will be
3770evaluated by @value{GDBN}.
3771
3772@item set breakpoint condition-evaluation auto
3773This is the default mode. If the target supports evaluating breakpoint
3774conditions on its end, @value{GDBN} will download breakpoint conditions to
3775the target (limitations mentioned previously apply). If the target does
3776not support breakpoint condition evaluation, then @value{GDBN} will fallback
3777to evaluating all these conditions on the host's side.
3778@end table
3779
3780
c906108c
SS
3781@cindex negative breakpoint numbers
3782@cindex internal @value{GDBN} breakpoints
eb12ee30
AC
3783@value{GDBN} itself sometimes sets breakpoints in your program for
3784special purposes, such as proper handling of @code{longjmp} (in C
3785programs). These internal breakpoints are assigned negative numbers,
3786starting with @code{-1}; @samp{info breakpoints} does not display them.
c906108c 3787You can see these breakpoints with the @value{GDBN} maintenance command
eb12ee30 3788@samp{maint info breakpoints} (@pxref{maint info breakpoints}).
c906108c
SS
3789
3790
6d2ebf8b 3791@node Set Watchpoints
79a6e687 3792@subsection Setting Watchpoints
c906108c
SS
3793
3794@cindex setting watchpoints
c906108c
SS
3795You can use a watchpoint to stop execution whenever the value of an
3796expression changes, without having to predict a particular place where
fd60e0df
EZ
3797this may happen. (This is sometimes called a @dfn{data breakpoint}.)
3798The expression may be as simple as the value of a single variable, or
3799as complex as many variables combined by operators. Examples include:
3800
3801@itemize @bullet
3802@item
3803A reference to the value of a single variable.
3804
3805@item
3806An address cast to an appropriate data type. For example,
3807@samp{*(int *)0x12345678} will watch a 4-byte region at the specified
3808address (assuming an @code{int} occupies 4 bytes).
3809
3810@item
3811An arbitrarily complex expression, such as @samp{a*b + c/d}. The
3812expression can use any operators valid in the program's native
3813language (@pxref{Languages}).
3814@end itemize
c906108c 3815
fa4727a6
DJ
3816You can set a watchpoint on an expression even if the expression can
3817not be evaluated yet. For instance, you can set a watchpoint on
3818@samp{*global_ptr} before @samp{global_ptr} is initialized.
3819@value{GDBN} will stop when your program sets @samp{global_ptr} and
3820the expression produces a valid value. If the expression becomes
3821valid in some other way than changing a variable (e.g.@: if the memory
3822pointed to by @samp{*global_ptr} becomes readable as the result of a
3823@code{malloc} call), @value{GDBN} may not stop until the next time
3824the expression changes.
3825
82f2d802
EZ
3826@cindex software watchpoints
3827@cindex hardware watchpoints
c906108c 3828Depending on your system, watchpoints may be implemented in software or
2df3850c 3829hardware. @value{GDBN} does software watchpointing by single-stepping your
c906108c
SS
3830program and testing the variable's value each time, which is hundreds of
3831times slower than normal execution. (But this may still be worth it, to
3832catch errors where you have no clue what part of your program is the
3833culprit.)
3834
37e4754d 3835On some systems, such as HP-UX, PowerPC, @sc{gnu}/Linux and most other
82f2d802
EZ
3836x86-based targets, @value{GDBN} includes support for hardware
3837watchpoints, which do not slow down the running of your program.
c906108c
SS
3838
3839@table @code
3840@kindex watch
9c06b0b4 3841@item watch @r{[}-l@r{|}-location@r{]} @var{expr} @r{[}thread @var{threadnum}@r{]} @r{[}mask @var{maskvalue}@r{]}
fd60e0df
EZ
3842Set a watchpoint for an expression. @value{GDBN} will break when the
3843expression @var{expr} is written into by the program and its value
3844changes. The simplest (and the most popular) use of this command is
3845to watch the value of a single variable:
3846
3847@smallexample
3848(@value{GDBP}) watch foo
3849@end smallexample
c906108c 3850
d8b2a693 3851If the command includes a @code{@r{[}thread @var{threadnum}@r{]}}
9c06b0b4 3852argument, @value{GDBN} breaks only when the thread identified by
d8b2a693
JB
3853@var{threadnum} changes the value of @var{expr}. If any other threads
3854change the value of @var{expr}, @value{GDBN} will not break. Note
3855that watchpoints restricted to a single thread in this way only work
3856with Hardware Watchpoints.
3857
06a64a0b
TT
3858Ordinarily a watchpoint respects the scope of variables in @var{expr}
3859(see below). The @code{-location} argument tells @value{GDBN} to
3860instead watch the memory referred to by @var{expr}. In this case,
3861@value{GDBN} will evaluate @var{expr}, take the address of the result,
3862and watch the memory at that address. The type of the result is used
3863to determine the size of the watched memory. If the expression's
3864result does not have an address, then @value{GDBN} will print an
3865error.
3866
9c06b0b4
TJB
3867The @code{@r{[}mask @var{maskvalue}@r{]}} argument allows creation
3868of masked watchpoints, if the current architecture supports this
3869feature (e.g., PowerPC Embedded architecture, see @ref{PowerPC
3870Embedded}.) A @dfn{masked watchpoint} specifies a mask in addition
3871to an address to watch. The mask specifies that some bits of an address
3872(the bits which are reset in the mask) should be ignored when matching
3873the address accessed by the inferior against the watchpoint address.
3874Thus, a masked watchpoint watches many addresses simultaneously---those
3875addresses whose unmasked bits are identical to the unmasked bits in the
3876watchpoint address. The @code{mask} argument implies @code{-location}.
3877Examples:
3878
3879@smallexample
3880(@value{GDBP}) watch foo mask 0xffff00ff
3881(@value{GDBP}) watch *0xdeadbeef mask 0xffffff00
3882@end smallexample
3883
c906108c 3884@kindex rwatch
9c06b0b4 3885@item rwatch @r{[}-l@r{|}-location@r{]} @var{expr} @r{[}thread @var{threadnum}@r{]} @r{[}mask @var{maskvalue}@r{]}
09d4efe1
EZ
3886Set a watchpoint that will break when the value of @var{expr} is read
3887by the program.
c906108c
SS
3888
3889@kindex awatch
9c06b0b4 3890@item awatch @r{[}-l@r{|}-location@r{]} @var{expr} @r{[}thread @var{threadnum}@r{]} @r{[}mask @var{maskvalue}@r{]}
09d4efe1
EZ
3891Set a watchpoint that will break when @var{expr} is either read from
3892or written into by the program.
c906108c 3893
e5a67952
MS
3894@kindex info watchpoints @r{[}@var{n}@dots{}@r{]}
3895@item info watchpoints @r{[}@var{n}@dots{}@r{]}
d77f58be
SS
3896This command prints a list of watchpoints, using the same format as
3897@code{info break} (@pxref{Set Breaks}).
c906108c
SS
3898@end table
3899
65d79d4b
SDJ
3900If you watch for a change in a numerically entered address you need to
3901dereference it, as the address itself is just a constant number which will
3902never change. @value{GDBN} refuses to create a watchpoint that watches
3903a never-changing value:
3904
3905@smallexample
3906(@value{GDBP}) watch 0x600850
3907Cannot watch constant value 0x600850.
3908(@value{GDBP}) watch *(int *) 0x600850
3909Watchpoint 1: *(int *) 6293584
3910@end smallexample
3911
c906108c
SS
3912@value{GDBN} sets a @dfn{hardware watchpoint} if possible. Hardware
3913watchpoints execute very quickly, and the debugger reports a change in
3914value at the exact instruction where the change occurs. If @value{GDBN}
3915cannot set a hardware watchpoint, it sets a software watchpoint, which
3916executes more slowly and reports the change in value at the next
82f2d802
EZ
3917@emph{statement}, not the instruction, after the change occurs.
3918
82f2d802
EZ
3919@cindex use only software watchpoints
3920You can force @value{GDBN} to use only software watchpoints with the
3921@kbd{set can-use-hw-watchpoints 0} command. With this variable set to
3922zero, @value{GDBN} will never try to use hardware watchpoints, even if
3923the underlying system supports them. (Note that hardware-assisted
3924watchpoints that were set @emph{before} setting
3925@code{can-use-hw-watchpoints} to zero will still use the hardware
d3e8051b 3926mechanism of watching expression values.)
c906108c 3927
9c16f35a
EZ
3928@table @code
3929@item set can-use-hw-watchpoints
3930@kindex set can-use-hw-watchpoints
3931Set whether or not to use hardware watchpoints.
3932
3933@item show can-use-hw-watchpoints
3934@kindex show can-use-hw-watchpoints
3935Show the current mode of using hardware watchpoints.
3936@end table
3937
3938For remote targets, you can restrict the number of hardware
3939watchpoints @value{GDBN} will use, see @ref{set remote
3940hardware-breakpoint-limit}.
3941
c906108c
SS
3942When you issue the @code{watch} command, @value{GDBN} reports
3943
474c8240 3944@smallexample
c906108c 3945Hardware watchpoint @var{num}: @var{expr}
474c8240 3946@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
3947
3948@noindent
3949if it was able to set a hardware watchpoint.
3950
7be570e7
JM
3951Currently, the @code{awatch} and @code{rwatch} commands can only set
3952hardware watchpoints, because accesses to data that don't change the
3953value of the watched expression cannot be detected without examining
3954every instruction as it is being executed, and @value{GDBN} does not do
3955that currently. If @value{GDBN} finds that it is unable to set a
3956hardware breakpoint with the @code{awatch} or @code{rwatch} command, it
3957will print a message like this:
3958
3959@smallexample
3960Expression cannot be implemented with read/access watchpoint.
3961@end smallexample
3962
3963Sometimes, @value{GDBN} cannot set a hardware watchpoint because the
3964data type of the watched expression is wider than what a hardware
3965watchpoint on the target machine can handle. For example, some systems
3966can only watch regions that are up to 4 bytes wide; on such systems you
3967cannot set hardware watchpoints for an expression that yields a
3968double-precision floating-point number (which is typically 8 bytes
3969wide). As a work-around, it might be possible to break the large region
3970into a series of smaller ones and watch them with separate watchpoints.
3971
3972If you set too many hardware watchpoints, @value{GDBN} might be unable
3973to insert all of them when you resume the execution of your program.
3974Since the precise number of active watchpoints is unknown until such
3975time as the program is about to be resumed, @value{GDBN} might not be
3976able to warn you about this when you set the watchpoints, and the
3977warning will be printed only when the program is resumed:
3978
3979@smallexample
3980Hardware watchpoint @var{num}: Could not insert watchpoint
3981@end smallexample
3982
3983@noindent
3984If this happens, delete or disable some of the watchpoints.
3985
fd60e0df
EZ
3986Watching complex expressions that reference many variables can also
3987exhaust the resources available for hardware-assisted watchpoints.
3988That's because @value{GDBN} needs to watch every variable in the
3989expression with separately allocated resources.
3990
c906108c 3991If you call a function interactively using @code{print} or @code{call},
2df3850c 3992any watchpoints you have set will be inactive until @value{GDBN} reaches another
c906108c
SS
3993kind of breakpoint or the call completes.
3994
7be570e7
JM
3995@value{GDBN} automatically deletes watchpoints that watch local
3996(automatic) variables, or expressions that involve such variables, when
3997they go out of scope, that is, when the execution leaves the block in
3998which these variables were defined. In particular, when the program
3999being debugged terminates, @emph{all} local variables go out of scope,
4000and so only watchpoints that watch global variables remain set. If you
4001rerun the program, you will need to set all such watchpoints again. One
4002way of doing that would be to set a code breakpoint at the entry to the
4003@code{main} function and when it breaks, set all the watchpoints.
4004
c906108c
SS
4005@cindex watchpoints and threads
4006@cindex threads and watchpoints
d983da9c
DJ
4007In multi-threaded programs, watchpoints will detect changes to the
4008watched expression from every thread.
4009
4010@quotation
4011@emph{Warning:} In multi-threaded programs, software watchpoints
53a5351d
JM
4012have only limited usefulness. If @value{GDBN} creates a software
4013watchpoint, it can only watch the value of an expression @emph{in a
4014single thread}. If you are confident that the expression can only
4015change due to the current thread's activity (and if you are also
4016confident that no other thread can become current), then you can use
4017software watchpoints as usual. However, @value{GDBN} may not notice
4018when a non-current thread's activity changes the expression. (Hardware
4019watchpoints, in contrast, watch an expression in all threads.)
c906108c 4020@end quotation
c906108c 4021
501eef12
AC
4022@xref{set remote hardware-watchpoint-limit}.
4023
6d2ebf8b 4024@node Set Catchpoints
79a6e687 4025@subsection Setting Catchpoints
d4f3574e 4026@cindex catchpoints, setting
c906108c
SS
4027@cindex exception handlers
4028@cindex event handling
4029
4030You can use @dfn{catchpoints} to cause the debugger to stop for certain
b37052ae 4031kinds of program events, such as C@t{++} exceptions or the loading of a
c906108c
SS
4032shared library. Use the @code{catch} command to set a catchpoint.
4033
4034@table @code
4035@kindex catch
4036@item catch @var{event}
4037Stop when @var{event} occurs. @var{event} can be any of the following:
4038@table @code
4039@item throw
4644b6e3 4040@cindex stop on C@t{++} exceptions
b37052ae 4041The throwing of a C@t{++} exception.
c906108c
SS
4042
4043@item catch
b37052ae 4044The catching of a C@t{++} exception.
c906108c 4045
8936fcda
JB
4046@item exception
4047@cindex Ada exception catching
4048@cindex catch Ada exceptions
4049An Ada exception being raised. If an exception name is specified
4050at the end of the command (eg @code{catch exception Program_Error}),
4051the debugger will stop only when this specific exception is raised.
4052Otherwise, the debugger stops execution when any Ada exception is raised.
4053
87f67dba
JB
4054When inserting an exception catchpoint on a user-defined exception whose
4055name is identical to one of the exceptions defined by the language, the
4056fully qualified name must be used as the exception name. Otherwise,
4057@value{GDBN} will assume that it should stop on the pre-defined exception
4058rather than the user-defined one. For instance, assuming an exception
4059called @code{Constraint_Error} is defined in package @code{Pck}, then
4060the command to use to catch such exceptions is @kbd{catch exception
4061Pck.Constraint_Error}.
4062
8936fcda
JB
4063@item exception unhandled
4064An exception that was raised but is not handled by the program.
4065
4066@item assert
4067A failed Ada assertion.
4068
c906108c 4069@item exec
4644b6e3 4070@cindex break on fork/exec
5ee187d7
DJ
4071A call to @code{exec}. This is currently only available for HP-UX
4072and @sc{gnu}/Linux.
c906108c 4073
a96d9b2e 4074@item syscall
ee8e71d4 4075@itemx syscall @r{[}@var{name} @r{|} @var{number}@r{]} @dots{}
a96d9b2e
SDJ
4076@cindex break on a system call.
4077A call to or return from a system call, a.k.a.@: @dfn{syscall}. A
4078syscall is a mechanism for application programs to request a service
4079from the operating system (OS) or one of the OS system services.
4080@value{GDBN} can catch some or all of the syscalls issued by the
4081debuggee, and show the related information for each syscall. If no
4082argument is specified, calls to and returns from all system calls
4083will be caught.
4084
4085@var{name} can be any system call name that is valid for the
4086underlying OS. Just what syscalls are valid depends on the OS. On
4087GNU and Unix systems, you can find the full list of valid syscall
4088names on @file{/usr/include/asm/unistd.h}.
4089
4090@c For MS-Windows, the syscall names and the corresponding numbers
4091@c can be found, e.g., on this URL:
4092@c http://www.metasploit.com/users/opcode/syscalls.html
4093@c but we don't support Windows syscalls yet.
4094
4095Normally, @value{GDBN} knows in advance which syscalls are valid for
4096each OS, so you can use the @value{GDBN} command-line completion
4097facilities (@pxref{Completion,, command completion}) to list the
4098available choices.
4099
4100You may also specify the system call numerically. A syscall's
4101number is the value passed to the OS's syscall dispatcher to
4102identify the requested service. When you specify the syscall by its
4103name, @value{GDBN} uses its database of syscalls to convert the name
4104into the corresponding numeric code, but using the number directly
4105may be useful if @value{GDBN}'s database does not have the complete
4106list of syscalls on your system (e.g., because @value{GDBN} lags
4107behind the OS upgrades).
4108
4109The example below illustrates how this command works if you don't provide
4110arguments to it:
4111
4112@smallexample
4113(@value{GDBP}) catch syscall
4114Catchpoint 1 (syscall)
4115(@value{GDBP}) r
4116Starting program: /tmp/catch-syscall
4117
4118Catchpoint 1 (call to syscall 'close'), \
4119 0xffffe424 in __kernel_vsyscall ()
4120(@value{GDBP}) c
4121Continuing.
4122
4123Catchpoint 1 (returned from syscall 'close'), \
4124 0xffffe424 in __kernel_vsyscall ()
4125(@value{GDBP})
4126@end smallexample
4127
4128Here is an example of catching a system call by name:
4129
4130@smallexample
4131(@value{GDBP}) catch syscall chroot
4132Catchpoint 1 (syscall 'chroot' [61])
4133(@value{GDBP}) r
4134Starting program: /tmp/catch-syscall
4135
4136Catchpoint 1 (call to syscall 'chroot'), \
4137 0xffffe424 in __kernel_vsyscall ()
4138(@value{GDBP}) c
4139Continuing.
4140
4141Catchpoint 1 (returned from syscall 'chroot'), \
4142 0xffffe424 in __kernel_vsyscall ()
4143(@value{GDBP})
4144@end smallexample
4145
4146An example of specifying a system call numerically. In the case
4147below, the syscall number has a corresponding entry in the XML
4148file, so @value{GDBN} finds its name and prints it:
4149
4150@smallexample
4151(@value{GDBP}) catch syscall 252
4152Catchpoint 1 (syscall(s) 'exit_group')
4153(@value{GDBP}) r
4154Starting program: /tmp/catch-syscall
4155
4156Catchpoint 1 (call to syscall 'exit_group'), \
4157 0xffffe424 in __kernel_vsyscall ()
4158(@value{GDBP}) c
4159Continuing.
4160
4161Program exited normally.
4162(@value{GDBP})
4163@end smallexample
4164
4165However, there can be situations when there is no corresponding name
4166in XML file for that syscall number. In this case, @value{GDBN} prints
4167a warning message saying that it was not able to find the syscall name,
4168but the catchpoint will be set anyway. See the example below:
4169
4170@smallexample
4171(@value{GDBP}) catch syscall 764
4172warning: The number '764' does not represent a known syscall.
4173Catchpoint 2 (syscall 764)
4174(@value{GDBP})
4175@end smallexample
4176
4177If you configure @value{GDBN} using the @samp{--without-expat} option,
4178it will not be able to display syscall names. Also, if your
4179architecture does not have an XML file describing its system calls,
4180you will not be able to see the syscall names. It is important to
4181notice that these two features are used for accessing the syscall
4182name database. In either case, you will see a warning like this:
4183
4184@smallexample
4185(@value{GDBP}) catch syscall
4186warning: Could not open "syscalls/i386-linux.xml"
4187warning: Could not load the syscall XML file 'syscalls/i386-linux.xml'.
4188GDB will not be able to display syscall names.
4189Catchpoint 1 (syscall)
4190(@value{GDBP})
4191@end smallexample
4192
4193Of course, the file name will change depending on your architecture and system.
4194
4195Still using the example above, you can also try to catch a syscall by its
4196number. In this case, you would see something like:
4197
4198@smallexample
4199(@value{GDBP}) catch syscall 252
4200Catchpoint 1 (syscall(s) 252)
4201@end smallexample
4202
4203Again, in this case @value{GDBN} would not be able to display syscall's names.
4204
c906108c 4205@item fork
5ee187d7
DJ
4206A call to @code{fork}. This is currently only available for HP-UX
4207and @sc{gnu}/Linux.
c906108c
SS
4208
4209@item vfork
5ee187d7
DJ
4210A call to @code{vfork}. This is currently only available for HP-UX
4211and @sc{gnu}/Linux.
c906108c 4212
edcc5120
TT
4213@item load @r{[}regexp@r{]}
4214@itemx unload @r{[}regexp@r{]}
4215The loading or unloading of a shared library. If @var{regexp} is
4216given, then the catchpoint will stop only if the regular expression
4217matches one of the affected libraries.
4218
c906108c
SS
4219@end table
4220
4221@item tcatch @var{event}
4222Set a catchpoint that is enabled only for one stop. The catchpoint is
4223automatically deleted after the first time the event is caught.
4224
4225@end table
4226
4227Use the @code{info break} command to list the current catchpoints.
4228
b37052ae 4229There are currently some limitations to C@t{++} exception handling
c906108c
SS
4230(@code{catch throw} and @code{catch catch}) in @value{GDBN}:
4231
4232@itemize @bullet
4233@item
4234If you call a function interactively, @value{GDBN} normally returns
4235control to you when the function has finished executing. If the call
4236raises an exception, however, the call may bypass the mechanism that
4237returns control to you and cause your program either to abort or to
4238simply continue running until it hits a breakpoint, catches a signal
4239that @value{GDBN} is listening for, or exits. This is the case even if
4240you set a catchpoint for the exception; catchpoints on exceptions are
4241disabled within interactive calls.
4242
4243@item
4244You cannot raise an exception interactively.
4245
4246@item
4247You cannot install an exception handler interactively.
4248@end itemize
4249
4250@cindex raise exceptions
4251Sometimes @code{catch} is not the best way to debug exception handling:
4252if you need to know exactly where an exception is raised, it is better to
4253stop @emph{before} the exception handler is called, since that way you
4254can see the stack before any unwinding takes place. If you set a
4255breakpoint in an exception handler instead, it may not be easy to find
4256out where the exception was raised.
4257
4258To stop just before an exception handler is called, you need some
b37052ae 4259knowledge of the implementation. In the case of @sc{gnu} C@t{++}, exceptions are
c906108c
SS
4260raised by calling a library function named @code{__raise_exception}
4261which has the following ANSI C interface:
4262
474c8240 4263@smallexample
c906108c 4264 /* @var{addr} is where the exception identifier is stored.
d4f3574e
SS
4265 @var{id} is the exception identifier. */
4266 void __raise_exception (void **addr, void *id);
474c8240 4267@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
4268
4269@noindent
4270To make the debugger catch all exceptions before any stack
4271unwinding takes place, set a breakpoint on @code{__raise_exception}
79a6e687 4272(@pxref{Breakpoints, ,Breakpoints; Watchpoints; and Exceptions}).
c906108c 4273
79a6e687 4274With a conditional breakpoint (@pxref{Conditions, ,Break Conditions})
c906108c
SS
4275that depends on the value of @var{id}, you can stop your program when
4276a specific exception is raised. You can use multiple conditional
4277breakpoints to stop your program when any of a number of exceptions are
4278raised.
4279
4280
6d2ebf8b 4281@node Delete Breaks
79a6e687 4282@subsection Deleting Breakpoints
c906108c
SS
4283
4284@cindex clearing breakpoints, watchpoints, catchpoints
4285@cindex deleting breakpoints, watchpoints, catchpoints
4286It is often necessary to eliminate a breakpoint, watchpoint, or
4287catchpoint once it has done its job and you no longer want your program
4288to stop there. This is called @dfn{deleting} the breakpoint. A
4289breakpoint that has been deleted no longer exists; it is forgotten.
4290
4291With the @code{clear} command you can delete breakpoints according to
4292where they are in your program. With the @code{delete} command you can
4293delete individual breakpoints, watchpoints, or catchpoints by specifying
4294their breakpoint numbers.
4295
4296It is not necessary to delete a breakpoint to proceed past it. @value{GDBN}
4297automatically ignores breakpoints on the first instruction to be executed
4298when you continue execution without changing the execution address.
4299
4300@table @code
4301@kindex clear
4302@item clear
4303Delete any breakpoints at the next instruction to be executed in the
79a6e687 4304selected stack frame (@pxref{Selection, ,Selecting a Frame}). When
c906108c
SS
4305the innermost frame is selected, this is a good way to delete a
4306breakpoint where your program just stopped.
4307
2a25a5ba
EZ
4308@item clear @var{location}
4309Delete any breakpoints set at the specified @var{location}.
4310@xref{Specify Location}, for the various forms of @var{location}; the
4311most useful ones are listed below:
4312
4313@table @code
c906108c
SS
4314@item clear @var{function}
4315@itemx clear @var{filename}:@var{function}
09d4efe1 4316Delete any breakpoints set at entry to the named @var{function}.
c906108c
SS
4317
4318@item clear @var{linenum}
4319@itemx clear @var{filename}:@var{linenum}
09d4efe1
EZ
4320Delete any breakpoints set at or within the code of the specified
4321@var{linenum} of the specified @var{filename}.
2a25a5ba 4322@end table
c906108c
SS
4323
4324@cindex delete breakpoints
4325@kindex delete
41afff9a 4326@kindex d @r{(@code{delete})}
c5394b80
JM
4327@item delete @r{[}breakpoints@r{]} @r{[}@var{range}@dots{}@r{]}
4328Delete the breakpoints, watchpoints, or catchpoints of the breakpoint
4329ranges specified as arguments. If no argument is specified, delete all
c906108c
SS
4330breakpoints (@value{GDBN} asks confirmation, unless you have @code{set
4331confirm off}). You can abbreviate this command as @code{d}.
4332@end table
4333
6d2ebf8b 4334@node Disabling
79a6e687 4335@subsection Disabling Breakpoints
c906108c 4336
4644b6e3 4337@cindex enable/disable a breakpoint
c906108c
SS
4338Rather than deleting a breakpoint, watchpoint, or catchpoint, you might
4339prefer to @dfn{disable} it. This makes the breakpoint inoperative as if
4340it had been deleted, but remembers the information on the breakpoint so
4341that you can @dfn{enable} it again later.
4342
4343You disable and enable breakpoints, watchpoints, and catchpoints with
d77f58be
SS
4344the @code{enable} and @code{disable} commands, optionally specifying
4345one or more breakpoint numbers as arguments. Use @code{info break} to
4346print a list of all breakpoints, watchpoints, and catchpoints if you
4347do not know which numbers to use.
c906108c 4348
3b784c4f
EZ
4349Disabling and enabling a breakpoint that has multiple locations
4350affects all of its locations.
4351
816338b5
SS
4352A breakpoint, watchpoint, or catchpoint can have any of several
4353different states of enablement:
c906108c
SS
4354
4355@itemize @bullet
4356@item
4357Enabled. The breakpoint stops your program. A breakpoint set
4358with the @code{break} command starts out in this state.
4359@item
4360Disabled. The breakpoint has no effect on your program.
4361@item
4362Enabled once. The breakpoint stops your program, but then becomes
d4f3574e 4363disabled.
c906108c 4364@item
816338b5
SS
4365Enabled for a count. The breakpoint stops your program for the next
4366N times, then becomes disabled.
4367@item
c906108c 4368Enabled for deletion. The breakpoint stops your program, but
d4f3574e
SS
4369immediately after it does so it is deleted permanently. A breakpoint
4370set with the @code{tbreak} command starts out in this state.
c906108c
SS
4371@end itemize
4372
4373You can use the following commands to enable or disable breakpoints,
4374watchpoints, and catchpoints:
4375
4376@table @code
c906108c 4377@kindex disable
41afff9a 4378@kindex dis @r{(@code{disable})}
c5394b80 4379@item disable @r{[}breakpoints@r{]} @r{[}@var{range}@dots{}@r{]}
c906108c
SS
4380Disable the specified breakpoints---or all breakpoints, if none are
4381listed. A disabled breakpoint has no effect but is not forgotten. All
4382options such as ignore-counts, conditions and commands are remembered in
4383case the breakpoint is enabled again later. You may abbreviate
4384@code{disable} as @code{dis}.
4385
c906108c 4386@kindex enable
c5394b80 4387@item enable @r{[}breakpoints@r{]} @r{[}@var{range}@dots{}@r{]}
c906108c
SS
4388Enable the specified breakpoints (or all defined breakpoints). They
4389become effective once again in stopping your program.
4390
c5394b80 4391@item enable @r{[}breakpoints@r{]} once @var{range}@dots{}
c906108c
SS
4392Enable the specified breakpoints temporarily. @value{GDBN} disables any
4393of these breakpoints immediately after stopping your program.
4394
816338b5
SS
4395@item enable @r{[}breakpoints@r{]} count @var{count} @var{range}@dots{}
4396Enable the specified breakpoints temporarily. @value{GDBN} records
4397@var{count} with each of the specified breakpoints, and decrements a
4398breakpoint's count when it is hit. When any count reaches 0,
4399@value{GDBN} disables that breakpoint. If a breakpoint has an ignore
4400count (@pxref{Conditions, ,Break Conditions}), that will be
4401decremented to 0 before @var{count} is affected.
4402
c5394b80 4403@item enable @r{[}breakpoints@r{]} delete @var{range}@dots{}
c906108c
SS
4404Enable the specified breakpoints to work once, then die. @value{GDBN}
4405deletes any of these breakpoints as soon as your program stops there.
09d4efe1 4406Breakpoints set by the @code{tbreak} command start out in this state.
c906108c
SS
4407@end table
4408
d4f3574e
SS
4409@c FIXME: I think the following ``Except for [...] @code{tbreak}'' is
4410@c confusing: tbreak is also initially enabled.
c906108c 4411Except for a breakpoint set with @code{tbreak} (@pxref{Set Breaks,
79a6e687 4412,Setting Breakpoints}), breakpoints that you set are initially enabled;
c906108c
SS
4413subsequently, they become disabled or enabled only when you use one of
4414the commands above. (The command @code{until} can set and delete a
4415breakpoint of its own, but it does not change the state of your other
4416breakpoints; see @ref{Continuing and Stepping, ,Continuing and
79a6e687 4417Stepping}.)
c906108c 4418
6d2ebf8b 4419@node Conditions
79a6e687 4420@subsection Break Conditions
c906108c
SS
4421@cindex conditional breakpoints
4422@cindex breakpoint conditions
4423
4424@c FIXME what is scope of break condition expr? Context where wanted?
5d161b24 4425@c in particular for a watchpoint?
c906108c
SS
4426The simplest sort of breakpoint breaks every time your program reaches a
4427specified place. You can also specify a @dfn{condition} for a
4428breakpoint. A condition is just a Boolean expression in your
4429programming language (@pxref{Expressions, ,Expressions}). A breakpoint with
4430a condition evaluates the expression each time your program reaches it,
4431and your program stops only if the condition is @emph{true}.
4432
4433This is the converse of using assertions for program validation; in that
4434situation, you want to stop when the assertion is violated---that is,
4435when the condition is false. In C, if you want to test an assertion expressed
4436by the condition @var{assert}, you should set the condition
4437@samp{! @var{assert}} on the appropriate breakpoint.
4438
4439Conditions are also accepted for watchpoints; you may not need them,
4440since a watchpoint is inspecting the value of an expression anyhow---but
4441it might be simpler, say, to just set a watchpoint on a variable name,
4442and specify a condition that tests whether the new value is an interesting
4443one.
4444
4445Break conditions can have side effects, and may even call functions in
4446your program. This can be useful, for example, to activate functions
4447that log program progress, or to use your own print functions to
99e008fe 4448format special data structures. The effects are completely predictable
c906108c
SS
4449unless there is another enabled breakpoint at the same address. (In
4450that case, @value{GDBN} might see the other breakpoint first and stop your
4451program without checking the condition of this one.) Note that
d4f3574e
SS
4452breakpoint commands are usually more convenient and flexible than break
4453conditions for the
c906108c 4454purpose of performing side effects when a breakpoint is reached
79a6e687 4455(@pxref{Break Commands, ,Breakpoint Command Lists}).
c906108c 4456
83364271
LM
4457Breakpoint conditions can also be evaluated on the target's side if
4458the target supports it. Instead of evaluating the conditions locally,
4459@value{GDBN} encodes the expression into an agent expression
4460(@pxref{Agent Expressions}) suitable for execution on the target,
4461independently of @value{GDBN}. Global variables become raw memory
4462locations, locals become stack accesses, and so forth.
4463
4464In this case, @value{GDBN} will only be notified of a breakpoint trigger
4465when its condition evaluates to true. This mechanism may provide faster
4466response times depending on the performance characteristics of the target
4467since it does not need to keep @value{GDBN} informed about
4468every breakpoint trigger, even those with false conditions.
4469
c906108c
SS
4470Break conditions can be specified when a breakpoint is set, by using
4471@samp{if} in the arguments to the @code{break} command. @xref{Set
79a6e687 4472Breaks, ,Setting Breakpoints}. They can also be changed at any time
c906108c 4473with the @code{condition} command.
53a5351d 4474
c906108c
SS
4475You can also use the @code{if} keyword with the @code{watch} command.
4476The @code{catch} command does not recognize the @code{if} keyword;
4477@code{condition} is the only way to impose a further condition on a
4478catchpoint.
c906108c
SS
4479
4480@table @code
4481@kindex condition
4482@item condition @var{bnum} @var{expression}
4483Specify @var{expression} as the break condition for breakpoint,
4484watchpoint, or catchpoint number @var{bnum}. After you set a condition,
4485breakpoint @var{bnum} stops your program only if the value of
4486@var{expression} is true (nonzero, in C). When you use
4487@code{condition}, @value{GDBN} checks @var{expression} immediately for
4488syntactic correctness, and to determine whether symbols in it have
d4f3574e
SS
4489referents in the context of your breakpoint. If @var{expression} uses
4490symbols not referenced in the context of the breakpoint, @value{GDBN}
4491prints an error message:
4492
474c8240 4493@smallexample
d4f3574e 4494No symbol "foo" in current context.
474c8240 4495@end smallexample
d4f3574e
SS
4496
4497@noindent
c906108c
SS
4498@value{GDBN} does
4499not actually evaluate @var{expression} at the time the @code{condition}
d4f3574e
SS
4500command (or a command that sets a breakpoint with a condition, like
4501@code{break if @dots{}}) is given, however. @xref{Expressions, ,Expressions}.
c906108c
SS
4502
4503@item condition @var{bnum}
4504Remove the condition from breakpoint number @var{bnum}. It becomes
4505an ordinary unconditional breakpoint.
4506@end table
4507
4508@cindex ignore count (of breakpoint)
4509A special case of a breakpoint condition is to stop only when the
4510breakpoint has been reached a certain number of times. This is so
4511useful that there is a special way to do it, using the @dfn{ignore
4512count} of the breakpoint. Every breakpoint has an ignore count, which
4513is an integer. Most of the time, the ignore count is zero, and
4514therefore has no effect. But if your program reaches a breakpoint whose
4515ignore count is positive, then instead of stopping, it just decrements
4516the ignore count by one and continues. As a result, if the ignore count
4517value is @var{n}, the breakpoint does not stop the next @var{n} times
4518your program reaches it.
4519
4520@table @code
4521@kindex ignore
4522@item ignore @var{bnum} @var{count}
4523Set the ignore count of breakpoint number @var{bnum} to @var{count}.
4524The next @var{count} times the breakpoint is reached, your program's
4525execution does not stop; other than to decrement the ignore count, @value{GDBN}
4526takes no action.
4527
4528To make the breakpoint stop the next time it is reached, specify
4529a count of zero.
4530
4531When you use @code{continue} to resume execution of your program from a
4532breakpoint, you can specify an ignore count directly as an argument to
4533@code{continue}, rather than using @code{ignore}. @xref{Continuing and
79a6e687 4534Stepping,,Continuing and Stepping}.
c906108c
SS
4535
4536If a breakpoint has a positive ignore count and a condition, the
4537condition is not checked. Once the ignore count reaches zero,
4538@value{GDBN} resumes checking the condition.
4539
4540You could achieve the effect of the ignore count with a condition such
4541as @w{@samp{$foo-- <= 0}} using a debugger convenience variable that
4542is decremented each time. @xref{Convenience Vars, ,Convenience
79a6e687 4543Variables}.
c906108c
SS
4544@end table
4545
4546Ignore counts apply to breakpoints, watchpoints, and catchpoints.
4547
4548
6d2ebf8b 4549@node Break Commands
79a6e687 4550@subsection Breakpoint Command Lists
c906108c
SS
4551
4552@cindex breakpoint commands
4553You can give any breakpoint (or watchpoint or catchpoint) a series of
4554commands to execute when your program stops due to that breakpoint. For
4555example, you might want to print the values of certain expressions, or
4556enable other breakpoints.
4557
4558@table @code
4559@kindex commands
ca91424e 4560@kindex end@r{ (breakpoint commands)}
95a42b64 4561@item commands @r{[}@var{range}@dots{}@r{]}
c906108c
SS
4562@itemx @dots{} @var{command-list} @dots{}
4563@itemx end
95a42b64 4564Specify a list of commands for the given breakpoints. The commands
c906108c
SS
4565themselves appear on the following lines. Type a line containing just
4566@code{end} to terminate the commands.
4567
4568To remove all commands from a breakpoint, type @code{commands} and
4569follow it immediately with @code{end}; that is, give no commands.
4570
95a42b64
TT
4571With no argument, @code{commands} refers to the last breakpoint,
4572watchpoint, or catchpoint set (not to the breakpoint most recently
4573encountered). If the most recent breakpoints were set with a single
4574command, then the @code{commands} will apply to all the breakpoints
4575set by that command. This applies to breakpoints set by
86b17b60
PA
4576@code{rbreak}, and also applies when a single @code{break} command
4577creates multiple breakpoints (@pxref{Ambiguous Expressions,,Ambiguous
4578Expressions}).
c906108c
SS
4579@end table
4580
4581Pressing @key{RET} as a means of repeating the last @value{GDBN} command is
4582disabled within a @var{command-list}.
4583
4584You can use breakpoint commands to start your program up again. Simply
4585use the @code{continue} command, or @code{step}, or any other command
4586that resumes execution.
4587
4588Any other commands in the command list, after a command that resumes
4589execution, are ignored. This is because any time you resume execution
4590(even with a simple @code{next} or @code{step}), you may encounter
4591another breakpoint---which could have its own command list, leading to
4592ambiguities about which list to execute.
4593
4594@kindex silent
4595If the first command you specify in a command list is @code{silent}, the
4596usual message about stopping at a breakpoint is not printed. This may
4597be desirable for breakpoints that are to print a specific message and
4598then continue. If none of the remaining commands print anything, you
4599see no sign that the breakpoint was reached. @code{silent} is
4600meaningful only at the beginning of a breakpoint command list.
4601
4602The commands @code{echo}, @code{output}, and @code{printf} allow you to
4603print precisely controlled output, and are often useful in silent
79a6e687 4604breakpoints. @xref{Output, ,Commands for Controlled Output}.
c906108c
SS
4605
4606For example, here is how you could use breakpoint commands to print the
4607value of @code{x} at entry to @code{foo} whenever @code{x} is positive.
4608
474c8240 4609@smallexample
c906108c
SS
4610break foo if x>0
4611commands
4612silent
4613printf "x is %d\n",x
4614cont
4615end
474c8240 4616@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
4617
4618One application for breakpoint commands is to compensate for one bug so
4619you can test for another. Put a breakpoint just after the erroneous line
4620of code, give it a condition to detect the case in which something
4621erroneous has been done, and give it commands to assign correct values
4622to any variables that need them. End with the @code{continue} command
4623so that your program does not stop, and start with the @code{silent}
4624command so that no output is produced. Here is an example:
4625
474c8240 4626@smallexample
c906108c
SS
4627break 403
4628commands
4629silent
4630set x = y + 4
4631cont
4632end
474c8240 4633@end smallexample
c906108c 4634
e7e0cddf
SS
4635@node Dynamic Printf
4636@subsection Dynamic Printf
4637
4638@cindex dynamic printf
4639@cindex dprintf
4640The dynamic printf command @code{dprintf} combines a breakpoint with
4641formatted printing of your program's data to give you the effect of
4642inserting @code{printf} calls into your program on-the-fly, without
4643having to recompile it.
4644
4645In its most basic form, the output goes to the GDB console. However,
4646you can set the variable @code{dprintf-style} for alternate handling.
4647For instance, you can ask to format the output by calling your
4648program's @code{printf} function. This has the advantage that the
4649characters go to the program's output device, so they can recorded in
4650redirects to files and so forth.
4651
4652@table @code
4653@kindex dprintf
4654@item dprintf @var{location},@var{template},@var{expression}[,@var{expression}@dots{}]
4655Whenever execution reaches @var{location}, print the values of one or
4656more @var{expressions} under the control of the string @var{template}.
4657To print several values, separate them with commas.
4658
4659@item set dprintf-style @var{style}
4660Set the dprintf output to be handled in one of several different
4661styles enumerated below. A change of style affects all existing
4662dynamic printfs immediately. (If you need individual control over the
4663print commands, simply define normal breakpoints with
4664explicitly-supplied command lists.)
4665
4666@item gdb
4667@kindex dprintf-style gdb
4668Handle the output using the @value{GDBN} @code{printf} command.
4669
4670@item call
4671@kindex dprintf-style call
4672Handle the output by calling a function in your program (normally
4673@code{printf}).
4674
4675@item set dprintf-function @var{function}
4676Set the function to call if the dprintf style is @code{call}. By
4677default its value is @code{printf}. You may set it to any expression.
4678that @value{GDBN} can evaluate to a function, as per the @code{call}
4679command.
4680
4681@item set dprintf-channel @var{channel}
4682Set a ``channel'' for dprintf. If set to a non-empty value,
4683@value{GDBN} will evaluate it as an expression and pass the result as
4684a first argument to the @code{dprintf-function}, in the manner of
4685@code{fprintf} and similar functions. Otherwise, the dprintf format
4686string will be the first argument, in the manner of @code{printf}.
4687
4688As an example, if you wanted @code{dprintf} output to go to a logfile
4689that is a standard I/O stream assigned to the variable @code{mylog},
4690you could do the following:
4691
4692@example
4693(gdb) set dprintf-style call
4694(gdb) set dprintf-function fprintf
4695(gdb) set dprintf-channel mylog
4696(gdb) dprintf 25,"at line 25, glob=%d\n",glob
4697Dprintf 1 at 0x123456: file main.c, line 25.
4698(gdb) info break
46991 dprintf keep y 0x00123456 in main at main.c:25
4700 call (void) fprintf (mylog,"at line 25, glob=%d\n",glob)
4701 continue
4702(gdb)
4703@end example
4704
4705Note that the @code{info break} displays the dynamic printf commands
4706as normal breakpoint commands; you can thus easily see the effect of
4707the variable settings.
4708
4709@end table
4710
4711@value{GDBN} does not check the validity of function and channel,
4712relying on you to supply values that are meaningful for the contexts
4713in which they are being used. For instance, the function and channel
4714may be the values of local variables, but if that is the case, then
4715all enabled dynamic prints must be at locations within the scope of
4716those locals. If evaluation fails, @value{GDBN} will report an error.
4717
6149aea9
PA
4718@node Save Breakpoints
4719@subsection How to save breakpoints to a file
4720
4721To save breakpoint definitions to a file use the @w{@code{save
4722breakpoints}} command.
4723
4724@table @code
4725@kindex save breakpoints
4726@cindex save breakpoints to a file for future sessions
4727@item save breakpoints [@var{filename}]
4728This command saves all current breakpoint definitions together with
4729their commands and ignore counts, into a file @file{@var{filename}}
4730suitable for use in a later debugging session. This includes all
4731types of breakpoints (breakpoints, watchpoints, catchpoints,
4732tracepoints). To read the saved breakpoint definitions, use the
4733@code{source} command (@pxref{Command Files}). Note that watchpoints
4734with expressions involving local variables may fail to be recreated
4735because it may not be possible to access the context where the
4736watchpoint is valid anymore. Because the saved breakpoint definitions
4737are simply a sequence of @value{GDBN} commands that recreate the
4738breakpoints, you can edit the file in your favorite editing program,
4739and remove the breakpoint definitions you're not interested in, or
4740that can no longer be recreated.
4741@end table
4742
62e5f89c
SDJ
4743@node Static Probe Points
4744@subsection Static Probe Points
4745
4746@cindex static probe point, SystemTap
4747@value{GDBN} supports @dfn{SDT} probes in the code. @acronym{SDT} stands
4748for Statically Defined Tracing, and the probes are designed to have a tiny
4749runtime code and data footprint, and no dynamic relocations. They are
4750usable from assembly, C and C@t{++} languages. See
4751@uref{http://sourceware.org/systemtap/wiki/UserSpaceProbeImplementation}
4752for a good reference on how the @acronym{SDT} probes are implemented.
4753
4754Currently, @code{SystemTap} (@uref{http://sourceware.org/systemtap/})
4755@acronym{SDT} probes are supported on ELF-compatible systems. See
4756@uref{http://sourceware.org/systemtap/wiki/AddingUserSpaceProbingToApps}
4757for more information on how to add @code{SystemTap} @acronym{SDT} probes
4758in your applications.
4759
4760@cindex semaphores on static probe points
4761Some probes have an associated semaphore variable; for instance, this
4762happens automatically if you defined your probe using a DTrace-style
4763@file{.d} file. If your probe has a semaphore, @value{GDBN} will
4764automatically enable it when you specify a breakpoint using the
4765@samp{-probe-stap} notation. But, if you put a breakpoint at a probe's
4766location by some other method (e.g., @code{break file:line}), then
4767@value{GDBN} will not automatically set the semaphore.
4768
4769You can examine the available static static probes using @code{info
4770probes}, with optional arguments:
4771
4772@table @code
4773@kindex info probes
4774@item info probes stap @r{[}@var{provider} @r{[}@var{name} @r{[}@var{objfile}@r{]}@r{]}@r{]}
4775If given, @var{provider} is a regular expression used to match against provider
4776names when selecting which probes to list. If omitted, probes by all
4777probes from all providers are listed.
4778
4779If given, @var{name} is a regular expression to match against probe names
4780when selecting which probes to list. If omitted, probe names are not
4781considered when deciding whether to display them.
4782
4783If given, @var{objfile} is a regular expression used to select which
4784object files (executable or shared libraries) to examine. If not
4785given, all object files are considered.
4786
4787@item info probes all
4788List the available static probes, from all types.
4789@end table
4790
4791@vindex $_probe_arg@r{, convenience variable}
4792A probe may specify up to twelve arguments. These are available at the
4793point at which the probe is defined---that is, when the current PC is
4794at the probe's location. The arguments are available using the
4795convenience variables (@pxref{Convenience Vars})
4796@code{$_probe_arg0}@dots{}@code{$_probe_arg11}. Each probe argument is
4797an integer of the appropriate size; types are not preserved. The
4798convenience variable @code{$_probe_argc} holds the number of arguments
4799at the current probe point.
4800
4801These variables are always available, but attempts to access them at
4802any location other than a probe point will cause @value{GDBN} to give
4803an error message.
4804
4805
c906108c 4806@c @ifclear BARETARGET
6d2ebf8b 4807@node Error in Breakpoints
d4f3574e 4808@subsection ``Cannot insert breakpoints''
c906108c 4809
fa3a767f
PA
4810If you request too many active hardware-assisted breakpoints and
4811watchpoints, you will see this error message:
d4f3574e
SS
4812
4813@c FIXME: the precise wording of this message may change; the relevant
4814@c source change is not committed yet (Sep 3, 1999).
4815@smallexample
4816Stopped; cannot insert breakpoints.
4817You may have requested too many hardware breakpoints and watchpoints.
4818@end smallexample
4819
4820@noindent
4821This message is printed when you attempt to resume the program, since
4822only then @value{GDBN} knows exactly how many hardware breakpoints and
4823watchpoints it needs to insert.
4824
4825When this message is printed, you need to disable or remove some of the
4826hardware-assisted breakpoints and watchpoints, and then continue.
4827
79a6e687 4828@node Breakpoint-related Warnings
1485d690
KB
4829@subsection ``Breakpoint address adjusted...''
4830@cindex breakpoint address adjusted
4831
4832Some processor architectures place constraints on the addresses at
4833which breakpoints may be placed. For architectures thus constrained,
4834@value{GDBN} will attempt to adjust the breakpoint's address to comply
4835with the constraints dictated by the architecture.
4836
4837One example of such an architecture is the Fujitsu FR-V. The FR-V is
4838a VLIW architecture in which a number of RISC-like instructions may be
4839bundled together for parallel execution. The FR-V architecture
4840constrains the location of a breakpoint instruction within such a
4841bundle to the instruction with the lowest address. @value{GDBN}
4842honors this constraint by adjusting a breakpoint's address to the
4843first in the bundle.
4844
4845It is not uncommon for optimized code to have bundles which contain
4846instructions from different source statements, thus it may happen that
4847a breakpoint's address will be adjusted from one source statement to
4848another. Since this adjustment may significantly alter @value{GDBN}'s
4849breakpoint related behavior from what the user expects, a warning is
4850printed when the breakpoint is first set and also when the breakpoint
4851is hit.
4852
4853A warning like the one below is printed when setting a breakpoint
4854that's been subject to address adjustment:
4855
4856@smallexample
4857warning: Breakpoint address adjusted from 0x00010414 to 0x00010410.
4858@end smallexample
4859
4860Such warnings are printed both for user settable and @value{GDBN}'s
4861internal breakpoints. If you see one of these warnings, you should
4862verify that a breakpoint set at the adjusted address will have the
4863desired affect. If not, the breakpoint in question may be removed and
b383017d 4864other breakpoints may be set which will have the desired behavior.
1485d690
KB
4865E.g., it may be sufficient to place the breakpoint at a later
4866instruction. A conditional breakpoint may also be useful in some
4867cases to prevent the breakpoint from triggering too often.
4868
4869@value{GDBN} will also issue a warning when stopping at one of these
4870adjusted breakpoints:
4871
4872@smallexample
4873warning: Breakpoint 1 address previously adjusted from 0x00010414
4874to 0x00010410.
4875@end smallexample
4876
4877When this warning is encountered, it may be too late to take remedial
4878action except in cases where the breakpoint is hit earlier or more
4879frequently than expected.
d4f3574e 4880
6d2ebf8b 4881@node Continuing and Stepping
79a6e687 4882@section Continuing and Stepping
c906108c
SS
4883
4884@cindex stepping
4885@cindex continuing
4886@cindex resuming execution
4887@dfn{Continuing} means resuming program execution until your program
4888completes normally. In contrast, @dfn{stepping} means executing just
4889one more ``step'' of your program, where ``step'' may mean either one
4890line of source code, or one machine instruction (depending on what
7a292a7a
SS
4891particular command you use). Either when continuing or when stepping,
4892your program may stop even sooner, due to a breakpoint or a signal. (If
d4f3574e
SS
4893it stops due to a signal, you may want to use @code{handle}, or use
4894@samp{signal 0} to resume execution. @xref{Signals, ,Signals}.)
c906108c
SS
4895
4896@table @code
4897@kindex continue
41afff9a
EZ
4898@kindex c @r{(@code{continue})}
4899@kindex fg @r{(resume foreground execution)}
c906108c
SS
4900@item continue @r{[}@var{ignore-count}@r{]}
4901@itemx c @r{[}@var{ignore-count}@r{]}
4902@itemx fg @r{[}@var{ignore-count}@r{]}
4903Resume program execution, at the address where your program last stopped;
4904any breakpoints set at that address are bypassed. The optional argument
4905@var{ignore-count} allows you to specify a further number of times to
4906ignore a breakpoint at this location; its effect is like that of
79a6e687 4907@code{ignore} (@pxref{Conditions, ,Break Conditions}).
c906108c
SS
4908
4909The argument @var{ignore-count} is meaningful only when your program
4910stopped due to a breakpoint. At other times, the argument to
4911@code{continue} is ignored.
4912
d4f3574e
SS
4913The synonyms @code{c} and @code{fg} (for @dfn{foreground}, as the
4914debugged program is deemed to be the foreground program) are provided
4915purely for convenience, and have exactly the same behavior as
4916@code{continue}.
c906108c
SS
4917@end table
4918
4919To resume execution at a different place, you can use @code{return}
79a6e687 4920(@pxref{Returning, ,Returning from a Function}) to go back to the
c906108c 4921calling function; or @code{jump} (@pxref{Jumping, ,Continuing at a
79a6e687 4922Different Address}) to go to an arbitrary location in your program.
c906108c
SS
4923
4924A typical technique for using stepping is to set a breakpoint
79a6e687 4925(@pxref{Breakpoints, ,Breakpoints; Watchpoints; and Catchpoints}) at the
c906108c
SS
4926beginning of the function or the section of your program where a problem
4927is believed to lie, run your program until it stops at that breakpoint,
4928and then step through the suspect area, examining the variables that are
4929interesting, until you see the problem happen.
4930
4931@table @code
4932@kindex step
41afff9a 4933@kindex s @r{(@code{step})}
c906108c
SS
4934@item step
4935Continue running your program until control reaches a different source
4936line, then stop it and return control to @value{GDBN}. This command is
4937abbreviated @code{s}.
4938
4939@quotation
4940@c "without debugging information" is imprecise; actually "without line
4941@c numbers in the debugging information". (gcc -g1 has debugging info but
4942@c not line numbers). But it seems complex to try to make that
4943@c distinction here.
4944@emph{Warning:} If you use the @code{step} command while control is
4945within a function that was compiled without debugging information,
4946execution proceeds until control reaches a function that does have
4947debugging information. Likewise, it will not step into a function which
4948is compiled without debugging information. To step through functions
4949without debugging information, use the @code{stepi} command, described
4950below.
4951@end quotation
4952
4a92d011
EZ
4953The @code{step} command only stops at the first instruction of a source
4954line. This prevents the multiple stops that could otherwise occur in
4955@code{switch} statements, @code{for} loops, etc. @code{step} continues
4956to stop if a function that has debugging information is called within
4957the line. In other words, @code{step} @emph{steps inside} any functions
4958called within the line.
c906108c 4959
d4f3574e
SS
4960Also, the @code{step} command only enters a function if there is line
4961number information for the function. Otherwise it acts like the
5d161b24 4962@code{next} command. This avoids problems when using @code{cc -gl}
eb17f351 4963on @acronym{MIPS} machines. Previously, @code{step} entered subroutines if there
5d161b24 4964was any debugging information about the routine.
c906108c
SS
4965
4966@item step @var{count}
4967Continue running as in @code{step}, but do so @var{count} times. If a
7a292a7a
SS
4968breakpoint is reached, or a signal not related to stepping occurs before
4969@var{count} steps, stepping stops right away.
c906108c
SS
4970
4971@kindex next
41afff9a 4972@kindex n @r{(@code{next})}
c906108c
SS
4973@item next @r{[}@var{count}@r{]}
4974Continue to the next source line in the current (innermost) stack frame.
7a292a7a
SS
4975This is similar to @code{step}, but function calls that appear within
4976the line of code are executed without stopping. Execution stops when
4977control reaches a different line of code at the original stack level
4978that was executing when you gave the @code{next} command. This command
4979is abbreviated @code{n}.
c906108c
SS
4980
4981An argument @var{count} is a repeat count, as for @code{step}.
4982
4983
4984@c FIX ME!! Do we delete this, or is there a way it fits in with
4985@c the following paragraph? --- Vctoria
4986@c
4987@c @code{next} within a function that lacks debugging information acts like
4988@c @code{step}, but any function calls appearing within the code of the
4989@c function are executed without stopping.
4990
d4f3574e
SS
4991The @code{next} command only stops at the first instruction of a
4992source line. This prevents multiple stops that could otherwise occur in
4a92d011 4993@code{switch} statements, @code{for} loops, etc.
c906108c 4994
b90a5f51
CF
4995@kindex set step-mode
4996@item set step-mode
4997@cindex functions without line info, and stepping
4998@cindex stepping into functions with no line info
4999@itemx set step-mode on
4a92d011 5000The @code{set step-mode on} command causes the @code{step} command to
b90a5f51
CF
5001stop at the first instruction of a function which contains no debug line
5002information rather than stepping over it.
5003
4a92d011
EZ
5004This is useful in cases where you may be interested in inspecting the
5005machine instructions of a function which has no symbolic info and do not
5006want @value{GDBN} to automatically skip over this function.
b90a5f51
CF
5007
5008@item set step-mode off
4a92d011 5009Causes the @code{step} command to step over any functions which contains no
b90a5f51
CF
5010debug information. This is the default.
5011
9c16f35a
EZ
5012@item show step-mode
5013Show whether @value{GDBN} will stop in or step over functions without
5014source line debug information.
5015
c906108c 5016@kindex finish
8dfa32fc 5017@kindex fin @r{(@code{finish})}
c906108c
SS
5018@item finish
5019Continue running until just after function in the selected stack frame
8dfa32fc
JB
5020returns. Print the returned value (if any). This command can be
5021abbreviated as @code{fin}.
c906108c
SS
5022
5023Contrast this with the @code{return} command (@pxref{Returning,
79a6e687 5024,Returning from a Function}).
c906108c
SS
5025
5026@kindex until
41afff9a 5027@kindex u @r{(@code{until})}
09d4efe1 5028@cindex run until specified location
c906108c
SS
5029@item until
5030@itemx u
5031Continue running until a source line past the current line, in the
5032current stack frame, is reached. This command is used to avoid single
5033stepping through a loop more than once. It is like the @code{next}
5034command, except that when @code{until} encounters a jump, it
5035automatically continues execution until the program counter is greater
5036than the address of the jump.
5037
5038This means that when you reach the end of a loop after single stepping
5039though it, @code{until} makes your program continue execution until it
5040exits the loop. In contrast, a @code{next} command at the end of a loop
5041simply steps back to the beginning of the loop, which forces you to step
5042through the next iteration.
5043
5044@code{until} always stops your program if it attempts to exit the current
5045stack frame.
5046
5047@code{until} may produce somewhat counterintuitive results if the order
5048of machine code does not match the order of the source lines. For
5049example, in the following excerpt from a debugging session, the @code{f}
5050(@code{frame}) command shows that execution is stopped at line
5051@code{206}; yet when we use @code{until}, we get to line @code{195}:
5052
474c8240 5053@smallexample
c906108c
SS
5054(@value{GDBP}) f
5055#0 main (argc=4, argv=0xf7fffae8) at m4.c:206
5056206 expand_input();
5057(@value{GDBP}) until
5058195 for ( ; argc > 0; NEXTARG) @{
474c8240 5059@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
5060
5061This happened because, for execution efficiency, the compiler had
5062generated code for the loop closure test at the end, rather than the
5063start, of the loop---even though the test in a C @code{for}-loop is
5064written before the body of the loop. The @code{until} command appeared
5065to step back to the beginning of the loop when it advanced to this
5066expression; however, it has not really gone to an earlier
5067statement---not in terms of the actual machine code.
5068
5069@code{until} with no argument works by means of single
5070instruction stepping, and hence is slower than @code{until} with an
5071argument.
5072
5073@item until @var{location}
5074@itemx u @var{location}
5075Continue running your program until either the specified location is
5076reached, or the current stack frame returns. @var{location} is any of
2a25a5ba
EZ
5077the forms described in @ref{Specify Location}.
5078This form of the command uses temporary breakpoints, and
c60eb6f1
EZ
5079hence is quicker than @code{until} without an argument. The specified
5080location is actually reached only if it is in the current frame. This
5081implies that @code{until} can be used to skip over recursive function
5082invocations. For instance in the code below, if the current location is
5083line @code{96}, issuing @code{until 99} will execute the program up to
db2e3e2e 5084line @code{99} in the same invocation of factorial, i.e., after the inner
c60eb6f1
EZ
5085invocations have returned.
5086
5087@smallexample
508894 int factorial (int value)
508995 @{
509096 if (value > 1) @{
509197 value *= factorial (value - 1);
509298 @}
509399 return (value);
5094100 @}
5095@end smallexample
5096
5097
5098@kindex advance @var{location}
984359d2 5099@item advance @var{location}
09d4efe1 5100Continue running the program up to the given @var{location}. An argument is
2a25a5ba
EZ
5101required, which should be of one of the forms described in
5102@ref{Specify Location}.
5103Execution will also stop upon exit from the current stack
c60eb6f1
EZ
5104frame. This command is similar to @code{until}, but @code{advance} will
5105not skip over recursive function calls, and the target location doesn't
5106have to be in the same frame as the current one.
5107
c906108c
SS
5108
5109@kindex stepi
41afff9a 5110@kindex si @r{(@code{stepi})}
c906108c 5111@item stepi
96a2c332 5112@itemx stepi @var{arg}
c906108c
SS
5113@itemx si
5114Execute one machine instruction, then stop and return to the debugger.
5115
5116It is often useful to do @samp{display/i $pc} when stepping by machine
5117instructions. This makes @value{GDBN} automatically display the next
5118instruction to be executed, each time your program stops. @xref{Auto
79a6e687 5119Display,, Automatic Display}.
c906108c
SS
5120
5121An argument is a repeat count, as in @code{step}.
5122
5123@need 750
5124@kindex nexti
41afff9a 5125@kindex ni @r{(@code{nexti})}
c906108c 5126@item nexti
96a2c332 5127@itemx nexti @var{arg}
c906108c
SS
5128@itemx ni
5129Execute one machine instruction, but if it is a function call,
5130proceed until the function returns.
5131
5132An argument is a repeat count, as in @code{next}.
5133@end table
5134
aad1c02c
TT
5135@node Skipping Over Functions and Files
5136@section Skipping Over Functions and Files
1bfeeb0f
JL
5137@cindex skipping over functions and files
5138
5139The program you are debugging may contain some functions which are
5140uninteresting to debug. The @code{skip} comand lets you tell @value{GDBN} to
5141skip a function or all functions in a file when stepping.
5142
5143For example, consider the following C function:
5144
5145@smallexample
5146101 int func()
5147102 @{
5148103 foo(boring());
5149104 bar(boring());
5150105 @}
5151@end smallexample
5152
5153@noindent
5154Suppose you wish to step into the functions @code{foo} and @code{bar}, but you
5155are not interested in stepping through @code{boring}. If you run @code{step}
5156at line 103, you'll enter @code{boring()}, but if you run @code{next}, you'll
5157step over both @code{foo} and @code{boring}!
5158
5159One solution is to @code{step} into @code{boring} and use the @code{finish}
5160command to immediately exit it. But this can become tedious if @code{boring}
5161is called from many places.
5162
5163A more flexible solution is to execute @kbd{skip boring}. This instructs
5164@value{GDBN} never to step into @code{boring}. Now when you execute
5165@code{step} at line 103, you'll step over @code{boring} and directly into
5166@code{foo}.
5167
5168You can also instruct @value{GDBN} to skip all functions in a file, with, for
5169example, @code{skip file boring.c}.
5170
5171@table @code
5172@kindex skip function
5173@item skip @r{[}@var{linespec}@r{]}
5174@itemx skip function @r{[}@var{linespec}@r{]}
5175After running this command, the function named by @var{linespec} or the
5176function containing the line named by @var{linespec} will be skipped over when
983fb131 5177stepping. @xref{Specify Location}.
1bfeeb0f
JL
5178
5179If you do not specify @var{linespec}, the function you're currently debugging
5180will be skipped.
5181
5182(If you have a function called @code{file} that you want to skip, use
5183@kbd{skip function file}.)
5184
5185@kindex skip file
5186@item skip file @r{[}@var{filename}@r{]}
5187After running this command, any function whose source lives in @var{filename}
5188will be skipped over when stepping.
5189
5190If you do not specify @var{filename}, functions whose source lives in the file
5191you're currently debugging will be skipped.
5192@end table
5193
5194Skips can be listed, deleted, disabled, and enabled, much like breakpoints.
5195These are the commands for managing your list of skips:
5196
5197@table @code
5198@kindex info skip
5199@item info skip @r{[}@var{range}@r{]}
5200Print details about the specified skip(s). If @var{range} is not specified,
5201print a table with details about all functions and files marked for skipping.
5202@code{info skip} prints the following information about each skip:
5203
5204@table @emph
5205@item Identifier
5206A number identifying this skip.
5207@item Type
5208The type of this skip, either @samp{function} or @samp{file}.
5209@item Enabled or Disabled
5210Enabled skips are marked with @samp{y}. Disabled skips are marked with @samp{n}.
5211@item Address
5212For function skips, this column indicates the address in memory of the function
5213being skipped. If you've set a function skip on a function which has not yet
5214been loaded, this field will contain @samp{<PENDING>}. Once a shared library
5215which has the function is loaded, @code{info skip} will show the function's
5216address here.
5217@item What
5218For file skips, this field contains the filename being skipped. For functions
5219skips, this field contains the function name and its line number in the file
5220where it is defined.
5221@end table
5222
5223@kindex skip delete
5224@item skip delete @r{[}@var{range}@r{]}
5225Delete the specified skip(s). If @var{range} is not specified, delete all
5226skips.
5227
5228@kindex skip enable
5229@item skip enable @r{[}@var{range}@r{]}
5230Enable the specified skip(s). If @var{range} is not specified, enable all
5231skips.
5232
5233@kindex skip disable
5234@item skip disable @r{[}@var{range}@r{]}
5235Disable the specified skip(s). If @var{range} is not specified, disable all
5236skips.
5237
5238@end table
5239
6d2ebf8b 5240@node Signals
c906108c
SS
5241@section Signals
5242@cindex signals
5243
5244A signal is an asynchronous event that can happen in a program. The
5245operating system defines the possible kinds of signals, and gives each
5246kind a name and a number. For example, in Unix @code{SIGINT} is the
c8aa23ab 5247signal a program gets when you type an interrupt character (often @kbd{Ctrl-c});
c906108c
SS
5248@code{SIGSEGV} is the signal a program gets from referencing a place in
5249memory far away from all the areas in use; @code{SIGALRM} occurs when
5250the alarm clock timer goes off (which happens only if your program has
5251requested an alarm).
5252
5253@cindex fatal signals
5254Some signals, including @code{SIGALRM}, are a normal part of the
5255functioning of your program. Others, such as @code{SIGSEGV}, indicate
d4f3574e 5256errors; these signals are @dfn{fatal} (they kill your program immediately) if the
c906108c
SS
5257program has not specified in advance some other way to handle the signal.
5258@code{SIGINT} does not indicate an error in your program, but it is normally
5259fatal so it can carry out the purpose of the interrupt: to kill the program.
5260
5261@value{GDBN} has the ability to detect any occurrence of a signal in your
5262program. You can tell @value{GDBN} in advance what to do for each kind of
5263signal.
5264
5265@cindex handling signals
24f93129
EZ
5266Normally, @value{GDBN} is set up to let the non-erroneous signals like
5267@code{SIGALRM} be silently passed to your program
5268(so as not to interfere with their role in the program's functioning)
c906108c
SS
5269but to stop your program immediately whenever an error signal happens.
5270You can change these settings with the @code{handle} command.
5271
5272@table @code
5273@kindex info signals
09d4efe1 5274@kindex info handle
c906108c 5275@item info signals
96a2c332 5276@itemx info handle
c906108c
SS
5277Print a table of all the kinds of signals and how @value{GDBN} has been told to
5278handle each one. You can use this to see the signal numbers of all
5279the defined types of signals.
5280
45ac1734
EZ
5281@item info signals @var{sig}
5282Similar, but print information only about the specified signal number.
5283
d4f3574e 5284@code{info handle} is an alias for @code{info signals}.
c906108c
SS
5285
5286@kindex handle
45ac1734 5287@item handle @var{signal} @r{[}@var{keywords}@dots{}@r{]}
5ece1a18
EZ
5288Change the way @value{GDBN} handles signal @var{signal}. @var{signal}
5289can be the number of a signal or its name (with or without the
24f93129 5290@samp{SIG} at the beginning); a list of signal numbers of the form
5ece1a18 5291@samp{@var{low}-@var{high}}; or the word @samp{all}, meaning all the
45ac1734
EZ
5292known signals. Optional arguments @var{keywords}, described below,
5293say what change to make.
c906108c
SS
5294@end table
5295
5296@c @group
5297The keywords allowed by the @code{handle} command can be abbreviated.
5298Their full names are:
5299
5300@table @code
5301@item nostop
5302@value{GDBN} should not stop your program when this signal happens. It may
5303still print a message telling you that the signal has come in.
5304
5305@item stop
5306@value{GDBN} should stop your program when this signal happens. This implies
5307the @code{print} keyword as well.
5308
5309@item print
5310@value{GDBN} should print a message when this signal happens.
5311
5312@item noprint
5313@value{GDBN} should not mention the occurrence of the signal at all. This
5314implies the @code{nostop} keyword as well.
5315
5316@item pass
5ece1a18 5317@itemx noignore
c906108c
SS
5318@value{GDBN} should allow your program to see this signal; your program
5319can handle the signal, or else it may terminate if the signal is fatal
5ece1a18 5320and not handled. @code{pass} and @code{noignore} are synonyms.
c906108c
SS
5321
5322@item nopass
5ece1a18 5323@itemx ignore
c906108c 5324@value{GDBN} should not allow your program to see this signal.
5ece1a18 5325@code{nopass} and @code{ignore} are synonyms.
c906108c
SS
5326@end table
5327@c @end group
5328
d4f3574e
SS
5329When a signal stops your program, the signal is not visible to the
5330program until you
c906108c
SS
5331continue. Your program sees the signal then, if @code{pass} is in
5332effect for the signal in question @emph{at that time}. In other words,
5333after @value{GDBN} reports a signal, you can use the @code{handle}
5334command with @code{pass} or @code{nopass} to control whether your
5335program sees that signal when you continue.
5336
24f93129
EZ
5337The default is set to @code{nostop}, @code{noprint}, @code{pass} for
5338non-erroneous signals such as @code{SIGALRM}, @code{SIGWINCH} and
5339@code{SIGCHLD}, and to @code{stop}, @code{print}, @code{pass} for the
5340erroneous signals.
5341
c906108c
SS
5342You can also use the @code{signal} command to prevent your program from
5343seeing a signal, or cause it to see a signal it normally would not see,
5344or to give it any signal at any time. For example, if your program stopped
5345due to some sort of memory reference error, you might store correct
5346values into the erroneous variables and continue, hoping to see more
5347execution; but your program would probably terminate immediately as
5348a result of the fatal signal once it saw the signal. To prevent this,
5349you can continue with @samp{signal 0}. @xref{Signaling, ,Giving your
79a6e687 5350Program a Signal}.
c906108c 5351
4aa995e1
PA
5352@cindex extra signal information
5353@anchor{extra signal information}
5354
5355On some targets, @value{GDBN} can inspect extra signal information
5356associated with the intercepted signal, before it is actually
5357delivered to the program being debugged. This information is exported
5358by the convenience variable @code{$_siginfo}, and consists of data
5359that is passed by the kernel to the signal handler at the time of the
5360receipt of a signal. The data type of the information itself is
5361target dependent. You can see the data type using the @code{ptype
5362$_siginfo} command. On Unix systems, it typically corresponds to the
5363standard @code{siginfo_t} type, as defined in the @file{signal.h}
5364system header.
5365
5366Here's an example, on a @sc{gnu}/Linux system, printing the stray
5367referenced address that raised a segmentation fault.
5368
5369@smallexample
5370@group
5371(@value{GDBP}) continue
5372Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
53730x0000000000400766 in main ()
537469 *(int *)p = 0;
5375(@value{GDBP}) ptype $_siginfo
5376type = struct @{
5377 int si_signo;
5378 int si_errno;
5379 int si_code;
5380 union @{
5381 int _pad[28];
5382 struct @{...@} _kill;
5383 struct @{...@} _timer;
5384 struct @{...@} _rt;
5385 struct @{...@} _sigchld;
5386 struct @{...@} _sigfault;
5387 struct @{...@} _sigpoll;
5388 @} _sifields;
5389@}
5390(@value{GDBP}) ptype $_siginfo._sifields._sigfault
5391type = struct @{
5392 void *si_addr;
5393@}
5394(@value{GDBP}) p $_siginfo._sifields._sigfault.si_addr
5395$1 = (void *) 0x7ffff7ff7000
5396@end group
5397@end smallexample
5398
5399Depending on target support, @code{$_siginfo} may also be writable.
5400
6d2ebf8b 5401@node Thread Stops
79a6e687 5402@section Stopping and Starting Multi-thread Programs
c906108c 5403
0606b73b
SL
5404@cindex stopped threads
5405@cindex threads, stopped
5406
5407@cindex continuing threads
5408@cindex threads, continuing
5409
5410@value{GDBN} supports debugging programs with multiple threads
5411(@pxref{Threads,, Debugging Programs with Multiple Threads}). There
5412are two modes of controlling execution of your program within the
5413debugger. In the default mode, referred to as @dfn{all-stop mode},
5414when any thread in your program stops (for example, at a breakpoint
5415or while being stepped), all other threads in the program are also stopped by
5416@value{GDBN}. On some targets, @value{GDBN} also supports
5417@dfn{non-stop mode}, in which other threads can continue to run freely while
5418you examine the stopped thread in the debugger.
5419
5420@menu
5421* All-Stop Mode:: All threads stop when GDB takes control
5422* Non-Stop Mode:: Other threads continue to execute
5423* Background Execution:: Running your program asynchronously
5424* Thread-Specific Breakpoints:: Controlling breakpoints
5425* Interrupted System Calls:: GDB may interfere with system calls
d914c394 5426* Observer Mode:: GDB does not alter program behavior
0606b73b
SL
5427@end menu
5428
5429@node All-Stop Mode
5430@subsection All-Stop Mode
5431
5432@cindex all-stop mode
5433
5434In all-stop mode, whenever your program stops under @value{GDBN} for any reason,
5435@emph{all} threads of execution stop, not just the current thread. This
5436allows you to examine the overall state of the program, including
5437switching between threads, without worrying that things may change
5438underfoot.
5439
5440Conversely, whenever you restart the program, @emph{all} threads start
5441executing. @emph{This is true even when single-stepping} with commands
5442like @code{step} or @code{next}.
5443
5444In particular, @value{GDBN} cannot single-step all threads in lockstep.
5445Since thread scheduling is up to your debugging target's operating
5446system (not controlled by @value{GDBN}), other threads may
5447execute more than one statement while the current thread completes a
5448single step. Moreover, in general other threads stop in the middle of a
5449statement, rather than at a clean statement boundary, when the program
5450stops.
5451
5452You might even find your program stopped in another thread after
5453continuing or even single-stepping. This happens whenever some other
5454thread runs into a breakpoint, a signal, or an exception before the
5455first thread completes whatever you requested.
5456
5457@cindex automatic thread selection
5458@cindex switching threads automatically
5459@cindex threads, automatic switching
5460Whenever @value{GDBN} stops your program, due to a breakpoint or a
5461signal, it automatically selects the thread where that breakpoint or
5462signal happened. @value{GDBN} alerts you to the context switch with a
5463message such as @samp{[Switching to Thread @var{n}]} to identify the
5464thread.
5465
5466On some OSes, you can modify @value{GDBN}'s default behavior by
5467locking the OS scheduler to allow only a single thread to run.
5468
5469@table @code
5470@item set scheduler-locking @var{mode}
5471@cindex scheduler locking mode
5472@cindex lock scheduler
5473Set the scheduler locking mode. If it is @code{off}, then there is no
5474locking and any thread may run at any time. If @code{on}, then only the
5475current thread may run when the inferior is resumed. The @code{step}
5476mode optimizes for single-stepping; it prevents other threads
5477from preempting the current thread while you are stepping, so that
5478the focus of debugging does not change unexpectedly.
5479Other threads only rarely (or never) get a chance to run
5480when you step. They are more likely to run when you @samp{next} over a
5481function call, and they are completely free to run when you use commands
5482like @samp{continue}, @samp{until}, or @samp{finish}. However, unless another
5483thread hits a breakpoint during its timeslice, @value{GDBN} does not change
5484the current thread away from the thread that you are debugging.
5485
5486@item show scheduler-locking
5487Display the current scheduler locking mode.
5488@end table
5489
d4db2f36
PA
5490@cindex resume threads of multiple processes simultaneously
5491By default, when you issue one of the execution commands such as
5492@code{continue}, @code{next} or @code{step}, @value{GDBN} allows only
5493threads of the current inferior to run. For example, if @value{GDBN}
5494is attached to two inferiors, each with two threads, the
5495@code{continue} command resumes only the two threads of the current
5496inferior. This is useful, for example, when you debug a program that
5497forks and you want to hold the parent stopped (so that, for instance,
5498it doesn't run to exit), while you debug the child. In other
5499situations, you may not be interested in inspecting the current state
5500of any of the processes @value{GDBN} is attached to, and you may want
5501to resume them all until some breakpoint is hit. In the latter case,
5502you can instruct @value{GDBN} to allow all threads of all the
5503inferiors to run with the @w{@code{set schedule-multiple}} command.
5504
5505@table @code
5506@kindex set schedule-multiple
5507@item set schedule-multiple
5508Set the mode for allowing threads of multiple processes to be resumed
5509when an execution command is issued. When @code{on}, all threads of
5510all processes are allowed to run. When @code{off}, only the threads
5511of the current process are resumed. The default is @code{off}. The
5512@code{scheduler-locking} mode takes precedence when set to @code{on},
5513or while you are stepping and set to @code{step}.
5514
5515@item show schedule-multiple
5516Display the current mode for resuming the execution of threads of
5517multiple processes.
5518@end table
5519
0606b73b
SL
5520@node Non-Stop Mode
5521@subsection Non-Stop Mode
5522
5523@cindex non-stop mode
5524
5525@c This section is really only a place-holder, and needs to be expanded
5526@c with more details.
5527
5528For some multi-threaded targets, @value{GDBN} supports an optional
5529mode of operation in which you can examine stopped program threads in
5530the debugger while other threads continue to execute freely. This
5531minimizes intrusion when debugging live systems, such as programs
5532where some threads have real-time constraints or must continue to
5533respond to external events. This is referred to as @dfn{non-stop} mode.
5534
5535In non-stop mode, when a thread stops to report a debugging event,
5536@emph{only} that thread is stopped; @value{GDBN} does not stop other
5537threads as well, in contrast to the all-stop mode behavior. Additionally,
5538execution commands such as @code{continue} and @code{step} apply by default
5539only to the current thread in non-stop mode, rather than all threads as
5540in all-stop mode. This allows you to control threads explicitly in
5541ways that are not possible in all-stop mode --- for example, stepping
5542one thread while allowing others to run freely, stepping
5543one thread while holding all others stopped, or stepping several threads
5544independently and simultaneously.
5545
5546To enter non-stop mode, use this sequence of commands before you run
5547or attach to your program:
5548
0606b73b
SL
5549@smallexample
5550# Enable the async interface.
c6ebd6cf 5551set target-async 1
0606b73b 5552
0606b73b
SL
5553# If using the CLI, pagination breaks non-stop.
5554set pagination off
5555
5556# Finally, turn it on!
5557set non-stop on
5558@end smallexample
5559
5560You can use these commands to manipulate the non-stop mode setting:
5561
5562@table @code
5563@kindex set non-stop
5564@item set non-stop on
5565Enable selection of non-stop mode.
5566@item set non-stop off
5567Disable selection of non-stop mode.
5568@kindex show non-stop
5569@item show non-stop
5570Show the current non-stop enablement setting.
5571@end table
5572
5573Note these commands only reflect whether non-stop mode is enabled,
5574not whether the currently-executing program is being run in non-stop mode.
5575In particular, the @code{set non-stop} preference is only consulted when
5576@value{GDBN} starts or connects to the target program, and it is generally
5577not possible to switch modes once debugging has started. Furthermore,
5578since not all targets support non-stop mode, even when you have enabled
5579non-stop mode, @value{GDBN} may still fall back to all-stop operation by
5580default.
5581
5582In non-stop mode, all execution commands apply only to the current thread
5583by default. That is, @code{continue} only continues one thread.
5584To continue all threads, issue @code{continue -a} or @code{c -a}.
5585
5586You can use @value{GDBN}'s background execution commands
5587(@pxref{Background Execution}) to run some threads in the background
5588while you continue to examine or step others from @value{GDBN}.
5589The MI execution commands (@pxref{GDB/MI Program Execution}) are
5590always executed asynchronously in non-stop mode.
5591
5592Suspending execution is done with the @code{interrupt} command when
5593running in the background, or @kbd{Ctrl-c} during foreground execution.
5594In all-stop mode, this stops the whole process;
5595but in non-stop mode the interrupt applies only to the current thread.
5596To stop the whole program, use @code{interrupt -a}.
5597
5598Other execution commands do not currently support the @code{-a} option.
5599
5600In non-stop mode, when a thread stops, @value{GDBN} doesn't automatically make
5601that thread current, as it does in all-stop mode. This is because the
5602thread stop notifications are asynchronous with respect to @value{GDBN}'s
5603command interpreter, and it would be confusing if @value{GDBN} unexpectedly
5604changed to a different thread just as you entered a command to operate on the
5605previously current thread.
5606
5607@node Background Execution
5608@subsection Background Execution
5609
5610@cindex foreground execution
5611@cindex background execution
5612@cindex asynchronous execution
5613@cindex execution, foreground, background and asynchronous
5614
5615@value{GDBN}'s execution commands have two variants: the normal
5616foreground (synchronous) behavior, and a background
5617(asynchronous) behavior. In foreground execution, @value{GDBN} waits for
5618the program to report that some thread has stopped before prompting for
5619another command. In background execution, @value{GDBN} immediately gives
5620a command prompt so that you can issue other commands while your program runs.
5621
32fc0df9
PA
5622You need to explicitly enable asynchronous mode before you can use
5623background execution commands. You can use these commands to
5624manipulate the asynchronous mode setting:
5625
5626@table @code
5627@kindex set target-async
5628@item set target-async on
5629Enable asynchronous mode.
5630@item set target-async off
5631Disable asynchronous mode.
5632@kindex show target-async
5633@item show target-async
5634Show the current target-async setting.
5635@end table
5636
5637If the target doesn't support async mode, @value{GDBN} issues an error
5638message if you attempt to use the background execution commands.
5639
0606b73b
SL
5640To specify background execution, add a @code{&} to the command. For example,
5641the background form of the @code{continue} command is @code{continue&}, or
5642just @code{c&}. The execution commands that accept background execution
5643are:
5644
5645@table @code
5646@kindex run&
5647@item run
5648@xref{Starting, , Starting your Program}.
5649
5650@item attach
5651@kindex attach&
5652@xref{Attach, , Debugging an Already-running Process}.
5653
5654@item step
5655@kindex step&
5656@xref{Continuing and Stepping, step}.
5657
5658@item stepi
5659@kindex stepi&
5660@xref{Continuing and Stepping, stepi}.
5661
5662@item next
5663@kindex next&
5664@xref{Continuing and Stepping, next}.
5665
7ce58dd2
DE
5666@item nexti
5667@kindex nexti&
5668@xref{Continuing and Stepping, nexti}.
5669
0606b73b
SL
5670@item continue
5671@kindex continue&
5672@xref{Continuing and Stepping, continue}.
5673
5674@item finish
5675@kindex finish&
5676@xref{Continuing and Stepping, finish}.
5677
5678@item until
5679@kindex until&
5680@xref{Continuing and Stepping, until}.
5681
5682@end table
5683
5684Background execution is especially useful in conjunction with non-stop
5685mode for debugging programs with multiple threads; see @ref{Non-Stop Mode}.
5686However, you can also use these commands in the normal all-stop mode with
5687the restriction that you cannot issue another execution command until the
5688previous one finishes. Examples of commands that are valid in all-stop
5689mode while the program is running include @code{help} and @code{info break}.
5690
5691You can interrupt your program while it is running in the background by
5692using the @code{interrupt} command.
5693
5694@table @code
5695@kindex interrupt
5696@item interrupt
5697@itemx interrupt -a
5698
5699Suspend execution of the running program. In all-stop mode,
5700@code{interrupt} stops the whole process, but in non-stop mode, it stops
5701only the current thread. To stop the whole program in non-stop mode,
5702use @code{interrupt -a}.
5703@end table
5704
0606b73b
SL
5705@node Thread-Specific Breakpoints
5706@subsection Thread-Specific Breakpoints
5707
c906108c 5708When your program has multiple threads (@pxref{Threads,, Debugging
79a6e687 5709Programs with Multiple Threads}), you can choose whether to set
c906108c
SS
5710breakpoints on all threads, or on a particular thread.
5711
5712@table @code
5713@cindex breakpoints and threads
5714@cindex thread breakpoints
5715@kindex break @dots{} thread @var{threadno}
5716@item break @var{linespec} thread @var{threadno}
5717@itemx break @var{linespec} thread @var{threadno} if @dots{}
5718@var{linespec} specifies source lines; there are several ways of
2a25a5ba
EZ
5719writing them (@pxref{Specify Location}), but the effect is always to
5720specify some source line.
c906108c
SS
5721
5722Use the qualifier @samp{thread @var{threadno}} with a breakpoint command
5723to specify that you only want @value{GDBN} to stop the program when a
5724particular thread reaches this breakpoint. @var{threadno} is one of the
5725numeric thread identifiers assigned by @value{GDBN}, shown in the first
5726column of the @samp{info threads} display.
5727
5728If you do not specify @samp{thread @var{threadno}} when you set a
5729breakpoint, the breakpoint applies to @emph{all} threads of your
5730program.
5731
5732You can use the @code{thread} qualifier on conditional breakpoints as
b6199126
DJ
5733well; in this case, place @samp{thread @var{threadno}} before or
5734after the breakpoint condition, like this:
c906108c
SS
5735
5736@smallexample
2df3850c 5737(@value{GDBP}) break frik.c:13 thread 28 if bartab > lim
c906108c
SS
5738@end smallexample
5739
5740@end table
5741
0606b73b
SL
5742@node Interrupted System Calls
5743@subsection Interrupted System Calls
c906108c 5744
36d86913
MC
5745@cindex thread breakpoints and system calls
5746@cindex system calls and thread breakpoints
5747@cindex premature return from system calls
0606b73b
SL
5748There is an unfortunate side effect when using @value{GDBN} to debug
5749multi-threaded programs. If one thread stops for a
36d86913
MC
5750breakpoint, or for some other reason, and another thread is blocked in a
5751system call, then the system call may return prematurely. This is a
5752consequence of the interaction between multiple threads and the signals
5753that @value{GDBN} uses to implement breakpoints and other events that
5754stop execution.
5755
5756To handle this problem, your program should check the return value of
5757each system call and react appropriately. This is good programming
5758style anyways.
5759
5760For example, do not write code like this:
5761
5762@smallexample
5763 sleep (10);
5764@end smallexample
5765
5766The call to @code{sleep} will return early if a different thread stops
5767at a breakpoint or for some other reason.
5768
5769Instead, write this:
5770
5771@smallexample
5772 int unslept = 10;
5773 while (unslept > 0)
5774 unslept = sleep (unslept);
5775@end smallexample
5776
5777A system call is allowed to return early, so the system is still
5778conforming to its specification. But @value{GDBN} does cause your
5779multi-threaded program to behave differently than it would without
5780@value{GDBN}.
5781
5782Also, @value{GDBN} uses internal breakpoints in the thread library to
5783monitor certain events such as thread creation and thread destruction.
5784When such an event happens, a system call in another thread may return
5785prematurely, even though your program does not appear to stop.
5786
d914c394
SS
5787@node Observer Mode
5788@subsection Observer Mode
5789
5790If you want to build on non-stop mode and observe program behavior
5791without any chance of disruption by @value{GDBN}, you can set
5792variables to disable all of the debugger's attempts to modify state,
5793whether by writing memory, inserting breakpoints, etc. These operate
5794at a low level, intercepting operations from all commands.
5795
5796When all of these are set to @code{off}, then @value{GDBN} is said to
5797be @dfn{observer mode}. As a convenience, the variable
5798@code{observer} can be set to disable these, plus enable non-stop
5799mode.
5800
5801Note that @value{GDBN} will not prevent you from making nonsensical
5802combinations of these settings. For instance, if you have enabled
5803@code{may-insert-breakpoints} but disabled @code{may-write-memory},
5804then breakpoints that work by writing trap instructions into the code
5805stream will still not be able to be placed.
5806
5807@table @code
5808
5809@kindex observer
5810@item set observer on
5811@itemx set observer off
5812When set to @code{on}, this disables all the permission variables
5813below (except for @code{insert-fast-tracepoints}), plus enables
5814non-stop debugging. Setting this to @code{off} switches back to
5815normal debugging, though remaining in non-stop mode.
5816
5817@item show observer
5818Show whether observer mode is on or off.
5819
5820@kindex may-write-registers
5821@item set may-write-registers on
5822@itemx set may-write-registers off
5823This controls whether @value{GDBN} will attempt to alter the values of
5824registers, such as with assignment expressions in @code{print}, or the
5825@code{jump} command. It defaults to @code{on}.
5826
5827@item show may-write-registers
5828Show the current permission to write registers.
5829
5830@kindex may-write-memory
5831@item set may-write-memory on
5832@itemx set may-write-memory off
5833This controls whether @value{GDBN} will attempt to alter the contents
5834of memory, such as with assignment expressions in @code{print}. It
5835defaults to @code{on}.
5836
5837@item show may-write-memory
5838Show the current permission to write memory.
5839
5840@kindex may-insert-breakpoints
5841@item set may-insert-breakpoints on
5842@itemx set may-insert-breakpoints off
5843This controls whether @value{GDBN} will attempt to insert breakpoints.
5844This affects all breakpoints, including internal breakpoints defined
5845by @value{GDBN}. It defaults to @code{on}.
5846
5847@item show may-insert-breakpoints
5848Show the current permission to insert breakpoints.
5849
5850@kindex may-insert-tracepoints
5851@item set may-insert-tracepoints on
5852@itemx set may-insert-tracepoints off
5853This controls whether @value{GDBN} will attempt to insert (regular)
5854tracepoints at the beginning of a tracing experiment. It affects only
5855non-fast tracepoints, fast tracepoints being under the control of
5856@code{may-insert-fast-tracepoints}. It defaults to @code{on}.
5857
5858@item show may-insert-tracepoints
5859Show the current permission to insert tracepoints.
5860
5861@kindex may-insert-fast-tracepoints
5862@item set may-insert-fast-tracepoints on
5863@itemx set may-insert-fast-tracepoints off
5864This controls whether @value{GDBN} will attempt to insert fast
5865tracepoints at the beginning of a tracing experiment. It affects only
5866fast tracepoints, regular (non-fast) tracepoints being under the
5867control of @code{may-insert-tracepoints}. It defaults to @code{on}.
5868
5869@item show may-insert-fast-tracepoints
5870Show the current permission to insert fast tracepoints.
5871
5872@kindex may-interrupt
5873@item set may-interrupt on
5874@itemx set may-interrupt off
5875This controls whether @value{GDBN} will attempt to interrupt or stop
5876program execution. When this variable is @code{off}, the
5877@code{interrupt} command will have no effect, nor will
5878@kbd{Ctrl-c}. It defaults to @code{on}.
5879
5880@item show may-interrupt
5881Show the current permission to interrupt or stop the program.
5882
5883@end table
c906108c 5884
bacec72f
MS
5885@node Reverse Execution
5886@chapter Running programs backward
5887@cindex reverse execution
5888@cindex running programs backward
5889
5890When you are debugging a program, it is not unusual to realize that
5891you have gone too far, and some event of interest has already happened.
5892If the target environment supports it, @value{GDBN} can allow you to
5893``rewind'' the program by running it backward.
5894
5895A target environment that supports reverse execution should be able
5896to ``undo'' the changes in machine state that have taken place as the
5897program was executing normally. Variables, registers etc.@: should
5898revert to their previous values. Obviously this requires a great
5899deal of sophistication on the part of the target environment; not
5900all target environments can support reverse execution.
5901
5902When a program is executed in reverse, the instructions that
5903have most recently been executed are ``un-executed'', in reverse
5904order. The program counter runs backward, following the previous
5905thread of execution in reverse. As each instruction is ``un-executed'',
5906the values of memory and/or registers that were changed by that
5907instruction are reverted to their previous states. After executing
5908a piece of source code in reverse, all side effects of that code
5909should be ``undone'', and all variables should be returned to their
5910prior values@footnote{
5911Note that some side effects are easier to undo than others. For instance,
5912memory and registers are relatively easy, but device I/O is hard. Some
5913targets may be able undo things like device I/O, and some may not.
5914
5915The contract between @value{GDBN} and the reverse executing target
5916requires only that the target do something reasonable when
5917@value{GDBN} tells it to execute backwards, and then report the
5918results back to @value{GDBN}. Whatever the target reports back to
5919@value{GDBN}, @value{GDBN} will report back to the user. @value{GDBN}
5920assumes that the memory and registers that the target reports are in a
5921consistant state, but @value{GDBN} accepts whatever it is given.
5922}.
5923
5924If you are debugging in a target environment that supports
5925reverse execution, @value{GDBN} provides the following commands.
5926
5927@table @code
5928@kindex reverse-continue
5929@kindex rc @r{(@code{reverse-continue})}
5930@item reverse-continue @r{[}@var{ignore-count}@r{]}
5931@itemx rc @r{[}@var{ignore-count}@r{]}
5932Beginning at the point where your program last stopped, start executing
5933in reverse. Reverse execution will stop for breakpoints and synchronous
5934exceptions (signals), just like normal execution. Behavior of
5935asynchronous signals depends on the target environment.
5936
5937@kindex reverse-step
5938@kindex rs @r{(@code{step})}
5939@item reverse-step @r{[}@var{count}@r{]}
5940Run the program backward until control reaches the start of a
5941different source line; then stop it, and return control to @value{GDBN}.
5942
5943Like the @code{step} command, @code{reverse-step} will only stop
5944at the beginning of a source line. It ``un-executes'' the previously
5945executed source line. If the previous source line included calls to
5946debuggable functions, @code{reverse-step} will step (backward) into
5947the called function, stopping at the beginning of the @emph{last}
5948statement in the called function (typically a return statement).
5949
5950Also, as with the @code{step} command, if non-debuggable functions are
5951called, @code{reverse-step} will run thru them backward without stopping.
5952
5953@kindex reverse-stepi
5954@kindex rsi @r{(@code{reverse-stepi})}
5955@item reverse-stepi @r{[}@var{count}@r{]}
5956Reverse-execute one machine instruction. Note that the instruction
5957to be reverse-executed is @emph{not} the one pointed to by the program
5958counter, but the instruction executed prior to that one. For instance,
5959if the last instruction was a jump, @code{reverse-stepi} will take you
5960back from the destination of the jump to the jump instruction itself.
5961
5962@kindex reverse-next
5963@kindex rn @r{(@code{reverse-next})}
5964@item reverse-next @r{[}@var{count}@r{]}
5965Run backward to the beginning of the previous line executed in
5966the current (innermost) stack frame. If the line contains function
5967calls, they will be ``un-executed'' without stopping. Starting from
5968the first line of a function, @code{reverse-next} will take you back
5969to the caller of that function, @emph{before} the function was called,
5970just as the normal @code{next} command would take you from the last
5971line of a function back to its return to its caller
16af530a 5972@footnote{Unless the code is too heavily optimized.}.
bacec72f
MS
5973
5974@kindex reverse-nexti
5975@kindex rni @r{(@code{reverse-nexti})}
5976@item reverse-nexti @r{[}@var{count}@r{]}
5977Like @code{nexti}, @code{reverse-nexti} executes a single instruction
5978in reverse, except that called functions are ``un-executed'' atomically.
5979That is, if the previously executed instruction was a return from
540aa8e7 5980another function, @code{reverse-nexti} will continue to execute
bacec72f
MS
5981in reverse until the call to that function (from the current stack
5982frame) is reached.
5983
5984@kindex reverse-finish
5985@item reverse-finish
5986Just as the @code{finish} command takes you to the point where the
5987current function returns, @code{reverse-finish} takes you to the point
5988where it was called. Instead of ending up at the end of the current
5989function invocation, you end up at the beginning.
5990
5991@kindex set exec-direction
5992@item set exec-direction
5993Set the direction of target execution.
984359d2 5994@item set exec-direction reverse
bacec72f
MS
5995@cindex execute forward or backward in time
5996@value{GDBN} will perform all execution commands in reverse, until the
5997exec-direction mode is changed to ``forward''. Affected commands include
5998@code{step, stepi, next, nexti, continue, and finish}. The @code{return}
5999command cannot be used in reverse mode.
6000@item set exec-direction forward
6001@value{GDBN} will perform all execution commands in the normal fashion.
6002This is the default.
6003@end table
6004
c906108c 6005
a2311334
EZ
6006@node Process Record and Replay
6007@chapter Recording Inferior's Execution and Replaying It
53cc454a
HZ
6008@cindex process record and replay
6009@cindex recording inferior's execution and replaying it
6010
8e05493c
EZ
6011On some platforms, @value{GDBN} provides a special @dfn{process record
6012and replay} target that can record a log of the process execution, and
6013replay it later with both forward and reverse execution commands.
a2311334
EZ
6014
6015@cindex replay mode
6016When this target is in use, if the execution log includes the record
6017for the next instruction, @value{GDBN} will debug in @dfn{replay
6018mode}. In the replay mode, the inferior does not really execute code
6019instructions. Instead, all the events that normally happen during
6020code execution are taken from the execution log. While code is not
6021really executed in replay mode, the values of registers (including the
6022program counter register) and the memory of the inferior are still
8e05493c
EZ
6023changed as they normally would. Their contents are taken from the
6024execution log.
a2311334
EZ
6025
6026@cindex record mode
6027If the record for the next instruction is not in the execution log,
6028@value{GDBN} will debug in @dfn{record mode}. In this mode, the
6029inferior executes normally, and @value{GDBN} records the execution log
6030for future replay.
6031
8e05493c
EZ
6032The process record and replay target supports reverse execution
6033(@pxref{Reverse Execution}), even if the platform on which the
6034inferior runs does not. However, the reverse execution is limited in
6035this case by the range of the instructions recorded in the execution
6036log. In other words, reverse execution on platforms that don't
6037support it directly can only be done in the replay mode.
6038
6039When debugging in the reverse direction, @value{GDBN} will work in
6040replay mode as long as the execution log includes the record for the
6041previous instruction; otherwise, it will work in record mode, if the
6042platform supports reverse execution, or stop if not.
6043
a2311334
EZ
6044For architecture environments that support process record and replay,
6045@value{GDBN} provides the following commands:
53cc454a
HZ
6046
6047@table @code
6048@kindex target record
6049@kindex record
6050@kindex rec
6051@item target record
a2311334
EZ
6052This command starts the process record and replay target. The process
6053record and replay target can only debug a process that is already
6054running. Therefore, you need first to start the process with the
6055@kbd{run} or @kbd{start} commands, and then start the recording with
6056the @kbd{target record} command.
6057
6058Both @code{record} and @code{rec} are aliases of @code{target record}.
6059
6060@cindex displaced stepping, and process record and replay
6061Displaced stepping (@pxref{Maintenance Commands,, displaced stepping})
6062will be automatically disabled when process record and replay target
6063is started. That's because the process record and replay target
6064doesn't support displaced stepping.
6065
6066@cindex non-stop mode, and process record and replay
6067@cindex asynchronous execution, and process record and replay
6068If the inferior is in the non-stop mode (@pxref{Non-Stop Mode}) or in
6069the asynchronous execution mode (@pxref{Background Execution}), the
6070process record and replay target cannot be started because it doesn't
6071support these two modes.
53cc454a
HZ
6072
6073@kindex record stop
6074@kindex rec s
6075@item record stop
a2311334
EZ
6076Stop the process record and replay target. When process record and
6077replay target stops, the entire execution log will be deleted and the
6078inferior will either be terminated, or will remain in its final state.
53cc454a 6079
a2311334
EZ
6080When you stop the process record and replay target in record mode (at
6081the end of the execution log), the inferior will be stopped at the
6082next instruction that would have been recorded. In other words, if
6083you record for a while and then stop recording, the inferior process
6084will be left in the same state as if the recording never happened.
53cc454a 6085
a2311334
EZ
6086On the other hand, if the process record and replay target is stopped
6087while in replay mode (that is, not at the end of the execution log,
6088but at some earlier point), the inferior process will become ``live''
6089at that earlier state, and it will then be possible to continue the
6090usual ``live'' debugging of the process from that state.
53cc454a 6091
a2311334
EZ
6092When the inferior process exits, or @value{GDBN} detaches from it,
6093process record and replay target will automatically stop itself.
53cc454a 6094
24e933df
HZ
6095@kindex record save
6096@item record save @var{filename}
6097Save the execution log to a file @file{@var{filename}}.
6098Default filename is @file{gdb_record.@var{process_id}}, where
6099@var{process_id} is the process ID of the inferior.
6100
6101@kindex record restore
6102@item record restore @var{filename}
6103Restore the execution log from a file @file{@var{filename}}.
6104File must have been created with @code{record save}.
6105
53cc454a
HZ
6106@kindex set record insn-number-max
6107@item set record insn-number-max @var{limit}
6108Set the limit of instructions to be recorded. Default value is 200000.
6109
a2311334
EZ
6110If @var{limit} is a positive number, then @value{GDBN} will start
6111deleting instructions from the log once the number of the record
6112instructions becomes greater than @var{limit}. For every new recorded
6113instruction, @value{GDBN} will delete the earliest recorded
6114instruction to keep the number of recorded instructions at the limit.
6115(Since deleting recorded instructions loses information, @value{GDBN}
6116lets you control what happens when the limit is reached, by means of
6117the @code{stop-at-limit} option, described below.)
53cc454a 6118
a2311334
EZ
6119If @var{limit} is zero, @value{GDBN} will never delete recorded
6120instructions from the execution log. The number of recorded
6121instructions is unlimited in this case.
53cc454a
HZ
6122
6123@kindex show record insn-number-max
6124@item show record insn-number-max
a2311334 6125Show the limit of instructions to be recorded.
53cc454a
HZ
6126
6127@kindex set record stop-at-limit
a2311334
EZ
6128@item set record stop-at-limit
6129Control the behavior when the number of recorded instructions reaches
6130the limit. If ON (the default), @value{GDBN} will stop when the limit
6131is reached for the first time and ask you whether you want to stop the
6132inferior or continue running it and recording the execution log. If
6133you decide to continue recording, each new recorded instruction will
6134cause the oldest one to be deleted.
53cc454a 6135
a2311334
EZ
6136If this option is OFF, @value{GDBN} will automatically delete the
6137oldest record to make room for each new one, without asking.
53cc454a
HZ
6138
6139@kindex show record stop-at-limit
6140@item show record stop-at-limit
a2311334 6141Show the current setting of @code{stop-at-limit}.
53cc454a 6142
bb08c432
HZ
6143@kindex set record memory-query
6144@item set record memory-query
6145Control the behavior when @value{GDBN} is unable to record memory
6146changes caused by an instruction. If ON, @value{GDBN} will query
6147whether to stop the inferior in that case.
6148
6149If this option is OFF (the default), @value{GDBN} will automatically
6150ignore the effect of such instructions on memory. Later, when
6151@value{GDBN} replays this execution log, it will mark the log of this
6152instruction as not accessible, and it will not affect the replay
6153results.
6154
6155@kindex show record memory-query
6156@item show record memory-query
6157Show the current setting of @code{memory-query}.
6158
29153c24
MS
6159@kindex info record
6160@item info record
6161Show various statistics about the state of process record and its
6162in-memory execution log buffer, including:
6163
6164@itemize @bullet
6165@item
6166Whether in record mode or replay mode.
6167@item
6168Lowest recorded instruction number (counting from when the current execution log started recording instructions).
6169@item
6170Highest recorded instruction number.
6171@item
6172Current instruction about to be replayed (if in replay mode).
6173@item
6174Number of instructions contained in the execution log.
6175@item
6176Maximum number of instructions that may be contained in the execution log.
6177@end itemize
53cc454a
HZ
6178
6179@kindex record delete
6180@kindex rec del
6181@item record delete
a2311334 6182When record target runs in replay mode (``in the past''), delete the
53cc454a 6183subsequent execution log and begin to record a new execution log starting
a2311334 6184from the current address. This means you will abandon the previously
53cc454a
HZ
6185recorded ``future'' and begin recording a new ``future''.
6186@end table
6187
6188
6d2ebf8b 6189@node Stack
c906108c
SS
6190@chapter Examining the Stack
6191
6192When your program has stopped, the first thing you need to know is where it
6193stopped and how it got there.
6194
6195@cindex call stack
5d161b24
DB
6196Each time your program performs a function call, information about the call
6197is generated.
6198That information includes the location of the call in your program,
6199the arguments of the call,
c906108c 6200and the local variables of the function being called.
5d161b24 6201The information is saved in a block of data called a @dfn{stack frame}.
c906108c
SS
6202The stack frames are allocated in a region of memory called the @dfn{call
6203stack}.
6204
6205When your program stops, the @value{GDBN} commands for examining the
6206stack allow you to see all of this information.
6207
6208@cindex selected frame
6209One of the stack frames is @dfn{selected} by @value{GDBN} and many
6210@value{GDBN} commands refer implicitly to the selected frame. In
6211particular, whenever you ask @value{GDBN} for the value of a variable in
6212your program, the value is found in the selected frame. There are
6213special @value{GDBN} commands to select whichever frame you are
79a6e687 6214interested in. @xref{Selection, ,Selecting a Frame}.
c906108c
SS
6215
6216When your program stops, @value{GDBN} automatically selects the
5d161b24 6217currently executing frame and describes it briefly, similar to the
79a6e687 6218@code{frame} command (@pxref{Frame Info, ,Information about a Frame}).
c906108c
SS
6219
6220@menu
6221* Frames:: Stack frames
6222* Backtrace:: Backtraces
6223* Selection:: Selecting a frame
6224* Frame Info:: Information on a frame
c906108c
SS
6225
6226@end menu
6227
6d2ebf8b 6228@node Frames
79a6e687 6229@section Stack Frames
c906108c 6230
d4f3574e 6231@cindex frame, definition
c906108c
SS
6232@cindex stack frame
6233The call stack is divided up into contiguous pieces called @dfn{stack
6234frames}, or @dfn{frames} for short; each frame is the data associated
6235with one call to one function. The frame contains the arguments given
6236to the function, the function's local variables, and the address at
6237which the function is executing.
6238
6239@cindex initial frame
6240@cindex outermost frame
6241@cindex innermost frame
6242When your program is started, the stack has only one frame, that of the
6243function @code{main}. This is called the @dfn{initial} frame or the
6244@dfn{outermost} frame. Each time a function is called, a new frame is
6245made. Each time a function returns, the frame for that function invocation
6246is eliminated. If a function is recursive, there can be many frames for
6247the same function. The frame for the function in which execution is
6248actually occurring is called the @dfn{innermost} frame. This is the most
6249recently created of all the stack frames that still exist.
6250
6251@cindex frame pointer
6252Inside your program, stack frames are identified by their addresses. A
6253stack frame consists of many bytes, each of which has its own address; each
6254kind of computer has a convention for choosing one byte whose
6255address serves as the address of the frame. Usually this address is kept
e09f16f9
EZ
6256in a register called the @dfn{frame pointer register}
6257(@pxref{Registers, $fp}) while execution is going on in that frame.
c906108c
SS
6258
6259@cindex frame number
6260@value{GDBN} assigns numbers to all existing stack frames, starting with
6261zero for the innermost frame, one for the frame that called it,
6262and so on upward. These numbers do not really exist in your program;
6263they are assigned by @value{GDBN} to give you a way of designating stack
6264frames in @value{GDBN} commands.
6265
6d2ebf8b
SS
6266@c The -fomit-frame-pointer below perennially causes hbox overflow
6267@c underflow problems.
c906108c
SS
6268@cindex frameless execution
6269Some compilers provide a way to compile functions so that they operate
e22ea452 6270without stack frames. (For example, the @value{NGCC} option
474c8240 6271@smallexample
6d2ebf8b 6272@samp{-fomit-frame-pointer}
474c8240 6273@end smallexample
6d2ebf8b 6274generates functions without a frame.)
c906108c
SS
6275This is occasionally done with heavily used library functions to save
6276the frame setup time. @value{GDBN} has limited facilities for dealing
6277with these function invocations. If the innermost function invocation
6278has no stack frame, @value{GDBN} nevertheless regards it as though
6279it had a separate frame, which is numbered zero as usual, allowing
6280correct tracing of the function call chain. However, @value{GDBN} has
6281no provision for frameless functions elsewhere in the stack.
6282
6283@table @code
d4f3574e 6284@kindex frame@r{, command}
41afff9a 6285@cindex current stack frame
c906108c 6286@item frame @var{args}
5d161b24 6287The @code{frame} command allows you to move from one stack frame to another,
c906108c 6288and to print the stack frame you select. @var{args} may be either the
5d161b24
DB
6289address of the frame or the stack frame number. Without an argument,
6290@code{frame} prints the current stack frame.
c906108c
SS
6291
6292@kindex select-frame
41afff9a 6293@cindex selecting frame silently
c906108c
SS
6294@item select-frame
6295The @code{select-frame} command allows you to move from one stack frame
6296to another without printing the frame. This is the silent version of
6297@code{frame}.
6298@end table
6299
6d2ebf8b 6300@node Backtrace
c906108c
SS
6301@section Backtraces
6302
09d4efe1
EZ
6303@cindex traceback
6304@cindex call stack traces
c906108c
SS
6305A backtrace is a summary of how your program got where it is. It shows one
6306line per frame, for many frames, starting with the currently executing
6307frame (frame zero), followed by its caller (frame one), and on up the
6308stack.
6309
6310@table @code
6311@kindex backtrace
41afff9a 6312@kindex bt @r{(@code{backtrace})}
c906108c
SS
6313@item backtrace
6314@itemx bt
6315Print a backtrace of the entire stack: one line per frame for all
6316frames in the stack.
6317
6318You can stop the backtrace at any time by typing the system interrupt
c8aa23ab 6319character, normally @kbd{Ctrl-c}.
c906108c
SS
6320
6321@item backtrace @var{n}
6322@itemx bt @var{n}
6323Similar, but print only the innermost @var{n} frames.
6324
6325@item backtrace -@var{n}
6326@itemx bt -@var{n}
6327Similar, but print only the outermost @var{n} frames.
0f061b69
NR
6328
6329@item backtrace full
0f061b69 6330@itemx bt full
dd74f6ae
NR
6331@itemx bt full @var{n}
6332@itemx bt full -@var{n}
e7109c7e 6333Print the values of the local variables also. @var{n} specifies the
286ba84d 6334number of frames to print, as described above.
c906108c
SS
6335@end table
6336
6337@kindex where
6338@kindex info stack
c906108c
SS
6339The names @code{where} and @code{info stack} (abbreviated @code{info s})
6340are additional aliases for @code{backtrace}.
6341
839c27b7
EZ
6342@cindex multiple threads, backtrace
6343In a multi-threaded program, @value{GDBN} by default shows the
6344backtrace only for the current thread. To display the backtrace for
6345several or all of the threads, use the command @code{thread apply}
6346(@pxref{Threads, thread apply}). For example, if you type @kbd{thread
6347apply all backtrace}, @value{GDBN} will display the backtrace for all
6348the threads; this is handy when you debug a core dump of a
6349multi-threaded program.
6350
c906108c
SS
6351Each line in the backtrace shows the frame number and the function name.
6352The program counter value is also shown---unless you use @code{set
6353print address off}. The backtrace also shows the source file name and
6354line number, as well as the arguments to the function. The program
6355counter value is omitted if it is at the beginning of the code for that
6356line number.
6357
6358Here is an example of a backtrace. It was made with the command
6359@samp{bt 3}, so it shows the innermost three frames.
6360
6361@smallexample
6362@group
5d161b24 6363#0 m4_traceon (obs=0x24eb0, argc=1, argv=0x2b8c8)
c906108c 6364 at builtin.c:993
4f5376b2 6365#1 0x6e38 in expand_macro (sym=0x2b600, data=...) at macro.c:242
c906108c
SS
6366#2 0x6840 in expand_token (obs=0x0, t=177664, td=0xf7fffb08)
6367 at macro.c:71
6368(More stack frames follow...)
6369@end group
6370@end smallexample
6371
6372@noindent
6373The display for frame zero does not begin with a program counter
6374value, indicating that your program has stopped at the beginning of the
6375code for line @code{993} of @code{builtin.c}.
6376
4f5376b2
JB
6377@noindent
6378The value of parameter @code{data} in frame 1 has been replaced by
6379@code{@dots{}}. By default, @value{GDBN} prints the value of a parameter
6380only if it is a scalar (integer, pointer, enumeration, etc). See command
6381@kbd{set print frame-arguments} in @ref{Print Settings} for more details
6382on how to configure the way function parameter values are printed.
6383
585fdaa1 6384@cindex optimized out, in backtrace
18999be5
EZ
6385@cindex function call arguments, optimized out
6386If your program was compiled with optimizations, some compilers will
6387optimize away arguments passed to functions if those arguments are
6388never used after the call. Such optimizations generate code that
6389passes arguments through registers, but doesn't store those arguments
6390in the stack frame. @value{GDBN} has no way of displaying such
6391arguments in stack frames other than the innermost one. Here's what
6392such a backtrace might look like:
6393
6394@smallexample
6395@group
6396#0 m4_traceon (obs=0x24eb0, argc=1, argv=0x2b8c8)
6397 at builtin.c:993
585fdaa1
PA
6398#1 0x6e38 in expand_macro (sym=<optimized out>) at macro.c:242
6399#2 0x6840 in expand_token (obs=0x0, t=<optimized out>, td=0xf7fffb08)
18999be5
EZ
6400 at macro.c:71
6401(More stack frames follow...)
6402@end group
6403@end smallexample
6404
6405@noindent
6406The values of arguments that were not saved in their stack frames are
585fdaa1 6407shown as @samp{<optimized out>}.
18999be5
EZ
6408
6409If you need to display the values of such optimized-out arguments,
6410either deduce that from other variables whose values depend on the one
6411you are interested in, or recompile without optimizations.
6412
a8f24a35
EZ
6413@cindex backtrace beyond @code{main} function
6414@cindex program entry point
6415@cindex startup code, and backtrace
25d29d70
AC
6416Most programs have a standard user entry point---a place where system
6417libraries and startup code transition into user code. For C this is
d416eeec
EZ
6418@code{main}@footnote{
6419Note that embedded programs (the so-called ``free-standing''
6420environment) are not required to have a @code{main} function as the
6421entry point. They could even have multiple entry points.}.
6422When @value{GDBN} finds the entry function in a backtrace
25d29d70
AC
6423it will terminate the backtrace, to avoid tracing into highly
6424system-specific (and generally uninteresting) code.
6425
6426If you need to examine the startup code, or limit the number of levels
6427in a backtrace, you can change this behavior:
95f90d25
DJ
6428
6429@table @code
25d29d70
AC
6430@item set backtrace past-main
6431@itemx set backtrace past-main on
4644b6e3 6432@kindex set backtrace
25d29d70
AC
6433Backtraces will continue past the user entry point.
6434
6435@item set backtrace past-main off
95f90d25
DJ
6436Backtraces will stop when they encounter the user entry point. This is the
6437default.
6438
25d29d70 6439@item show backtrace past-main
4644b6e3 6440@kindex show backtrace
25d29d70
AC
6441Display the current user entry point backtrace policy.
6442
2315ffec
RC
6443@item set backtrace past-entry
6444@itemx set backtrace past-entry on
a8f24a35 6445Backtraces will continue past the internal entry point of an application.
2315ffec
RC
6446This entry point is encoded by the linker when the application is built,
6447and is likely before the user entry point @code{main} (or equivalent) is called.
6448
6449@item set backtrace past-entry off
d3e8051b 6450Backtraces will stop when they encounter the internal entry point of an
2315ffec
RC
6451application. This is the default.
6452
6453@item show backtrace past-entry
6454Display the current internal entry point backtrace policy.
6455
25d29d70
AC
6456@item set backtrace limit @var{n}
6457@itemx set backtrace limit 0
6458@cindex backtrace limit
6459Limit the backtrace to @var{n} levels. A value of zero means
6460unlimited.
95f90d25 6461
25d29d70
AC
6462@item show backtrace limit
6463Display the current limit on backtrace levels.
95f90d25
DJ
6464@end table
6465
6d2ebf8b 6466@node Selection
79a6e687 6467@section Selecting a Frame
c906108c
SS
6468
6469Most commands for examining the stack and other data in your program work on
6470whichever stack frame is selected at the moment. Here are the commands for
6471selecting a stack frame; all of them finish by printing a brief description
6472of the stack frame just selected.
6473
6474@table @code
d4f3574e 6475@kindex frame@r{, selecting}
41afff9a 6476@kindex f @r{(@code{frame})}
c906108c
SS
6477@item frame @var{n}
6478@itemx f @var{n}
6479Select frame number @var{n}. Recall that frame zero is the innermost
6480(currently executing) frame, frame one is the frame that called the
6481innermost one, and so on. The highest-numbered frame is the one for
6482@code{main}.
6483
6484@item frame @var{addr}
6485@itemx f @var{addr}
6486Select the frame at address @var{addr}. This is useful mainly if the
6487chaining of stack frames has been damaged by a bug, making it
6488impossible for @value{GDBN} to assign numbers properly to all frames. In
6489addition, this can be useful when your program has multiple stacks and
6490switches between them.
6491
c906108c
SS
6492On the SPARC architecture, @code{frame} needs two addresses to
6493select an arbitrary frame: a frame pointer and a stack pointer.
6494
eb17f351 6495On the @acronym{MIPS} and Alpha architecture, it needs two addresses: a stack
c906108c
SS
6496pointer and a program counter.
6497
6498On the 29k architecture, it needs three addresses: a register stack
6499pointer, a program counter, and a memory stack pointer.
c906108c
SS
6500
6501@kindex up
6502@item up @var{n}
6503Move @var{n} frames up the stack. For positive numbers @var{n}, this
6504advances toward the outermost frame, to higher frame numbers, to frames
6505that have existed longer. @var{n} defaults to one.
6506
6507@kindex down
41afff9a 6508@kindex do @r{(@code{down})}
c906108c
SS
6509@item down @var{n}
6510Move @var{n} frames down the stack. For positive numbers @var{n}, this
6511advances toward the innermost frame, to lower frame numbers, to frames
6512that were created more recently. @var{n} defaults to one. You may
6513abbreviate @code{down} as @code{do}.
6514@end table
6515
6516All of these commands end by printing two lines of output describing the
6517frame. The first line shows the frame number, the function name, the
6518arguments, and the source file and line number of execution in that
5d161b24 6519frame. The second line shows the text of that source line.
c906108c
SS
6520
6521@need 1000
6522For example:
6523
6524@smallexample
6525@group
6526(@value{GDBP}) up
6527#1 0x22f0 in main (argc=1, argv=0xf7fffbf4, env=0xf7fffbfc)
6528 at env.c:10
652910 read_input_file (argv[i]);
6530@end group
6531@end smallexample
6532
6533After such a printout, the @code{list} command with no arguments
6534prints ten lines centered on the point of execution in the frame.
87885426
FN
6535You can also edit the program at the point of execution with your favorite
6536editing program by typing @code{edit}.
79a6e687 6537@xref{List, ,Printing Source Lines},
87885426 6538for details.
c906108c
SS
6539
6540@table @code
6541@kindex down-silently
6542@kindex up-silently
6543@item up-silently @var{n}
6544@itemx down-silently @var{n}
6545These two commands are variants of @code{up} and @code{down},
6546respectively; they differ in that they do their work silently, without
6547causing display of the new frame. They are intended primarily for use
6548in @value{GDBN} command scripts, where the output might be unnecessary and
6549distracting.
6550@end table
6551
6d2ebf8b 6552@node Frame Info
79a6e687 6553@section Information About a Frame
c906108c
SS
6554
6555There are several other commands to print information about the selected
6556stack frame.
6557
6558@table @code
6559@item frame
6560@itemx f
6561When used without any argument, this command does not change which
6562frame is selected, but prints a brief description of the currently
6563selected stack frame. It can be abbreviated @code{f}. With an
6564argument, this command is used to select a stack frame.
79a6e687 6565@xref{Selection, ,Selecting a Frame}.
c906108c
SS
6566
6567@kindex info frame
41afff9a 6568@kindex info f @r{(@code{info frame})}
c906108c
SS
6569@item info frame
6570@itemx info f
6571This command prints a verbose description of the selected stack frame,
6572including:
6573
6574@itemize @bullet
5d161b24
DB
6575@item
6576the address of the frame
c906108c
SS
6577@item
6578the address of the next frame down (called by this frame)
6579@item
6580the address of the next frame up (caller of this frame)
6581@item
6582the language in which the source code corresponding to this frame is written
6583@item
6584the address of the frame's arguments
6585@item
d4f3574e
SS
6586the address of the frame's local variables
6587@item
c906108c
SS
6588the program counter saved in it (the address of execution in the caller frame)
6589@item
6590which registers were saved in the frame
6591@end itemize
6592
6593@noindent The verbose description is useful when
6594something has gone wrong that has made the stack format fail to fit
6595the usual conventions.
6596
6597@item info frame @var{addr}
6598@itemx info f @var{addr}
6599Print a verbose description of the frame at address @var{addr}, without
6600selecting that frame. The selected frame remains unchanged by this
6601command. This requires the same kind of address (more than one for some
6602architectures) that you specify in the @code{frame} command.
79a6e687 6603@xref{Selection, ,Selecting a Frame}.
c906108c
SS
6604
6605@kindex info args
6606@item info args
6607Print the arguments of the selected frame, each on a separate line.
6608
6609@item info locals
6610@kindex info locals
6611Print the local variables of the selected frame, each on a separate
6612line. These are all variables (declared either static or automatic)
6613accessible at the point of execution of the selected frame.
6614
c906108c
SS
6615@end table
6616
c906108c 6617
6d2ebf8b 6618@node Source
c906108c
SS
6619@chapter Examining Source Files
6620
6621@value{GDBN} can print parts of your program's source, since the debugging
6622information recorded in the program tells @value{GDBN} what source files were
6623used to build it. When your program stops, @value{GDBN} spontaneously prints
6624the line where it stopped. Likewise, when you select a stack frame
79a6e687 6625(@pxref{Selection, ,Selecting a Frame}), @value{GDBN} prints the line where
c906108c
SS
6626execution in that frame has stopped. You can print other portions of
6627source files by explicit command.
6628
7a292a7a 6629If you use @value{GDBN} through its @sc{gnu} Emacs interface, you may
d4f3574e 6630prefer to use Emacs facilities to view source; see @ref{Emacs, ,Using
7a292a7a 6631@value{GDBN} under @sc{gnu} Emacs}.
c906108c
SS
6632
6633@menu
6634* List:: Printing source lines
2a25a5ba 6635* Specify Location:: How to specify code locations
87885426 6636* Edit:: Editing source files
c906108c 6637* Search:: Searching source files
c906108c
SS
6638* Source Path:: Specifying source directories
6639* Machine Code:: Source and machine code
6640@end menu
6641
6d2ebf8b 6642@node List
79a6e687 6643@section Printing Source Lines
c906108c
SS
6644
6645@kindex list
41afff9a 6646@kindex l @r{(@code{list})}
c906108c 6647To print lines from a source file, use the @code{list} command
5d161b24 6648(abbreviated @code{l}). By default, ten lines are printed.
2a25a5ba
EZ
6649There are several ways to specify what part of the file you want to
6650print; see @ref{Specify Location}, for the full list.
c906108c
SS
6651
6652Here are the forms of the @code{list} command most commonly used:
6653
6654@table @code
6655@item list @var{linenum}
6656Print lines centered around line number @var{linenum} in the
6657current source file.
6658
6659@item list @var{function}
6660Print lines centered around the beginning of function
6661@var{function}.
6662
6663@item list
6664Print more lines. If the last lines printed were printed with a
6665@code{list} command, this prints lines following the last lines
6666printed; however, if the last line printed was a solitary line printed
6667as part of displaying a stack frame (@pxref{Stack, ,Examining the
6668Stack}), this prints lines centered around that line.
6669
6670@item list -
6671Print lines just before the lines last printed.
6672@end table
6673
9c16f35a 6674@cindex @code{list}, how many lines to display
c906108c
SS
6675By default, @value{GDBN} prints ten source lines with any of these forms of
6676the @code{list} command. You can change this using @code{set listsize}:
6677
6678@table @code
6679@kindex set listsize
6680@item set listsize @var{count}
6681Make the @code{list} command display @var{count} source lines (unless
6682the @code{list} argument explicitly specifies some other number).
6683
6684@kindex show listsize
6685@item show listsize
6686Display the number of lines that @code{list} prints.
6687@end table
6688
6689Repeating a @code{list} command with @key{RET} discards the argument,
6690so it is equivalent to typing just @code{list}. This is more useful
6691than listing the same lines again. An exception is made for an
6692argument of @samp{-}; that argument is preserved in repetition so that
6693each repetition moves up in the source file.
6694
c906108c
SS
6695In general, the @code{list} command expects you to supply zero, one or two
6696@dfn{linespecs}. Linespecs specify source lines; there are several ways
2a25a5ba
EZ
6697of writing them (@pxref{Specify Location}), but the effect is always
6698to specify some source line.
6699
c906108c
SS
6700Here is a complete description of the possible arguments for @code{list}:
6701
6702@table @code
6703@item list @var{linespec}
6704Print lines centered around the line specified by @var{linespec}.
6705
6706@item list @var{first},@var{last}
6707Print lines from @var{first} to @var{last}. Both arguments are
2a25a5ba
EZ
6708linespecs. When a @code{list} command has two linespecs, and the
6709source file of the second linespec is omitted, this refers to
6710the same source file as the first linespec.
c906108c
SS
6711
6712@item list ,@var{last}
6713Print lines ending with @var{last}.
6714
6715@item list @var{first},
6716Print lines starting with @var{first}.
6717
6718@item list +
6719Print lines just after the lines last printed.
6720
6721@item list -
6722Print lines just before the lines last printed.
6723
6724@item list
6725As described in the preceding table.
6726@end table
6727
2a25a5ba
EZ
6728@node Specify Location
6729@section Specifying a Location
6730@cindex specifying location
6731@cindex linespec
c906108c 6732
2a25a5ba
EZ
6733Several @value{GDBN} commands accept arguments that specify a location
6734of your program's code. Since @value{GDBN} is a source-level
6735debugger, a location usually specifies some line in the source code;
6736for that reason, locations are also known as @dfn{linespecs}.
c906108c 6737
2a25a5ba
EZ
6738Here are all the different ways of specifying a code location that
6739@value{GDBN} understands:
c906108c 6740
2a25a5ba
EZ
6741@table @code
6742@item @var{linenum}
6743Specifies the line number @var{linenum} of the current source file.
c906108c 6744
2a25a5ba
EZ
6745@item -@var{offset}
6746@itemx +@var{offset}
6747Specifies the line @var{offset} lines before or after the @dfn{current
6748line}. For the @code{list} command, the current line is the last one
6749printed; for the breakpoint commands, this is the line at which
6750execution stopped in the currently selected @dfn{stack frame}
6751(@pxref{Frames, ,Frames}, for a description of stack frames.) When
6752used as the second of the two linespecs in a @code{list} command,
6753this specifies the line @var{offset} lines up or down from the first
6754linespec.
6755
6756@item @var{filename}:@var{linenum}
6757Specifies the line @var{linenum} in the source file @var{filename}.
4aac40c8
TT
6758If @var{filename} is a relative file name, then it will match any
6759source file name with the same trailing components. For example, if
6760@var{filename} is @samp{gcc/expr.c}, then it will match source file
6761name of @file{/build/trunk/gcc/expr.c}, but not
6762@file{/build/trunk/libcpp/expr.c} or @file{/build/trunk/gcc/x-expr.c}.
c906108c
SS
6763
6764@item @var{function}
6765Specifies the line that begins the body of the function @var{function}.
2a25a5ba 6766For example, in C, this is the line with the open brace.
c906108c 6767
9ef07c8c
TT
6768@item @var{function}:@var{label}
6769Specifies the line where @var{label} appears in @var{function}.
6770
c906108c 6771@item @var{filename}:@var{function}
2a25a5ba
EZ
6772Specifies the line that begins the body of the function @var{function}
6773in the file @var{filename}. You only need the file name with a
6774function name to avoid ambiguity when there are identically named
6775functions in different source files.
c906108c 6776
0f5238ed
TT
6777@item @var{label}
6778Specifies the line at which the label named @var{label} appears.
6779@value{GDBN} searches for the label in the function corresponding to
6780the currently selected stack frame. If there is no current selected
6781stack frame (for instance, if the inferior is not running), then
6782@value{GDBN} will not search for a label.
6783
c906108c 6784@item *@var{address}
2a25a5ba
EZ
6785Specifies the program address @var{address}. For line-oriented
6786commands, such as @code{list} and @code{edit}, this specifies a source
6787line that contains @var{address}. For @code{break} and other
6788breakpoint oriented commands, this can be used to set breakpoints in
6789parts of your program which do not have debugging information or
6790source files.
6791
6792Here @var{address} may be any expression valid in the current working
6793language (@pxref{Languages, working language}) that specifies a code
5fa54e5d
EZ
6794address. In addition, as a convenience, @value{GDBN} extends the
6795semantics of expressions used in locations to cover the situations
6796that frequently happen during debugging. Here are the various forms
6797of @var{address}:
2a25a5ba
EZ
6798
6799@table @code
6800@item @var{expression}
6801Any expression valid in the current working language.
6802
6803@item @var{funcaddr}
6804An address of a function or procedure derived from its name. In C,
6805C@t{++}, Java, Objective-C, Fortran, minimal, and assembly, this is
6806simply the function's name @var{function} (and actually a special case
6807of a valid expression). In Pascal and Modula-2, this is
6808@code{&@var{function}}. In Ada, this is @code{@var{function}'Address}
6809(although the Pascal form also works).
6810
6811This form specifies the address of the function's first instruction,
6812before the stack frame and arguments have been set up.
6813
6814@item '@var{filename}'::@var{funcaddr}
6815Like @var{funcaddr} above, but also specifies the name of the source
6816file explicitly. This is useful if the name of the function does not
6817specify the function unambiguously, e.g., if there are several
6818functions with identical names in different source files.
c906108c
SS
6819@end table
6820
62e5f89c
SDJ
6821@cindex breakpoint at static probe point
6822@item -pstap|-probe-stap @r{[}@var{objfile}:@r{[}@var{provider}:@r{]}@r{]}@var{name}
6823The @sc{gnu}/Linux tool @code{SystemTap} provides a way for
6824applications to embed static probes. @xref{Static Probe Points}, for more
6825information on finding and using static probes. This form of linespec
6826specifies the location of such a static probe.
6827
6828If @var{objfile} is given, only probes coming from that shared library
6829or executable matching @var{objfile} as a regular expression are considered.
6830If @var{provider} is given, then only probes from that provider are considered.
6831If several probes match the spec, @value{GDBN} will insert a breakpoint at
6832each one of those probes.
6833
2a25a5ba
EZ
6834@end table
6835
6836
87885426 6837@node Edit
79a6e687 6838@section Editing Source Files
87885426
FN
6839@cindex editing source files
6840
6841@kindex edit
6842@kindex e @r{(@code{edit})}
6843To edit the lines in a source file, use the @code{edit} command.
6844The editing program of your choice
6845is invoked with the current line set to
6846the active line in the program.
6847Alternatively, there are several ways to specify what part of the file you
2a25a5ba 6848want to print if you want to see other parts of the program:
87885426
FN
6849
6850@table @code
2a25a5ba
EZ
6851@item edit @var{location}
6852Edit the source file specified by @code{location}. Editing starts at
6853that @var{location}, e.g., at the specified source line of the
6854specified file. @xref{Specify Location}, for all the possible forms
6855of the @var{location} argument; here are the forms of the @code{edit}
6856command most commonly used:
87885426 6857
2a25a5ba 6858@table @code
87885426
FN
6859@item edit @var{number}
6860Edit the current source file with @var{number} as the active line number.
6861
6862@item edit @var{function}
6863Edit the file containing @var{function} at the beginning of its definition.
2a25a5ba 6864@end table
87885426 6865
87885426
FN
6866@end table
6867
79a6e687 6868@subsection Choosing your Editor
87885426
FN
6869You can customize @value{GDBN} to use any editor you want
6870@footnote{
6871The only restriction is that your editor (say @code{ex}), recognizes the
6872following command-line syntax:
10998722 6873@smallexample
87885426 6874ex +@var{number} file
10998722 6875@end smallexample
15387254
EZ
6876The optional numeric value +@var{number} specifies the number of the line in
6877the file where to start editing.}.
6878By default, it is @file{@value{EDITOR}}, but you can change this
10998722
AC
6879by setting the environment variable @code{EDITOR} before using
6880@value{GDBN}. For example, to configure @value{GDBN} to use the
6881@code{vi} editor, you could use these commands with the @code{sh} shell:
6882@smallexample
87885426
FN
6883EDITOR=/usr/bin/vi
6884export EDITOR
15387254 6885gdb @dots{}
10998722 6886@end smallexample
87885426 6887or in the @code{csh} shell,
10998722 6888@smallexample
87885426 6889setenv EDITOR /usr/bin/vi
15387254 6890gdb @dots{}
10998722 6891@end smallexample
87885426 6892
6d2ebf8b 6893@node Search
79a6e687 6894@section Searching Source Files
15387254 6895@cindex searching source files
c906108c
SS
6896
6897There are two commands for searching through the current source file for a
6898regular expression.
6899
6900@table @code
6901@kindex search
6902@kindex forward-search
6903@item forward-search @var{regexp}
6904@itemx search @var{regexp}
6905The command @samp{forward-search @var{regexp}} checks each line,
6906starting with the one following the last line listed, for a match for
5d161b24 6907@var{regexp}. It lists the line that is found. You can use the
c906108c
SS
6908synonym @samp{search @var{regexp}} or abbreviate the command name as
6909@code{fo}.
6910
09d4efe1 6911@kindex reverse-search
c906108c
SS
6912@item reverse-search @var{regexp}
6913The command @samp{reverse-search @var{regexp}} checks each line, starting
6914with the one before the last line listed and going backward, for a match
6915for @var{regexp}. It lists the line that is found. You can abbreviate
6916this command as @code{rev}.
6917@end table
c906108c 6918
6d2ebf8b 6919@node Source Path
79a6e687 6920@section Specifying Source Directories
c906108c
SS
6921
6922@cindex source path
6923@cindex directories for source files
6924Executable programs sometimes do not record the directories of the source
6925files from which they were compiled, just the names. Even when they do,
6926the directories could be moved between the compilation and your debugging
6927session. @value{GDBN} has a list of directories to search for source files;
6928this is called the @dfn{source path}. Each time @value{GDBN} wants a source file,
6929it tries all the directories in the list, in the order they are present
0b66e38c
EZ
6930in the list, until it finds a file with the desired name.
6931
6932For example, suppose an executable references the file
6933@file{/usr/src/foo-1.0/lib/foo.c}, and our source path is
6934@file{/mnt/cross}. The file is first looked up literally; if this
6935fails, @file{/mnt/cross/usr/src/foo-1.0/lib/foo.c} is tried; if this
6936fails, @file{/mnt/cross/foo.c} is opened; if this fails, an error
6937message is printed. @value{GDBN} does not look up the parts of the
6938source file name, such as @file{/mnt/cross/src/foo-1.0/lib/foo.c}.
6939Likewise, the subdirectories of the source path are not searched: if
6940the source path is @file{/mnt/cross}, and the binary refers to
6941@file{foo.c}, @value{GDBN} would not find it under
6942@file{/mnt/cross/usr/src/foo-1.0/lib}.
6943
6944Plain file names, relative file names with leading directories, file
6945names containing dots, etc.@: are all treated as described above; for
6946instance, if the source path is @file{/mnt/cross}, and the source file
6947is recorded as @file{../lib/foo.c}, @value{GDBN} would first try
6948@file{../lib/foo.c}, then @file{/mnt/cross/../lib/foo.c}, and after
6949that---@file{/mnt/cross/foo.c}.
6950
6951Note that the executable search path is @emph{not} used to locate the
cd852561 6952source files.
c906108c
SS
6953
6954Whenever you reset or rearrange the source path, @value{GDBN} clears out
6955any information it has cached about where source files are found and where
6956each line is in the file.
6957
6958@kindex directory
6959@kindex dir
d4f3574e
SS
6960When you start @value{GDBN}, its source path includes only @samp{cdir}
6961and @samp{cwd}, in that order.
c906108c
SS
6962To add other directories, use the @code{directory} command.
6963
4b505b12
AS
6964The search path is used to find both program source files and @value{GDBN}
6965script files (read using the @samp{-command} option and @samp{source} command).
6966
30daae6c
JB
6967In addition to the source path, @value{GDBN} provides a set of commands
6968that manage a list of source path substitution rules. A @dfn{substitution
6969rule} specifies how to rewrite source directories stored in the program's
6970debug information in case the sources were moved to a different
6971directory between compilation and debugging. A rule is made of
6972two strings, the first specifying what needs to be rewritten in
6973the path, and the second specifying how it should be rewritten.
6974In @ref{set substitute-path}, we name these two parts @var{from} and
6975@var{to} respectively. @value{GDBN} does a simple string replacement
6976of @var{from} with @var{to} at the start of the directory part of the
6977source file name, and uses that result instead of the original file
6978name to look up the sources.
6979
6980Using the previous example, suppose the @file{foo-1.0} tree has been
6981moved from @file{/usr/src} to @file{/mnt/cross}, then you can tell
3f94c067 6982@value{GDBN} to replace @file{/usr/src} in all source path names with
30daae6c
JB
6983@file{/mnt/cross}. The first lookup will then be
6984@file{/mnt/cross/foo-1.0/lib/foo.c} in place of the original location
6985of @file{/usr/src/foo-1.0/lib/foo.c}. To define a source path
6986substitution rule, use the @code{set substitute-path} command
6987(@pxref{set substitute-path}).
6988
6989To avoid unexpected substitution results, a rule is applied only if the
6990@var{from} part of the directory name ends at a directory separator.
6991For instance, a rule substituting @file{/usr/source} into
6992@file{/mnt/cross} will be applied to @file{/usr/source/foo-1.0} but
6993not to @file{/usr/sourceware/foo-2.0}. And because the substitution
d3e8051b 6994is applied only at the beginning of the directory name, this rule will
30daae6c
JB
6995not be applied to @file{/root/usr/source/baz.c} either.
6996
6997In many cases, you can achieve the same result using the @code{directory}
6998command. However, @code{set substitute-path} can be more efficient in
6999the case where the sources are organized in a complex tree with multiple
7000subdirectories. With the @code{directory} command, you need to add each
7001subdirectory of your project. If you moved the entire tree while
7002preserving its internal organization, then @code{set substitute-path}
7003allows you to direct the debugger to all the sources with one single
7004command.
7005
7006@code{set substitute-path} is also more than just a shortcut command.
7007The source path is only used if the file at the original location no
7008longer exists. On the other hand, @code{set substitute-path} modifies
7009the debugger behavior to look at the rewritten location instead. So, if
7010for any reason a source file that is not relevant to your executable is
7011located at the original location, a substitution rule is the only
3f94c067 7012method available to point @value{GDBN} at the new location.
30daae6c 7013
29b0e8a2
JM
7014@cindex @samp{--with-relocated-sources}
7015@cindex default source path substitution
7016You can configure a default source path substitution rule by
7017configuring @value{GDBN} with the
7018@samp{--with-relocated-sources=@var{dir}} option. The @var{dir}
7019should be the name of a directory under @value{GDBN}'s configured
7020prefix (set with @samp{--prefix} or @samp{--exec-prefix}), and
7021directory names in debug information under @var{dir} will be adjusted
7022automatically if the installed @value{GDBN} is moved to a new
7023location. This is useful if @value{GDBN}, libraries or executables
7024with debug information and corresponding source code are being moved
7025together.
7026
c906108c
SS
7027@table @code
7028@item directory @var{dirname} @dots{}
7029@item dir @var{dirname} @dots{}
7030Add directory @var{dirname} to the front of the source path. Several
d4f3574e
SS
7031directory names may be given to this command, separated by @samp{:}
7032(@samp{;} on MS-DOS and MS-Windows, where @samp{:} usually appears as
7033part of absolute file names) or
c906108c
SS
7034whitespace. You may specify a directory that is already in the source
7035path; this moves it forward, so @value{GDBN} searches it sooner.
7036
7037@kindex cdir
7038@kindex cwd
41afff9a 7039@vindex $cdir@r{, convenience variable}
d3e8051b 7040@vindex $cwd@r{, convenience variable}
c906108c
SS
7041@cindex compilation directory
7042@cindex current directory
7043@cindex working directory
7044@cindex directory, current
7045@cindex directory, compilation
7046You can use the string @samp{$cdir} to refer to the compilation
7047directory (if one is recorded), and @samp{$cwd} to refer to the current
7048working directory. @samp{$cwd} is not the same as @samp{.}---the former
7049tracks the current working directory as it changes during your @value{GDBN}
7050session, while the latter is immediately expanded to the current
7051directory at the time you add an entry to the source path.
7052
7053@item directory
cd852561 7054Reset the source path to its default value (@samp{$cdir:$cwd} on Unix systems). This requires confirmation.
c906108c
SS
7055
7056@c RET-repeat for @code{directory} is explicitly disabled, but since
7057@c repeating it would be a no-op we do not say that. (thanks to RMS)
7058
99e7ae30
DE
7059@item set directories @var{path-list}
7060@kindex set directories
7061Set the source path to @var{path-list}.
7062@samp{$cdir:$cwd} are added if missing.
7063
c906108c
SS
7064@item show directories
7065@kindex show directories
7066Print the source path: show which directories it contains.
30daae6c
JB
7067
7068@anchor{set substitute-path}
7069@item set substitute-path @var{from} @var{to}
7070@kindex set substitute-path
7071Define a source path substitution rule, and add it at the end of the
7072current list of existing substitution rules. If a rule with the same
7073@var{from} was already defined, then the old rule is also deleted.
7074
7075For example, if the file @file{/foo/bar/baz.c} was moved to
7076@file{/mnt/cross/baz.c}, then the command
7077
7078@smallexample
7079(@value{GDBP}) set substitute-path /usr/src /mnt/cross
7080@end smallexample
7081
7082@noindent
7083will tell @value{GDBN} to replace @samp{/usr/src} with
7084@samp{/mnt/cross}, which will allow @value{GDBN} to find the file
7085@file{baz.c} even though it was moved.
7086
7087In the case when more than one substitution rule have been defined,
7088the rules are evaluated one by one in the order where they have been
7089defined. The first one matching, if any, is selected to perform
7090the substitution.
7091
7092For instance, if we had entered the following commands:
7093
7094@smallexample
7095(@value{GDBP}) set substitute-path /usr/src/include /mnt/include
7096(@value{GDBP}) set substitute-path /usr/src /mnt/src
7097@end smallexample
7098
7099@noindent
7100@value{GDBN} would then rewrite @file{/usr/src/include/defs.h} into
7101@file{/mnt/include/defs.h} by using the first rule. However, it would
7102use the second rule to rewrite @file{/usr/src/lib/foo.c} into
7103@file{/mnt/src/lib/foo.c}.
7104
7105
7106@item unset substitute-path [path]
7107@kindex unset substitute-path
7108If a path is specified, search the current list of substitution rules
7109for a rule that would rewrite that path. Delete that rule if found.
7110A warning is emitted by the debugger if no rule could be found.
7111
7112If no path is specified, then all substitution rules are deleted.
7113
7114@item show substitute-path [path]
7115@kindex show substitute-path
7116If a path is specified, then print the source path substitution rule
7117which would rewrite that path, if any.
7118
7119If no path is specified, then print all existing source path substitution
7120rules.
7121
c906108c
SS
7122@end table
7123
7124If your source path is cluttered with directories that are no longer of
7125interest, @value{GDBN} may sometimes cause confusion by finding the wrong
7126versions of source. You can correct the situation as follows:
7127
7128@enumerate
7129@item
cd852561 7130Use @code{directory} with no argument to reset the source path to its default value.
c906108c
SS
7131
7132@item
7133Use @code{directory} with suitable arguments to reinstall the
7134directories you want in the source path. You can add all the
7135directories in one command.
7136@end enumerate
7137
6d2ebf8b 7138@node Machine Code
79a6e687 7139@section Source and Machine Code
15387254 7140@cindex source line and its code address
c906108c
SS
7141
7142You can use the command @code{info line} to map source lines to program
7143addresses (and vice versa), and the command @code{disassemble} to display
91440f57
HZ
7144a range of addresses as machine instructions. You can use the command
7145@code{set disassemble-next-line} to set whether to disassemble next
7146source line when execution stops. When run under @sc{gnu} Emacs
d4f3574e 7147mode, the @code{info line} command causes the arrow to point to the
5d161b24 7148line specified. Also, @code{info line} prints addresses in symbolic form as
c906108c
SS
7149well as hex.
7150
7151@table @code
7152@kindex info line
7153@item info line @var{linespec}
7154Print the starting and ending addresses of the compiled code for
7155source line @var{linespec}. You can specify source lines in any of
2a25a5ba 7156the ways documented in @ref{Specify Location}.
c906108c
SS
7157@end table
7158
7159For example, we can use @code{info line} to discover the location of
7160the object code for the first line of function
7161@code{m4_changequote}:
7162
d4f3574e
SS
7163@c FIXME: I think this example should also show the addresses in
7164@c symbolic form, as they usually would be displayed.
c906108c 7165@smallexample
96a2c332 7166(@value{GDBP}) info line m4_changequote
c906108c
SS
7167Line 895 of "builtin.c" starts at pc 0x634c and ends at 0x6350.
7168@end smallexample
7169
7170@noindent
15387254 7171@cindex code address and its source line
c906108c
SS
7172We can also inquire (using @code{*@var{addr}} as the form for
7173@var{linespec}) what source line covers a particular address:
7174@smallexample
7175(@value{GDBP}) info line *0x63ff
7176Line 926 of "builtin.c" starts at pc 0x63e4 and ends at 0x6404.
7177@end smallexample
7178
7179@cindex @code{$_} and @code{info line}
15387254 7180@cindex @code{x} command, default address
41afff9a 7181@kindex x@r{(examine), and} info line
c906108c
SS
7182After @code{info line}, the default address for the @code{x} command
7183is changed to the starting address of the line, so that @samp{x/i} is
7184sufficient to begin examining the machine code (@pxref{Memory,
79a6e687 7185,Examining Memory}). Also, this address is saved as the value of the
c906108c 7186convenience variable @code{$_} (@pxref{Convenience Vars, ,Convenience
79a6e687 7187Variables}).
c906108c
SS
7188
7189@table @code
7190@kindex disassemble
7191@cindex assembly instructions
7192@cindex instructions, assembly
7193@cindex machine instructions
7194@cindex listing machine instructions
7195@item disassemble
d14508fe 7196@itemx disassemble /m
9b117ef3 7197@itemx disassemble /r
c906108c 7198This specialized command dumps a range of memory as machine
d14508fe 7199instructions. It can also print mixed source+disassembly by specifying
9b117ef3
HZ
7200the @code{/m} modifier and print the raw instructions in hex as well as
7201in symbolic form by specifying the @code{/r}.
d14508fe 7202The default memory range is the function surrounding the
c906108c
SS
7203program counter of the selected frame. A single argument to this
7204command is a program counter value; @value{GDBN} dumps the function
21a0512e
PP
7205surrounding this value. When two arguments are given, they should
7206be separated by a comma, possibly surrounded by whitespace. The
53a71c06
CR
7207arguments specify a range of addresses to dump, in one of two forms:
7208
7209@table @code
7210@item @var{start},@var{end}
7211the addresses from @var{start} (inclusive) to @var{end} (exclusive)
7212@item @var{start},+@var{length}
7213the addresses from @var{start} (inclusive) to
7214@code{@var{start}+@var{length}} (exclusive).
7215@end table
7216
7217@noindent
7218When 2 arguments are specified, the name of the function is also
7219printed (since there could be several functions in the given range).
21a0512e
PP
7220
7221The argument(s) can be any expression yielding a numeric value, such as
7222@samp{0x32c4}, @samp{&main+10} or @samp{$pc - 8}.
2b28d209
PP
7223
7224If the range of memory being disassembled contains current program counter,
7225the instruction at that location is shown with a @code{=>} marker.
c906108c
SS
7226@end table
7227
c906108c
SS
7228The following example shows the disassembly of a range of addresses of
7229HP PA-RISC 2.0 code:
7230
7231@smallexample
21a0512e 7232(@value{GDBP}) disas 0x32c4, 0x32e4
c906108c 7233Dump of assembler code from 0x32c4 to 0x32e4:
2b28d209
PP
7234 0x32c4 <main+204>: addil 0,dp
7235 0x32c8 <main+208>: ldw 0x22c(sr0,r1),r26
7236 0x32cc <main+212>: ldil 0x3000,r31
7237 0x32d0 <main+216>: ble 0x3f8(sr4,r31)
7238 0x32d4 <main+220>: ldo 0(r31),rp
7239 0x32d8 <main+224>: addil -0x800,dp
7240 0x32dc <main+228>: ldo 0x588(r1),r26
7241 0x32e0 <main+232>: ldil 0x3000,r31
c906108c
SS
7242End of assembler dump.
7243@end smallexample
c906108c 7244
2b28d209
PP
7245Here is an example showing mixed source+assembly for Intel x86, when the
7246program is stopped just after function prologue:
d14508fe
DE
7247
7248@smallexample
7249(@value{GDBP}) disas /m main
7250Dump of assembler code for function main:
72515 @{
9c419145
PP
7252 0x08048330 <+0>: push %ebp
7253 0x08048331 <+1>: mov %esp,%ebp
7254 0x08048333 <+3>: sub $0x8,%esp
7255 0x08048336 <+6>: and $0xfffffff0,%esp
7256 0x08048339 <+9>: sub $0x10,%esp
d14508fe
DE
7257
72586 printf ("Hello.\n");
9c419145
PP
7259=> 0x0804833c <+12>: movl $0x8048440,(%esp)
7260 0x08048343 <+19>: call 0x8048284 <puts@@plt>
d14508fe
DE
7261
72627 return 0;
72638 @}
9c419145
PP
7264 0x08048348 <+24>: mov $0x0,%eax
7265 0x0804834d <+29>: leave
7266 0x0804834e <+30>: ret
d14508fe
DE
7267
7268End of assembler dump.
7269@end smallexample
7270
53a71c06
CR
7271Here is another example showing raw instructions in hex for AMD x86-64,
7272
7273@smallexample
7274(gdb) disas /r 0x400281,+10
7275Dump of assembler code from 0x400281 to 0x40028b:
7276 0x0000000000400281: 38 36 cmp %dh,(%rsi)
7277 0x0000000000400283: 2d 36 34 2e 73 sub $0x732e3436,%eax
7278 0x0000000000400288: 6f outsl %ds:(%rsi),(%dx)
7279 0x0000000000400289: 2e 32 00 xor %cs:(%rax),%al
7280End of assembler dump.
7281@end smallexample
7282
c906108c
SS
7283Some architectures have more than one commonly-used set of instruction
7284mnemonics or other syntax.
7285
76d17f34
EZ
7286For programs that were dynamically linked and use shared libraries,
7287instructions that call functions or branch to locations in the shared
7288libraries might show a seemingly bogus location---it's actually a
7289location of the relocation table. On some architectures, @value{GDBN}
7290might be able to resolve these to actual function names.
7291
c906108c 7292@table @code
d4f3574e 7293@kindex set disassembly-flavor
d4f3574e
SS
7294@cindex Intel disassembly flavor
7295@cindex AT&T disassembly flavor
7296@item set disassembly-flavor @var{instruction-set}
c906108c
SS
7297Select the instruction set to use when disassembling the
7298program via the @code{disassemble} or @code{x/i} commands.
7299
7300Currently this command is only defined for the Intel x86 family. You
d4f3574e
SS
7301can set @var{instruction-set} to either @code{intel} or @code{att}.
7302The default is @code{att}, the AT&T flavor used by default by Unix
7303assemblers for x86-based targets.
9c16f35a
EZ
7304
7305@kindex show disassembly-flavor
7306@item show disassembly-flavor
7307Show the current setting of the disassembly flavor.
c906108c
SS
7308@end table
7309
91440f57
HZ
7310@table @code
7311@kindex set disassemble-next-line
7312@kindex show disassemble-next-line
7313@item set disassemble-next-line
7314@itemx show disassemble-next-line
32ae1842
EZ
7315Control whether or not @value{GDBN} will disassemble the next source
7316line or instruction when execution stops. If ON, @value{GDBN} will
7317display disassembly of the next source line when execution of the
7318program being debugged stops. This is @emph{in addition} to
7319displaying the source line itself, which @value{GDBN} always does if
7320possible. If the next source line cannot be displayed for some reason
7321(e.g., if @value{GDBN} cannot find the source file, or there's no line
7322info in the debug info), @value{GDBN} will display disassembly of the
7323next @emph{instruction} instead of showing the next source line. If
7324AUTO, @value{GDBN} will display disassembly of next instruction only
7325if the source line cannot be displayed. This setting causes
7326@value{GDBN} to display some feedback when you step through a function
7327with no line info or whose source file is unavailable. The default is
7328OFF, which means never display the disassembly of the next line or
7329instruction.
91440f57
HZ
7330@end table
7331
c906108c 7332
6d2ebf8b 7333@node Data
c906108c
SS
7334@chapter Examining Data
7335
7336@cindex printing data
7337@cindex examining data
7338@kindex print
7339@kindex inspect
7340@c "inspect" is not quite a synonym if you are using Epoch, which we do not
7341@c document because it is nonstandard... Under Epoch it displays in a
7342@c different window or something like that.
7343The usual way to examine data in your program is with the @code{print}
7a292a7a
SS
7344command (abbreviated @code{p}), or its synonym @code{inspect}. It
7345evaluates and prints the value of an expression of the language your
7346program is written in (@pxref{Languages, ,Using @value{GDBN} with
78e2826b
TT
7347Different Languages}). It may also print the expression using a
7348Python-based pretty-printer (@pxref{Pretty Printing}).
c906108c
SS
7349
7350@table @code
d4f3574e
SS
7351@item print @var{expr}
7352@itemx print /@var{f} @var{expr}
7353@var{expr} is an expression (in the source language). By default the
7354value of @var{expr} is printed in a format appropriate to its data type;
c906108c 7355you can choose a different format by specifying @samp{/@var{f}}, where
d4f3574e 7356@var{f} is a letter specifying the format; see @ref{Output Formats,,Output
79a6e687 7357Formats}.
c906108c
SS
7358
7359@item print
7360@itemx print /@var{f}
15387254 7361@cindex reprint the last value
d4f3574e 7362If you omit @var{expr}, @value{GDBN} displays the last value again (from the
79a6e687 7363@dfn{value history}; @pxref{Value History, ,Value History}). This allows you to
c906108c
SS
7364conveniently inspect the same value in an alternative format.
7365@end table
7366
7367A more low-level way of examining data is with the @code{x} command.
7368It examines data in memory at a specified address and prints it in a
79a6e687 7369specified format. @xref{Memory, ,Examining Memory}.
c906108c 7370
7a292a7a 7371If you are interested in information about types, or about how the
d4f3574e
SS
7372fields of a struct or a class are declared, use the @code{ptype @var{exp}}
7373command rather than @code{print}. @xref{Symbols, ,Examining the Symbol
7a292a7a 7374Table}.
c906108c 7375
06fc020f
SCR
7376@cindex exploring hierarchical data structures
7377@kindex explore
7378Another way of examining values of expressions and type information is
7379through the Python extension command @code{explore} (available only if
7380the @value{GDBN} build is configured with @code{--with-python}). It
7381offers an interactive way to start at the highest level (or, the most
7382abstract level) of the data type of an expression (or, the data type
7383itself) and explore all the way down to leaf scalar values/fields
7384embedded in the higher level data types.
7385
7386@table @code
7387@item explore @var{arg}
7388@var{arg} is either an expression (in the source language), or a type
7389visible in the current context of the program being debugged.
7390@end table
7391
7392The working of the @code{explore} command can be illustrated with an
7393example. If a data type @code{struct ComplexStruct} is defined in your
7394C program as
7395
7396@smallexample
7397struct SimpleStruct
7398@{
7399 int i;
7400 double d;
7401@};
7402
7403struct ComplexStruct
7404@{
7405 struct SimpleStruct *ss_p;
7406 int arr[10];
7407@};
7408@end smallexample
7409
7410@noindent
7411followed by variable declarations as
7412
7413@smallexample
7414struct SimpleStruct ss = @{ 10, 1.11 @};
7415struct ComplexStruct cs = @{ &ss, @{ 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 @} @};
7416@end smallexample
7417
7418@noindent
7419then, the value of the variable @code{cs} can be explored using the
7420@code{explore} command as follows.
7421
7422@smallexample
7423(gdb) explore cs
7424The value of `cs' is a struct/class of type `struct ComplexStruct' with
7425the following fields:
7426
7427 ss_p = <Enter 0 to explore this field of type `struct SimpleStruct *'>
7428 arr = <Enter 1 to explore this field of type `int [10]'>
7429
7430Enter the field number of choice:
7431@end smallexample
7432
7433@noindent
7434Since the fields of @code{cs} are not scalar values, you are being
7435prompted to chose the field you want to explore. Let's say you choose
7436the field @code{ss_p} by entering @code{0}. Then, since this field is a
7437pointer, you will be asked if it is pointing to a single value. From
7438the declaration of @code{cs} above, it is indeed pointing to a single
7439value, hence you enter @code{y}. If you enter @code{n}, then you will
7440be asked if it were pointing to an array of values, in which case this
7441field will be explored as if it were an array.
7442
7443@smallexample
7444`cs.ss_p' is a pointer to a value of type `struct SimpleStruct'
7445Continue exploring it as a pointer to a single value [y/n]: y
7446The value of `*(cs.ss_p)' is a struct/class of type `struct
7447SimpleStruct' with the following fields:
7448
7449 i = 10 .. (Value of type `int')
7450 d = 1.1100000000000001 .. (Value of type `double')
7451
7452Press enter to return to parent value:
7453@end smallexample
7454
7455@noindent
7456If the field @code{arr} of @code{cs} was chosen for exploration by
7457entering @code{1} earlier, then since it is as array, you will be
7458prompted to enter the index of the element in the array that you want
7459to explore.
7460
7461@smallexample
7462`cs.arr' is an array of `int'.
7463Enter the index of the element you want to explore in `cs.arr': 5
7464
7465`(cs.arr)[5]' is a scalar value of type `int'.
7466
7467(cs.arr)[5] = 4
7468
7469Press enter to return to parent value:
7470@end smallexample
7471
7472In general, at any stage of exploration, you can go deeper towards the
7473leaf values by responding to the prompts appropriately, or hit the
7474return key to return to the enclosing data structure (the @i{higher}
7475level data structure).
7476
7477Similar to exploring values, you can use the @code{explore} command to
7478explore types. Instead of specifying a value (which is typically a
7479variable name or an expression valid in the current context of the
7480program being debugged), you specify a type name. If you consider the
7481same example as above, your can explore the type
7482@code{struct ComplexStruct} by passing the argument
7483@code{struct ComplexStruct} to the @code{explore} command.
7484
7485@smallexample
7486(gdb) explore struct ComplexStruct
7487@end smallexample
7488
7489@noindent
7490By responding to the prompts appropriately in the subsequent interactive
7491session, you can explore the type @code{struct ComplexStruct} in a
7492manner similar to how the value @code{cs} was explored in the above
7493example.
7494
7495The @code{explore} command also has two sub-commands,
7496@code{explore value} and @code{explore type}. The former sub-command is
7497a way to explicitly specify that value exploration of the argument is
7498being invoked, while the latter is a way to explicitly specify that type
7499exploration of the argument is being invoked.
7500
7501@table @code
7502@item explore value @var{expr}
7503@cindex explore value
7504This sub-command of @code{explore} explores the value of the
7505expression @var{expr} (if @var{expr} is an expression valid in the
7506current context of the program being debugged). The behavior of this
7507command is identical to that of the behavior of the @code{explore}
7508command being passed the argument @var{expr}.
7509
7510@item explore type @var{arg}
7511@cindex explore type
7512This sub-command of @code{explore} explores the type of @var{arg} (if
7513@var{arg} is a type visible in the current context of program being
7514debugged), or the type of the value/expression @var{arg} (if @var{arg}
7515is an expression valid in the current context of the program being
7516debugged). If @var{arg} is a type, then the behavior of this command is
7517identical to that of the @code{explore} command being passed the
7518argument @var{arg}. If @var{arg} is an expression, then the behavior of
7519this command will be identical to that of the @code{explore} command
7520being passed the type of @var{arg} as the argument.
7521@end table
7522
c906108c
SS
7523@menu
7524* Expressions:: Expressions
6ba66d6a 7525* Ambiguous Expressions:: Ambiguous Expressions
c906108c
SS
7526* Variables:: Program variables
7527* Arrays:: Artificial arrays
7528* Output Formats:: Output formats
7529* Memory:: Examining memory
7530* Auto Display:: Automatic display
7531* Print Settings:: Print settings
4c374409 7532* Pretty Printing:: Python pretty printing
c906108c
SS
7533* Value History:: Value history
7534* Convenience Vars:: Convenience variables
7535* Registers:: Registers
c906108c 7536* Floating Point Hardware:: Floating point hardware
53c69bd7 7537* Vector Unit:: Vector Unit
721c2651 7538* OS Information:: Auxiliary data provided by operating system
29e57380 7539* Memory Region Attributes:: Memory region attributes
16d9dec6 7540* Dump/Restore Files:: Copy between memory and a file
384ee23f 7541* Core File Generation:: Cause a program dump its core
a0eb71c5
KB
7542* Character Sets:: Debugging programs that use a different
7543 character set than GDB does
09d4efe1 7544* Caching Remote Data:: Data caching for remote targets
08388c79 7545* Searching Memory:: Searching memory for a sequence of bytes
c906108c
SS
7546@end menu
7547
6d2ebf8b 7548@node Expressions
c906108c
SS
7549@section Expressions
7550
7551@cindex expressions
7552@code{print} and many other @value{GDBN} commands accept an expression and
7553compute its value. Any kind of constant, variable or operator defined
7554by the programming language you are using is valid in an expression in
e2e0bcd1
JB
7555@value{GDBN}. This includes conditional expressions, function calls,
7556casts, and string constants. It also includes preprocessor macros, if
7557you compiled your program to include this information; see
7558@ref{Compilation}.
c906108c 7559
15387254 7560@cindex arrays in expressions
d4f3574e
SS
7561@value{GDBN} supports array constants in expressions input by
7562the user. The syntax is @{@var{element}, @var{element}@dots{}@}. For example,
63092375
DJ
7563you can use the command @code{print @{1, 2, 3@}} to create an array
7564of three integers. If you pass an array to a function or assign it
7565to a program variable, @value{GDBN} copies the array to memory that
7566is @code{malloc}ed in the target program.
c906108c 7567
c906108c
SS
7568Because C is so widespread, most of the expressions shown in examples in
7569this manual are in C. @xref{Languages, , Using @value{GDBN} with Different
7570Languages}, for information on how to use expressions in other
7571languages.
7572
7573In this section, we discuss operators that you can use in @value{GDBN}
7574expressions regardless of your programming language.
7575
15387254 7576@cindex casts, in expressions
c906108c
SS
7577Casts are supported in all languages, not just in C, because it is so
7578useful to cast a number into a pointer in order to examine a structure
7579at that address in memory.
7580@c FIXME: casts supported---Mod2 true?
c906108c
SS
7581
7582@value{GDBN} supports these operators, in addition to those common
7583to programming languages:
7584
7585@table @code
7586@item @@
7587@samp{@@} is a binary operator for treating parts of memory as arrays.
79a6e687 7588@xref{Arrays, ,Artificial Arrays}, for more information.
c906108c
SS
7589
7590@item ::
7591@samp{::} allows you to specify a variable in terms of the file or
79a6e687 7592function where it is defined. @xref{Variables, ,Program Variables}.
c906108c
SS
7593
7594@cindex @{@var{type}@}
7595@cindex type casting memory
7596@cindex memory, viewing as typed object
7597@cindex casts, to view memory
7598@item @{@var{type}@} @var{addr}
7599Refers to an object of type @var{type} stored at address @var{addr} in
7600memory. @var{addr} may be any expression whose value is an integer or
7601pointer (but parentheses are required around binary operators, just as in
7602a cast). This construct is allowed regardless of what kind of data is
7603normally supposed to reside at @var{addr}.
7604@end table
7605
6ba66d6a
JB
7606@node Ambiguous Expressions
7607@section Ambiguous Expressions
7608@cindex ambiguous expressions
7609
7610Expressions can sometimes contain some ambiguous elements. For instance,
7611some programming languages (notably Ada, C@t{++} and Objective-C) permit
7612a single function name to be defined several times, for application in
7613different contexts. This is called @dfn{overloading}. Another example
7614involving Ada is generics. A @dfn{generic package} is similar to C@t{++}
7615templates and is typically instantiated several times, resulting in
7616the same function name being defined in different contexts.
7617
7618In some cases and depending on the language, it is possible to adjust
7619the expression to remove the ambiguity. For instance in C@t{++}, you
7620can specify the signature of the function you want to break on, as in
7621@kbd{break @var{function}(@var{types})}. In Ada, using the fully
7622qualified name of your function often makes the expression unambiguous
7623as well.
7624
7625When an ambiguity that needs to be resolved is detected, the debugger
7626has the capability to display a menu of numbered choices for each
7627possibility, and then waits for the selection with the prompt @samp{>}.
7628The first option is always @samp{[0] cancel}, and typing @kbd{0 @key{RET}}
7629aborts the current command. If the command in which the expression was
7630used allows more than one choice to be selected, the next option in the
7631menu is @samp{[1] all}, and typing @kbd{1 @key{RET}} selects all possible
7632choices.
7633
7634For example, the following session excerpt shows an attempt to set a
7635breakpoint at the overloaded symbol @code{String::after}.
7636We choose three particular definitions of that function name:
7637
7638@c FIXME! This is likely to change to show arg type lists, at least
7639@smallexample
7640@group
7641(@value{GDBP}) b String::after
7642[0] cancel
7643[1] all
7644[2] file:String.cc; line number:867
7645[3] file:String.cc; line number:860
7646[4] file:String.cc; line number:875
7647[5] file:String.cc; line number:853
7648[6] file:String.cc; line number:846
7649[7] file:String.cc; line number:735
7650> 2 4 6
7651Breakpoint 1 at 0xb26c: file String.cc, line 867.
7652Breakpoint 2 at 0xb344: file String.cc, line 875.
7653Breakpoint 3 at 0xafcc: file String.cc, line 846.
7654Multiple breakpoints were set.
7655Use the "delete" command to delete unwanted
7656 breakpoints.
7657(@value{GDBP})
7658@end group
7659@end smallexample
7660
7661@table @code
7662@kindex set multiple-symbols
7663@item set multiple-symbols @var{mode}
7664@cindex multiple-symbols menu
7665
7666This option allows you to adjust the debugger behavior when an expression
7667is ambiguous.
7668
7669By default, @var{mode} is set to @code{all}. If the command with which
7670the expression is used allows more than one choice, then @value{GDBN}
7671automatically selects all possible choices. For instance, inserting
7672a breakpoint on a function using an ambiguous name results in a breakpoint
7673inserted on each possible match. However, if a unique choice must be made,
7674then @value{GDBN} uses the menu to help you disambiguate the expression.
7675For instance, printing the address of an overloaded function will result
7676in the use of the menu.
7677
7678When @var{mode} is set to @code{ask}, the debugger always uses the menu
7679when an ambiguity is detected.
7680
7681Finally, when @var{mode} is set to @code{cancel}, the debugger reports
7682an error due to the ambiguity and the command is aborted.
7683
7684@kindex show multiple-symbols
7685@item show multiple-symbols
7686Show the current value of the @code{multiple-symbols} setting.
7687@end table
7688
6d2ebf8b 7689@node Variables
79a6e687 7690@section Program Variables
c906108c
SS
7691
7692The most common kind of expression to use is the name of a variable
7693in your program.
7694
7695Variables in expressions are understood in the selected stack frame
79a6e687 7696(@pxref{Selection, ,Selecting a Frame}); they must be either:
c906108c
SS
7697
7698@itemize @bullet
7699@item
7700global (or file-static)
7701@end itemize
7702
5d161b24 7703@noindent or
c906108c
SS
7704
7705@itemize @bullet
7706@item
7707visible according to the scope rules of the
7708programming language from the point of execution in that frame
5d161b24 7709@end itemize
c906108c
SS
7710
7711@noindent This means that in the function
7712
474c8240 7713@smallexample
c906108c
SS
7714foo (a)
7715 int a;
7716@{
7717 bar (a);
7718 @{
7719 int b = test ();
7720 bar (b);
7721 @}
7722@}
474c8240 7723@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
7724
7725@noindent
7726you can examine and use the variable @code{a} whenever your program is
7727executing within the function @code{foo}, but you can only use or
7728examine the variable @code{b} while your program is executing inside
7729the block where @code{b} is declared.
7730
7731@cindex variable name conflict
7732There is an exception: you can refer to a variable or function whose
7733scope is a single source file even if the current execution point is not
7734in this file. But it is possible to have more than one such variable or
7735function with the same name (in different source files). If that
7736happens, referring to that name has unpredictable effects. If you wish,
72384ba3 7737you can specify a static variable in a particular function or file by
15387254 7738using the colon-colon (@code{::}) notation:
c906108c 7739
d4f3574e 7740@cindex colon-colon, context for variables/functions
12c27660 7741@ifnotinfo
c906108c 7742@c info cannot cope with a :: index entry, but why deprive hard copy readers?
41afff9a 7743@cindex @code{::}, context for variables/functions
12c27660 7744@end ifnotinfo
474c8240 7745@smallexample
c906108c
SS
7746@var{file}::@var{variable}
7747@var{function}::@var{variable}
474c8240 7748@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
7749
7750@noindent
7751Here @var{file} or @var{function} is the name of the context for the
7752static @var{variable}. In the case of file names, you can use quotes to
7753make sure @value{GDBN} parses the file name as a single word---for example,
7754to print a global value of @code{x} defined in @file{f2.c}:
7755
474c8240 7756@smallexample
c906108c 7757(@value{GDBP}) p 'f2.c'::x
474c8240 7758@end smallexample
c906108c 7759
72384ba3
PH
7760The @code{::} notation is normally used for referring to
7761static variables, since you typically disambiguate uses of local variables
7762in functions by selecting the appropriate frame and using the
7763simple name of the variable. However, you may also use this notation
7764to refer to local variables in frames enclosing the selected frame:
7765
7766@smallexample
7767void
7768foo (int a)
7769@{
7770 if (a < 10)
7771 bar (a);
7772 else
7773 process (a); /* Stop here */
7774@}
7775
7776int
7777bar (int a)
7778@{
7779 foo (a + 5);
7780@}
7781@end smallexample
7782
7783@noindent
7784For example, if there is a breakpoint at the commented line,
7785here is what you might see
7786when the program stops after executing the call @code{bar(0)}:
7787
7788@smallexample
7789(@value{GDBP}) p a
7790$1 = 10
7791(@value{GDBP}) p bar::a
7792$2 = 5
7793(@value{GDBP}) up 2
7794#2 0x080483d0 in foo (a=5) at foobar.c:12
7795(@value{GDBP}) p a
7796$3 = 5
7797(@value{GDBP}) p bar::a
7798$4 = 0
7799@end smallexample
7800
b37052ae 7801@cindex C@t{++} scope resolution
72384ba3 7802These uses of @samp{::} are very rarely in conflict with the very similar
b37052ae 7803use of the same notation in C@t{++}. @value{GDBN} also supports use of the C@t{++}
c906108c
SS
7804scope resolution operator in @value{GDBN} expressions.
7805@c FIXME: Um, so what happens in one of those rare cases where it's in
7806@c conflict?? --mew
c906108c
SS
7807
7808@cindex wrong values
7809@cindex variable values, wrong
15387254
EZ
7810@cindex function entry/exit, wrong values of variables
7811@cindex optimized code, wrong values of variables
c906108c
SS
7812@quotation
7813@emph{Warning:} Occasionally, a local variable may appear to have the
7814wrong value at certain points in a function---just after entry to a new
7815scope, and just before exit.
7816@end quotation
7817You may see this problem when you are stepping by machine instructions.
7818This is because, on most machines, it takes more than one instruction to
7819set up a stack frame (including local variable definitions); if you are
7820stepping by machine instructions, variables may appear to have the wrong
7821values until the stack frame is completely built. On exit, it usually
7822also takes more than one machine instruction to destroy a stack frame;
7823after you begin stepping through that group of instructions, local
7824variable definitions may be gone.
7825
7826This may also happen when the compiler does significant optimizations.
7827To be sure of always seeing accurate values, turn off all optimization
7828when compiling.
7829
d4f3574e
SS
7830@cindex ``No symbol "foo" in current context''
7831Another possible effect of compiler optimizations is to optimize
7832unused variables out of existence, or assign variables to registers (as
7833opposed to memory addresses). Depending on the support for such cases
7834offered by the debug info format used by the compiler, @value{GDBN}
7835might not be able to display values for such local variables. If that
7836happens, @value{GDBN} will print a message like this:
7837
474c8240 7838@smallexample
d4f3574e 7839No symbol "foo" in current context.
474c8240 7840@end smallexample
d4f3574e
SS
7841
7842To solve such problems, either recompile without optimizations, or use a
7843different debug info format, if the compiler supports several such
e0f8f636
TT
7844formats. @xref{Compilation}, for more information on choosing compiler
7845options. @xref{C, ,C and C@t{++}}, for more information about debug
7846info formats that are best suited to C@t{++} programs.
d4f3574e 7847
ab1adacd
EZ
7848If you ask to print an object whose contents are unknown to
7849@value{GDBN}, e.g., because its data type is not completely specified
7850by the debug information, @value{GDBN} will say @samp{<incomplete
7851type>}. @xref{Symbols, incomplete type}, for more about this.
7852
36b11add
JK
7853If you append @kbd{@@entry} string to a function parameter name you get its
7854value at the time the function got called. If the value is not available an
7855error message is printed. Entry values are available only with some compilers.
7856Entry values are normally also printed at the function parameter list according
7857to @ref{set print entry-values}.
7858
7859@smallexample
7860Breakpoint 1, d (i=30) at gdb.base/entry-value.c:29
786129 i++;
7862(gdb) next
786330 e (i);
7864(gdb) print i
7865$1 = 31
7866(gdb) print i@@entry
7867$2 = 30
7868@end smallexample
7869
3a60f64e
JK
7870Strings are identified as arrays of @code{char} values without specified
7871signedness. Arrays of either @code{signed char} or @code{unsigned char} get
7872printed as arrays of 1 byte sized integers. @code{-fsigned-char} or
7873@code{-funsigned-char} @value{NGCC} options have no effect as @value{GDBN}
7874defines literal string type @code{"char"} as @code{char} without a sign.
7875For program code
7876
7877@smallexample
7878char var0[] = "A";
7879signed char var1[] = "A";
7880@end smallexample
7881
7882You get during debugging
7883@smallexample
7884(gdb) print var0
7885$1 = "A"
7886(gdb) print var1
7887$2 = @{65 'A', 0 '\0'@}
7888@end smallexample
7889
6d2ebf8b 7890@node Arrays
79a6e687 7891@section Artificial Arrays
c906108c
SS
7892
7893@cindex artificial array
15387254 7894@cindex arrays
41afff9a 7895@kindex @@@r{, referencing memory as an array}
c906108c
SS
7896It is often useful to print out several successive objects of the
7897same type in memory; a section of an array, or an array of
7898dynamically determined size for which only a pointer exists in the
7899program.
7900
7901You can do this by referring to a contiguous span of memory as an
7902@dfn{artificial array}, using the binary operator @samp{@@}. The left
7903operand of @samp{@@} should be the first element of the desired array
7904and be an individual object. The right operand should be the desired length
7905of the array. The result is an array value whose elements are all of
7906the type of the left argument. The first element is actually the left
7907argument; the second element comes from bytes of memory immediately
7908following those that hold the first element, and so on. Here is an
7909example. If a program says
7910
474c8240 7911@smallexample
c906108c 7912int *array = (int *) malloc (len * sizeof (int));
474c8240 7913@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
7914
7915@noindent
7916you can print the contents of @code{array} with
7917
474c8240 7918@smallexample
c906108c 7919p *array@@len
474c8240 7920@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
7921
7922The left operand of @samp{@@} must reside in memory. Array values made
7923with @samp{@@} in this way behave just like other arrays in terms of
7924subscripting, and are coerced to pointers when used in expressions.
7925Artificial arrays most often appear in expressions via the value history
79a6e687 7926(@pxref{Value History, ,Value History}), after printing one out.
c906108c
SS
7927
7928Another way to create an artificial array is to use a cast.
7929This re-interprets a value as if it were an array.
7930The value need not be in memory:
474c8240 7931@smallexample
c906108c
SS
7932(@value{GDBP}) p/x (short[2])0x12345678
7933$1 = @{0x1234, 0x5678@}
474c8240 7934@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
7935
7936As a convenience, if you leave the array length out (as in
c3f6f71d 7937@samp{(@var{type}[])@var{value}}) @value{GDBN} calculates the size to fill
c906108c 7938the value (as @samp{sizeof(@var{value})/sizeof(@var{type})}:
474c8240 7939@smallexample
c906108c
SS
7940(@value{GDBP}) p/x (short[])0x12345678
7941$2 = @{0x1234, 0x5678@}
474c8240 7942@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
7943
7944Sometimes the artificial array mechanism is not quite enough; in
7945moderately complex data structures, the elements of interest may not
7946actually be adjacent---for example, if you are interested in the values
7947of pointers in an array. One useful work-around in this situation is
7948to use a convenience variable (@pxref{Convenience Vars, ,Convenience
79a6e687 7949Variables}) as a counter in an expression that prints the first
c906108c
SS
7950interesting value, and then repeat that expression via @key{RET}. For
7951instance, suppose you have an array @code{dtab} of pointers to
7952structures, and you are interested in the values of a field @code{fv}
7953in each structure. Here is an example of what you might type:
7954
474c8240 7955@smallexample
c906108c
SS
7956set $i = 0
7957p dtab[$i++]->fv
7958@key{RET}
7959@key{RET}
7960@dots{}
474c8240 7961@end smallexample
c906108c 7962
6d2ebf8b 7963@node Output Formats
79a6e687 7964@section Output Formats
c906108c
SS
7965
7966@cindex formatted output
7967@cindex output formats
7968By default, @value{GDBN} prints a value according to its data type. Sometimes
7969this is not what you want. For example, you might want to print a number
7970in hex, or a pointer in decimal. Or you might want to view data in memory
7971at a certain address as a character string or as an instruction. To do
7972these things, specify an @dfn{output format} when you print a value.
7973
7974The simplest use of output formats is to say how to print a value
7975already computed. This is done by starting the arguments of the
7976@code{print} command with a slash and a format letter. The format
7977letters supported are:
7978
7979@table @code
7980@item x
7981Regard the bits of the value as an integer, and print the integer in
7982hexadecimal.
7983
7984@item d
7985Print as integer in signed decimal.
7986
7987@item u
7988Print as integer in unsigned decimal.
7989
7990@item o
7991Print as integer in octal.
7992
7993@item t
7994Print as integer in binary. The letter @samp{t} stands for ``two''.
7995@footnote{@samp{b} cannot be used because these format letters are also
7996used with the @code{x} command, where @samp{b} stands for ``byte'';
79a6e687 7997see @ref{Memory,,Examining Memory}.}
c906108c
SS
7998
7999@item a
8000@cindex unknown address, locating
3d67e040 8001@cindex locate address
c906108c
SS
8002Print as an address, both absolute in hexadecimal and as an offset from
8003the nearest preceding symbol. You can use this format used to discover
8004where (in what function) an unknown address is located:
8005
474c8240 8006@smallexample
c906108c
SS
8007(@value{GDBP}) p/a 0x54320
8008$3 = 0x54320 <_initialize_vx+396>
474c8240 8009@end smallexample
c906108c 8010
3d67e040
EZ
8011@noindent
8012The command @code{info symbol 0x54320} yields similar results.
8013@xref{Symbols, info symbol}.
8014
c906108c 8015@item c
51274035
EZ
8016Regard as an integer and print it as a character constant. This
8017prints both the numerical value and its character representation. The
8018character representation is replaced with the octal escape @samp{\nnn}
8019for characters outside the 7-bit @sc{ascii} range.
c906108c 8020
ea37ba09
DJ
8021Without this format, @value{GDBN} displays @code{char},
8022@w{@code{unsigned char}}, and @w{@code{signed char}} data as character
8023constants. Single-byte members of vectors are displayed as integer
8024data.
8025
c906108c
SS
8026@item f
8027Regard the bits of the value as a floating point number and print
8028using typical floating point syntax.
ea37ba09
DJ
8029
8030@item s
8031@cindex printing strings
8032@cindex printing byte arrays
8033Regard as a string, if possible. With this format, pointers to single-byte
8034data are displayed as null-terminated strings and arrays of single-byte data
8035are displayed as fixed-length strings. Other values are displayed in their
8036natural types.
8037
8038Without this format, @value{GDBN} displays pointers to and arrays of
8039@code{char}, @w{@code{unsigned char}}, and @w{@code{signed char}} as
8040strings. Single-byte members of a vector are displayed as an integer
8041array.
a6bac58e
TT
8042
8043@item r
8044@cindex raw printing
8045Print using the @samp{raw} formatting. By default, @value{GDBN} will
78e2826b
TT
8046use a Python-based pretty-printer, if one is available (@pxref{Pretty
8047Printing}). This typically results in a higher-level display of the
8048value's contents. The @samp{r} format bypasses any Python
8049pretty-printer which might exist.
c906108c
SS
8050@end table
8051
8052For example, to print the program counter in hex (@pxref{Registers}), type
8053
474c8240 8054@smallexample
c906108c 8055p/x $pc
474c8240 8056@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
8057
8058@noindent
8059Note that no space is required before the slash; this is because command
8060names in @value{GDBN} cannot contain a slash.
8061
8062To reprint the last value in the value history with a different format,
8063you can use the @code{print} command with just a format and no
8064expression. For example, @samp{p/x} reprints the last value in hex.
8065
6d2ebf8b 8066@node Memory
79a6e687 8067@section Examining Memory
c906108c
SS
8068
8069You can use the command @code{x} (for ``examine'') to examine memory in
8070any of several formats, independently of your program's data types.
8071
8072@cindex examining memory
8073@table @code
41afff9a 8074@kindex x @r{(examine memory)}
c906108c
SS
8075@item x/@var{nfu} @var{addr}
8076@itemx x @var{addr}
8077@itemx x
8078Use the @code{x} command to examine memory.
8079@end table
8080
8081@var{n}, @var{f}, and @var{u} are all optional parameters that specify how
8082much memory to display and how to format it; @var{addr} is an
8083expression giving the address where you want to start displaying memory.
8084If you use defaults for @var{nfu}, you need not type the slash @samp{/}.
8085Several commands set convenient defaults for @var{addr}.
8086
8087@table @r
8088@item @var{n}, the repeat count
8089The repeat count is a decimal integer; the default is 1. It specifies
8090how much memory (counting by units @var{u}) to display.
8091@c This really is **decimal**; unaffected by 'set radix' as of GDB
8092@c 4.1.2.
8093
8094@item @var{f}, the display format
51274035
EZ
8095The display format is one of the formats used by @code{print}
8096(@samp{x}, @samp{d}, @samp{u}, @samp{o}, @samp{t}, @samp{a}, @samp{c},
ea37ba09
DJ
8097@samp{f}, @samp{s}), and in addition @samp{i} (for machine instructions).
8098The default is @samp{x} (hexadecimal) initially. The default changes
8099each time you use either @code{x} or @code{print}.
c906108c
SS
8100
8101@item @var{u}, the unit size
8102The unit size is any of
8103
8104@table @code
8105@item b
8106Bytes.
8107@item h
8108Halfwords (two bytes).
8109@item w
8110Words (four bytes). This is the initial default.
8111@item g
8112Giant words (eight bytes).
8113@end table
8114
8115Each time you specify a unit size with @code{x}, that size becomes the
9a22f0d0
PM
8116default unit the next time you use @code{x}. For the @samp{i} format,
8117the unit size is ignored and is normally not written. For the @samp{s} format,
8118the unit size defaults to @samp{b}, unless it is explicitly given.
8119Use @kbd{x /hs} to display 16-bit char strings and @kbd{x /ws} to display
812032-bit strings. The next use of @kbd{x /s} will again display 8-bit strings.
8121Note that the results depend on the programming language of the
8122current compilation unit. If the language is C, the @samp{s}
8123modifier will use the UTF-16 encoding while @samp{w} will use
8124UTF-32. The encoding is set by the programming language and cannot
8125be altered.
c906108c
SS
8126
8127@item @var{addr}, starting display address
8128@var{addr} is the address where you want @value{GDBN} to begin displaying
8129memory. The expression need not have a pointer value (though it may);
8130it is always interpreted as an integer address of a byte of memory.
8131@xref{Expressions, ,Expressions}, for more information on expressions. The default for
8132@var{addr} is usually just after the last address examined---but several
8133other commands also set the default address: @code{info breakpoints} (to
8134the address of the last breakpoint listed), @code{info line} (to the
8135starting address of a line), and @code{print} (if you use it to display
8136a value from memory).
8137@end table
8138
8139For example, @samp{x/3uh 0x54320} is a request to display three halfwords
8140(@code{h}) of memory, formatted as unsigned decimal integers (@samp{u}),
8141starting at address @code{0x54320}. @samp{x/4xw $sp} prints the four
8142words (@samp{w}) of memory above the stack pointer (here, @samp{$sp};
d4f3574e 8143@pxref{Registers, ,Registers}) in hexadecimal (@samp{x}).
c906108c
SS
8144
8145Since the letters indicating unit sizes are all distinct from the
8146letters specifying output formats, you do not have to remember whether
8147unit size or format comes first; either order works. The output
8148specifications @samp{4xw} and @samp{4wx} mean exactly the same thing.
8149(However, the count @var{n} must come first; @samp{wx4} does not work.)
8150
8151Even though the unit size @var{u} is ignored for the formats @samp{s}
8152and @samp{i}, you might still want to use a count @var{n}; for example,
8153@samp{3i} specifies that you want to see three machine instructions,
a4642986
MR
8154including any operands. For convenience, especially when used with
8155the @code{display} command, the @samp{i} format also prints branch delay
8156slot instructions, if any, beyond the count specified, which immediately
8157follow the last instruction that is within the count. The command
8158@code{disassemble} gives an alternative way of inspecting machine
8159instructions; see @ref{Machine Code,,Source and Machine Code}.
c906108c
SS
8160
8161All the defaults for the arguments to @code{x} are designed to make it
8162easy to continue scanning memory with minimal specifications each time
8163you use @code{x}. For example, after you have inspected three machine
8164instructions with @samp{x/3i @var{addr}}, you can inspect the next seven
8165with just @samp{x/7}. If you use @key{RET} to repeat the @code{x} command,
8166the repeat count @var{n} is used again; the other arguments default as
8167for successive uses of @code{x}.
8168
2b28d209
PP
8169When examining machine instructions, the instruction at current program
8170counter is shown with a @code{=>} marker. For example:
8171
8172@smallexample
8173(@value{GDBP}) x/5i $pc-6
8174 0x804837f <main+11>: mov %esp,%ebp
8175 0x8048381 <main+13>: push %ecx
8176 0x8048382 <main+14>: sub $0x4,%esp
8177=> 0x8048385 <main+17>: movl $0x8048460,(%esp)
8178 0x804838c <main+24>: call 0x80482d4 <puts@@plt>
8179@end smallexample
8180
c906108c
SS
8181@cindex @code{$_}, @code{$__}, and value history
8182The addresses and contents printed by the @code{x} command are not saved
8183in the value history because there is often too much of them and they
8184would get in the way. Instead, @value{GDBN} makes these values available for
8185subsequent use in expressions as values of the convenience variables
8186@code{$_} and @code{$__}. After an @code{x} command, the last address
8187examined is available for use in expressions in the convenience variable
8188@code{$_}. The contents of that address, as examined, are available in
8189the convenience variable @code{$__}.
8190
8191If the @code{x} command has a repeat count, the address and contents saved
8192are from the last memory unit printed; this is not the same as the last
8193address printed if several units were printed on the last line of output.
8194
09d4efe1
EZ
8195@cindex remote memory comparison
8196@cindex verify remote memory image
8197When you are debugging a program running on a remote target machine
ea35711c 8198(@pxref{Remote Debugging}), you may wish to verify the program's image in the
09d4efe1
EZ
8199remote machine's memory against the executable file you downloaded to
8200the target. The @code{compare-sections} command is provided for such
8201situations.
8202
8203@table @code
8204@kindex compare-sections
8205@item compare-sections @r{[}@var{section-name}@r{]}
8206Compare the data of a loadable section @var{section-name} in the
8207executable file of the program being debugged with the same section in
8208the remote machine's memory, and report any mismatches. With no
8209arguments, compares all loadable sections. This command's
8210availability depends on the target's support for the @code{"qCRC"}
8211remote request.
8212@end table
8213
6d2ebf8b 8214@node Auto Display
79a6e687 8215@section Automatic Display
c906108c
SS
8216@cindex automatic display
8217@cindex display of expressions
8218
8219If you find that you want to print the value of an expression frequently
8220(to see how it changes), you might want to add it to the @dfn{automatic
8221display list} so that @value{GDBN} prints its value each time your program stops.
8222Each expression added to the list is given a number to identify it;
8223to remove an expression from the list, you specify that number.
8224The automatic display looks like this:
8225
474c8240 8226@smallexample
c906108c
SS
82272: foo = 38
82283: bar[5] = (struct hack *) 0x3804
474c8240 8229@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
8230
8231@noindent
8232This display shows item numbers, expressions and their current values. As with
8233displays you request manually using @code{x} or @code{print}, you can
8234specify the output format you prefer; in fact, @code{display} decides
ea37ba09
DJ
8235whether to use @code{print} or @code{x} depending your format
8236specification---it uses @code{x} if you specify either the @samp{i}
8237or @samp{s} format, or a unit size; otherwise it uses @code{print}.
c906108c
SS
8238
8239@table @code
8240@kindex display
d4f3574e
SS
8241@item display @var{expr}
8242Add the expression @var{expr} to the list of expressions to display
c906108c
SS
8243each time your program stops. @xref{Expressions, ,Expressions}.
8244
8245@code{display} does not repeat if you press @key{RET} again after using it.
8246
d4f3574e 8247@item display/@var{fmt} @var{expr}
c906108c 8248For @var{fmt} specifying only a display format and not a size or
d4f3574e 8249count, add the expression @var{expr} to the auto-display list but
c906108c 8250arrange to display it each time in the specified format @var{fmt}.
79a6e687 8251@xref{Output Formats,,Output Formats}.
c906108c
SS
8252
8253@item display/@var{fmt} @var{addr}
8254For @var{fmt} @samp{i} or @samp{s}, or including a unit-size or a
8255number of units, add the expression @var{addr} as a memory address to
8256be examined each time your program stops. Examining means in effect
79a6e687 8257doing @samp{x/@var{fmt} @var{addr}}. @xref{Memory, ,Examining Memory}.
c906108c
SS
8258@end table
8259
8260For example, @samp{display/i $pc} can be helpful, to see the machine
8261instruction about to be executed each time execution stops (@samp{$pc}
d4f3574e 8262is a common name for the program counter; @pxref{Registers, ,Registers}).
c906108c
SS
8263
8264@table @code
8265@kindex delete display
8266@kindex undisplay
8267@item undisplay @var{dnums}@dots{}
8268@itemx delete display @var{dnums}@dots{}
c9174737
PA
8269Remove items from the list of expressions to display. Specify the
8270numbers of the displays that you want affected with the command
8271argument @var{dnums}. It can be a single display number, one of the
8272numbers shown in the first field of the @samp{info display} display;
8273or it could be a range of display numbers, as in @code{2-4}.
c906108c
SS
8274
8275@code{undisplay} does not repeat if you press @key{RET} after using it.
8276(Otherwise you would just get the error @samp{No display number @dots{}}.)
8277
8278@kindex disable display
8279@item disable display @var{dnums}@dots{}
8280Disable the display of item numbers @var{dnums}. A disabled display
8281item is not printed automatically, but is not forgotten. It may be
c9174737
PA
8282enabled again later. Specify the numbers of the displays that you
8283want affected with the command argument @var{dnums}. It can be a
8284single display number, one of the numbers shown in the first field of
8285the @samp{info display} display; or it could be a range of display
8286numbers, as in @code{2-4}.
c906108c
SS
8287
8288@kindex enable display
8289@item enable display @var{dnums}@dots{}
8290Enable display of item numbers @var{dnums}. It becomes effective once
8291again in auto display of its expression, until you specify otherwise.
c9174737
PA
8292Specify the numbers of the displays that you want affected with the
8293command argument @var{dnums}. It can be a single display number, one
8294of the numbers shown in the first field of the @samp{info display}
8295display; or it could be a range of display numbers, as in @code{2-4}.
c906108c
SS
8296
8297@item display
8298Display the current values of the expressions on the list, just as is
8299done when your program stops.
8300
8301@kindex info display
8302@item info display
8303Print the list of expressions previously set up to display
8304automatically, each one with its item number, but without showing the
8305values. This includes disabled expressions, which are marked as such.
8306It also includes expressions which would not be displayed right now
8307because they refer to automatic variables not currently available.
8308@end table
8309
15387254 8310@cindex display disabled out of scope
c906108c
SS
8311If a display expression refers to local variables, then it does not make
8312sense outside the lexical context for which it was set up. Such an
8313expression is disabled when execution enters a context where one of its
8314variables is not defined. For example, if you give the command
8315@code{display last_char} while inside a function with an argument
8316@code{last_char}, @value{GDBN} displays this argument while your program
8317continues to stop inside that function. When it stops elsewhere---where
8318there is no variable @code{last_char}---the display is disabled
8319automatically. The next time your program stops where @code{last_char}
8320is meaningful, you can enable the display expression once again.
8321
6d2ebf8b 8322@node Print Settings
79a6e687 8323@section Print Settings
c906108c
SS
8324
8325@cindex format options
8326@cindex print settings
8327@value{GDBN} provides the following ways to control how arrays, structures,
8328and symbols are printed.
8329
8330@noindent
8331These settings are useful for debugging programs in any language:
8332
8333@table @code
4644b6e3 8334@kindex set print
c906108c
SS
8335@item set print address
8336@itemx set print address on
4644b6e3 8337@cindex print/don't print memory addresses
c906108c
SS
8338@value{GDBN} prints memory addresses showing the location of stack
8339traces, structure values, pointer values, breakpoints, and so forth,
8340even when it also displays the contents of those addresses. The default
8341is @code{on}. For example, this is what a stack frame display looks like with
8342@code{set print address on}:
8343
8344@smallexample
8345@group
8346(@value{GDBP}) f
8347#0 set_quotes (lq=0x34c78 "<<", rq=0x34c88 ">>")
8348 at input.c:530
8349530 if (lquote != def_lquote)
8350@end group
8351@end smallexample
8352
8353@item set print address off
8354Do not print addresses when displaying their contents. For example,
8355this is the same stack frame displayed with @code{set print address off}:
8356
8357@smallexample
8358@group
8359(@value{GDBP}) set print addr off
8360(@value{GDBP}) f
8361#0 set_quotes (lq="<<", rq=">>") at input.c:530
8362530 if (lquote != def_lquote)
8363@end group
8364@end smallexample
8365
8366You can use @samp{set print address off} to eliminate all machine
8367dependent displays from the @value{GDBN} interface. For example, with
8368@code{print address off}, you should get the same text for backtraces on
8369all machines---whether or not they involve pointer arguments.
8370
4644b6e3 8371@kindex show print
c906108c
SS
8372@item show print address
8373Show whether or not addresses are to be printed.
8374@end table
8375
8376When @value{GDBN} prints a symbolic address, it normally prints the
8377closest earlier symbol plus an offset. If that symbol does not uniquely
8378identify the address (for example, it is a name whose scope is a single
8379source file), you may need to clarify. One way to do this is with
8380@code{info line}, for example @samp{info line *0x4537}. Alternately,
8381you can set @value{GDBN} to print the source file and line number when
8382it prints a symbolic address:
8383
8384@table @code
c906108c 8385@item set print symbol-filename on
9c16f35a
EZ
8386@cindex source file and line of a symbol
8387@cindex symbol, source file and line
c906108c
SS
8388Tell @value{GDBN} to print the source file name and line number of a
8389symbol in the symbolic form of an address.
8390
8391@item set print symbol-filename off
8392Do not print source file name and line number of a symbol. This is the
8393default.
8394
c906108c
SS
8395@item show print symbol-filename
8396Show whether or not @value{GDBN} will print the source file name and
8397line number of a symbol in the symbolic form of an address.
8398@end table
8399
8400Another situation where it is helpful to show symbol filenames and line
8401numbers is when disassembling code; @value{GDBN} shows you the line
8402number and source file that corresponds to each instruction.
8403
8404Also, you may wish to see the symbolic form only if the address being
8405printed is reasonably close to the closest earlier symbol:
8406
8407@table @code
c906108c 8408@item set print max-symbolic-offset @var{max-offset}
4644b6e3 8409@cindex maximum value for offset of closest symbol
c906108c
SS
8410Tell @value{GDBN} to only display the symbolic form of an address if the
8411offset between the closest earlier symbol and the address is less than
5d161b24 8412@var{max-offset}. The default is 0, which tells @value{GDBN}
c906108c
SS
8413to always print the symbolic form of an address if any symbol precedes it.
8414
c906108c
SS
8415@item show print max-symbolic-offset
8416Ask how large the maximum offset is that @value{GDBN} prints in a
8417symbolic address.
8418@end table
8419
8420@cindex wild pointer, interpreting
8421@cindex pointer, finding referent
8422If you have a pointer and you are not sure where it points, try
8423@samp{set print symbol-filename on}. Then you can determine the name
8424and source file location of the variable where it points, using
8425@samp{p/a @var{pointer}}. This interprets the address in symbolic form.
8426For example, here @value{GDBN} shows that a variable @code{ptt} points
8427at another variable @code{t}, defined in @file{hi2.c}:
8428
474c8240 8429@smallexample
c906108c
SS
8430(@value{GDBP}) set print symbol-filename on
8431(@value{GDBP}) p/a ptt
8432$4 = 0xe008 <t in hi2.c>
474c8240 8433@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
8434
8435@quotation
8436@emph{Warning:} For pointers that point to a local variable, @samp{p/a}
8437does not show the symbol name and filename of the referent, even with
8438the appropriate @code{set print} options turned on.
8439@end quotation
8440
9cb709b6
TT
8441You can also enable @samp{/a}-like formatting all the time using
8442@samp{set print symbol on}:
8443
8444@table @code
8445@item set print symbol on
8446Tell @value{GDBN} to print the symbol corresponding to an address, if
8447one exists.
8448
8449@item set print symbol off
8450Tell @value{GDBN} not to print the symbol corresponding to an
8451address. In this mode, @value{GDBN} will still print the symbol
8452corresponding to pointers to functions. This is the default.
8453
8454@item show print symbol
8455Show whether @value{GDBN} will display the symbol corresponding to an
8456address.
8457@end table
8458
c906108c
SS
8459Other settings control how different kinds of objects are printed:
8460
8461@table @code
c906108c
SS
8462@item set print array
8463@itemx set print array on
4644b6e3 8464@cindex pretty print arrays
c906108c
SS
8465Pretty print arrays. This format is more convenient to read,
8466but uses more space. The default is off.
8467
8468@item set print array off
8469Return to compressed format for arrays.
8470
c906108c
SS
8471@item show print array
8472Show whether compressed or pretty format is selected for displaying
8473arrays.
8474
3c9c013a
JB
8475@cindex print array indexes
8476@item set print array-indexes
8477@itemx set print array-indexes on
8478Print the index of each element when displaying arrays. May be more
8479convenient to locate a given element in the array or quickly find the
8480index of a given element in that printed array. The default is off.
8481
8482@item set print array-indexes off
8483Stop printing element indexes when displaying arrays.
8484
8485@item show print array-indexes
8486Show whether the index of each element is printed when displaying
8487arrays.
8488
c906108c 8489@item set print elements @var{number-of-elements}
4644b6e3 8490@cindex number of array elements to print
9c16f35a 8491@cindex limit on number of printed array elements
c906108c
SS
8492Set a limit on how many elements of an array @value{GDBN} will print.
8493If @value{GDBN} is printing a large array, it stops printing after it has
8494printed the number of elements set by the @code{set print elements} command.
8495This limit also applies to the display of strings.
d4f3574e 8496When @value{GDBN} starts, this limit is set to 200.
c906108c
SS
8497Setting @var{number-of-elements} to zero means that the printing is unlimited.
8498
c906108c
SS
8499@item show print elements
8500Display the number of elements of a large array that @value{GDBN} will print.
8501If the number is 0, then the printing is unlimited.
8502
b4740add 8503@item set print frame-arguments @var{value}
a0381d3a 8504@kindex set print frame-arguments
b4740add
JB
8505@cindex printing frame argument values
8506@cindex print all frame argument values
8507@cindex print frame argument values for scalars only
8508@cindex do not print frame argument values
8509This command allows to control how the values of arguments are printed
8510when the debugger prints a frame (@pxref{Frames}). The possible
8511values are:
8512
8513@table @code
8514@item all
4f5376b2 8515The values of all arguments are printed.
b4740add
JB
8516
8517@item scalars
8518Print the value of an argument only if it is a scalar. The value of more
8519complex arguments such as arrays, structures, unions, etc, is replaced
4f5376b2
JB
8520by @code{@dots{}}. This is the default. Here is an example where
8521only scalar arguments are shown:
b4740add
JB
8522
8523@smallexample
8524#1 0x08048361 in call_me (i=3, s=@dots{}, ss=0xbf8d508c, u=@dots{}, e=green)
8525 at frame-args.c:23
8526@end smallexample
8527
8528@item none
8529None of the argument values are printed. Instead, the value of each argument
8530is replaced by @code{@dots{}}. In this case, the example above now becomes:
8531
8532@smallexample
8533#1 0x08048361 in call_me (i=@dots{}, s=@dots{}, ss=@dots{}, u=@dots{}, e=@dots{})
8534 at frame-args.c:23
8535@end smallexample
8536@end table
8537
4f5376b2
JB
8538By default, only scalar arguments are printed. This command can be used
8539to configure the debugger to print the value of all arguments, regardless
8540of their type. However, it is often advantageous to not print the value
8541of more complex parameters. For instance, it reduces the amount of
8542information printed in each frame, making the backtrace more readable.
8543Also, it improves performance when displaying Ada frames, because
8544the computation of large arguments can sometimes be CPU-intensive,
8545especially in large applications. Setting @code{print frame-arguments}
8546to @code{scalars} (the default) or @code{none} avoids this computation,
8547thus speeding up the display of each Ada frame.
b4740add
JB
8548
8549@item show print frame-arguments
8550Show how the value of arguments should be displayed when printing a frame.
8551
36b11add 8552@anchor{set print entry-values}
e18b2753
JK
8553@item set print entry-values @var{value}
8554@kindex set print entry-values
8555Set printing of frame argument values at function entry. In some cases
8556@value{GDBN} can determine the value of function argument which was passed by
8557the function caller, even if the value was modified inside the called function
8558and therefore is different. With optimized code, the current value could be
8559unavailable, but the entry value may still be known.
8560
8561The default value is @code{default} (see below for its description). Older
8562@value{GDBN} behaved as with the setting @code{no}. Compilers not supporting
8563this feature will behave in the @code{default} setting the same way as with the
8564@code{no} setting.
8565
8566This functionality is currently supported only by DWARF 2 debugging format and
8567the compiler has to produce @samp{DW_TAG_GNU_call_site} tags. With
8568@value{NGCC}, you need to specify @option{-O -g} during compilation, to get
8569this information.
8570
8571The @var{value} parameter can be one of the following:
8572
8573@table @code
8574@item no
8575Print only actual parameter values, never print values from function entry
8576point.
8577@smallexample
8578#0 equal (val=5)
8579#0 different (val=6)
8580#0 lost (val=<optimized out>)
8581#0 born (val=10)
8582#0 invalid (val=<optimized out>)
8583@end smallexample
8584
8585@item only
8586Print only parameter values from function entry point. The actual parameter
8587values are never printed.
8588@smallexample
8589#0 equal (val@@entry=5)
8590#0 different (val@@entry=5)
8591#0 lost (val@@entry=5)
8592#0 born (val@@entry=<optimized out>)
8593#0 invalid (val@@entry=<optimized out>)
8594@end smallexample
8595
8596@item preferred
8597Print only parameter values from function entry point. If value from function
8598entry point is not known while the actual value is known, print the actual
8599value for such parameter.
8600@smallexample
8601#0 equal (val@@entry=5)
8602#0 different (val@@entry=5)
8603#0 lost (val@@entry=5)
8604#0 born (val=10)
8605#0 invalid (val@@entry=<optimized out>)
8606@end smallexample
8607
8608@item if-needed
8609Print actual parameter values. If actual parameter value is not known while
8610value from function entry point is known, print the entry point value for such
8611parameter.
8612@smallexample
8613#0 equal (val=5)
8614#0 different (val=6)
8615#0 lost (val@@entry=5)
8616#0 born (val=10)
8617#0 invalid (val=<optimized out>)
8618@end smallexample
8619
8620@item both
8621Always print both the actual parameter value and its value from function entry
8622point, even if values of one or both are not available due to compiler
8623optimizations.
8624@smallexample
8625#0 equal (val=5, val@@entry=5)
8626#0 different (val=6, val@@entry=5)
8627#0 lost (val=<optimized out>, val@@entry=5)
8628#0 born (val=10, val@@entry=<optimized out>)
8629#0 invalid (val=<optimized out>, val@@entry=<optimized out>)
8630@end smallexample
8631
8632@item compact
8633Print the actual parameter value if it is known and also its value from
8634function entry point if it is known. If neither is known, print for the actual
8635value @code{<optimized out>}. If not in MI mode (@pxref{GDB/MI}) and if both
8636values are known and identical, print the shortened
8637@code{param=param@@entry=VALUE} notation.
8638@smallexample
8639#0 equal (val=val@@entry=5)
8640#0 different (val=6, val@@entry=5)
8641#0 lost (val@@entry=5)
8642#0 born (val=10)
8643#0 invalid (val=<optimized out>)
8644@end smallexample
8645
8646@item default
8647Always print the actual parameter value. Print also its value from function
8648entry point, but only if it is known. If not in MI mode (@pxref{GDB/MI}) and
8649if both values are known and identical, print the shortened
8650@code{param=param@@entry=VALUE} notation.
8651@smallexample
8652#0 equal (val=val@@entry=5)
8653#0 different (val=6, val@@entry=5)
8654#0 lost (val=<optimized out>, val@@entry=5)
8655#0 born (val=10)
8656#0 invalid (val=<optimized out>)
8657@end smallexample
8658@end table
8659
8660For analysis messages on possible failures of frame argument values at function
8661entry resolution see @ref{set debug entry-values}.
8662
8663@item show print entry-values
8664Show the method being used for printing of frame argument values at function
8665entry.
8666
9c16f35a
EZ
8667@item set print repeats
8668@cindex repeated array elements
8669Set the threshold for suppressing display of repeated array
d3e8051b 8670elements. When the number of consecutive identical elements of an
9c16f35a
EZ
8671array exceeds the threshold, @value{GDBN} prints the string
8672@code{"<repeats @var{n} times>"}, where @var{n} is the number of
8673identical repetitions, instead of displaying the identical elements
8674themselves. Setting the threshold to zero will cause all elements to
8675be individually printed. The default threshold is 10.
8676
8677@item show print repeats
8678Display the current threshold for printing repeated identical
8679elements.
8680
c906108c 8681@item set print null-stop
4644b6e3 8682@cindex @sc{null} elements in arrays
c906108c 8683Cause @value{GDBN} to stop printing the characters of an array when the first
d4f3574e 8684@sc{null} is encountered. This is useful when large arrays actually
c906108c 8685contain only short strings.
d4f3574e 8686The default is off.
c906108c 8687
9c16f35a
EZ
8688@item show print null-stop
8689Show whether @value{GDBN} stops printing an array on the first
8690@sc{null} character.
8691
c906108c 8692@item set print pretty on
9c16f35a
EZ
8693@cindex print structures in indented form
8694@cindex indentation in structure display
5d161b24 8695Cause @value{GDBN} to print structures in an indented format with one member
c906108c
SS
8696per line, like this:
8697
8698@smallexample
8699@group
8700$1 = @{
8701 next = 0x0,
8702 flags = @{
8703 sweet = 1,
8704 sour = 1
8705 @},
8706 meat = 0x54 "Pork"
8707@}
8708@end group
8709@end smallexample
8710
8711@item set print pretty off
8712Cause @value{GDBN} to print structures in a compact format, like this:
8713
8714@smallexample
8715@group
8716$1 = @{next = 0x0, flags = @{sweet = 1, sour = 1@}, \
8717meat = 0x54 "Pork"@}
8718@end group
8719@end smallexample
8720
8721@noindent
8722This is the default format.
8723
c906108c
SS
8724@item show print pretty
8725Show which format @value{GDBN} is using to print structures.
8726
c906108c 8727@item set print sevenbit-strings on
4644b6e3
EZ
8728@cindex eight-bit characters in strings
8729@cindex octal escapes in strings
c906108c
SS
8730Print using only seven-bit characters; if this option is set,
8731@value{GDBN} displays any eight-bit characters (in strings or
8732character values) using the notation @code{\}@var{nnn}. This setting is
8733best if you are working in English (@sc{ascii}) and you use the
8734high-order bit of characters as a marker or ``meta'' bit.
8735
8736@item set print sevenbit-strings off
8737Print full eight-bit characters. This allows the use of more
8738international character sets, and is the default.
8739
c906108c
SS
8740@item show print sevenbit-strings
8741Show whether or not @value{GDBN} is printing only seven-bit characters.
8742
c906108c 8743@item set print union on
4644b6e3 8744@cindex unions in structures, printing
9c16f35a
EZ
8745Tell @value{GDBN} to print unions which are contained in structures
8746and other unions. This is the default setting.
c906108c
SS
8747
8748@item set print union off
9c16f35a
EZ
8749Tell @value{GDBN} not to print unions which are contained in
8750structures and other unions. @value{GDBN} will print @code{"@{...@}"}
8751instead.
c906108c 8752
c906108c
SS
8753@item show print union
8754Ask @value{GDBN} whether or not it will print unions which are contained in
9c16f35a 8755structures and other unions.
c906108c
SS
8756
8757For example, given the declarations
8758
8759@smallexample
8760typedef enum @{Tree, Bug@} Species;
8761typedef enum @{Big_tree, Acorn, Seedling@} Tree_forms;
5d161b24 8762typedef enum @{Caterpillar, Cocoon, Butterfly@}
c906108c
SS
8763 Bug_forms;
8764
8765struct thing @{
8766 Species it;
8767 union @{
8768 Tree_forms tree;
8769 Bug_forms bug;
8770 @} form;
8771@};
8772
8773struct thing foo = @{Tree, @{Acorn@}@};
8774@end smallexample
8775
8776@noindent
8777with @code{set print union on} in effect @samp{p foo} would print
8778
8779@smallexample
8780$1 = @{it = Tree, form = @{tree = Acorn, bug = Cocoon@}@}
8781@end smallexample
8782
8783@noindent
8784and with @code{set print union off} in effect it would print
8785
8786@smallexample
8787$1 = @{it = Tree, form = @{...@}@}
8788@end smallexample
9c16f35a
EZ
8789
8790@noindent
8791@code{set print union} affects programs written in C-like languages
8792and in Pascal.
c906108c
SS
8793@end table
8794
c906108c
SS
8795@need 1000
8796@noindent
b37052ae 8797These settings are of interest when debugging C@t{++} programs:
c906108c
SS
8798
8799@table @code
4644b6e3 8800@cindex demangling C@t{++} names
c906108c
SS
8801@item set print demangle
8802@itemx set print demangle on
b37052ae 8803Print C@t{++} names in their source form rather than in the encoded
c906108c 8804(``mangled'') form passed to the assembler and linker for type-safe
d4f3574e 8805linkage. The default is on.
c906108c 8806
c906108c 8807@item show print demangle
b37052ae 8808Show whether C@t{++} names are printed in mangled or demangled form.
c906108c 8809
c906108c
SS
8810@item set print asm-demangle
8811@itemx set print asm-demangle on
b37052ae 8812Print C@t{++} names in their source form rather than their mangled form, even
c906108c
SS
8813in assembler code printouts such as instruction disassemblies.
8814The default is off.
8815
c906108c 8816@item show print asm-demangle
b37052ae 8817Show whether C@t{++} names in assembly listings are printed in mangled
c906108c
SS
8818or demangled form.
8819
b37052ae
EZ
8820@cindex C@t{++} symbol decoding style
8821@cindex symbol decoding style, C@t{++}
a8f24a35 8822@kindex set demangle-style
c906108c
SS
8823@item set demangle-style @var{style}
8824Choose among several encoding schemes used by different compilers to
b37052ae 8825represent C@t{++} names. The choices for @var{style} are currently:
c906108c
SS
8826
8827@table @code
8828@item auto
8829Allow @value{GDBN} to choose a decoding style by inspecting your program.
8830
8831@item gnu
b37052ae 8832Decode based on the @sc{gnu} C@t{++} compiler (@code{g++}) encoding algorithm.
c906108c 8833This is the default.
c906108c
SS
8834
8835@item hp
b37052ae 8836Decode based on the HP ANSI C@t{++} (@code{aCC}) encoding algorithm.
c906108c
SS
8837
8838@item lucid
b37052ae 8839Decode based on the Lucid C@t{++} compiler (@code{lcc}) encoding algorithm.
c906108c
SS
8840
8841@item arm
b37052ae 8842Decode using the algorithm in the @cite{C@t{++} Annotated Reference Manual}.
c906108c
SS
8843@strong{Warning:} this setting alone is not sufficient to allow
8844debugging @code{cfront}-generated executables. @value{GDBN} would
8845require further enhancement to permit that.
8846
8847@end table
8848If you omit @var{style}, you will see a list of possible formats.
8849
c906108c 8850@item show demangle-style
b37052ae 8851Display the encoding style currently in use for decoding C@t{++} symbols.
c906108c 8852
c906108c
SS
8853@item set print object
8854@itemx set print object on
4644b6e3 8855@cindex derived type of an object, printing
9c16f35a 8856@cindex display derived types
c906108c
SS
8857When displaying a pointer to an object, identify the @emph{actual}
8858(derived) type of the object rather than the @emph{declared} type, using
625c0d47
TT
8859the virtual function table. Note that the virtual function table is
8860required---this feature can only work for objects that have run-time
8861type identification; a single virtual method in the object's declared
8264ba82
AG
8862type is sufficient. Note that this setting is also taken into account when
8863working with variable objects via MI (@pxref{GDB/MI}).
c906108c
SS
8864
8865@item set print object off
8866Display only the declared type of objects, without reference to the
8867virtual function table. This is the default setting.
8868
c906108c
SS
8869@item show print object
8870Show whether actual, or declared, object types are displayed.
8871
c906108c
SS
8872@item set print static-members
8873@itemx set print static-members on
4644b6e3 8874@cindex static members of C@t{++} objects
b37052ae 8875Print static members when displaying a C@t{++} object. The default is on.
c906108c
SS
8876
8877@item set print static-members off
b37052ae 8878Do not print static members when displaying a C@t{++} object.
c906108c 8879
c906108c 8880@item show print static-members
9c16f35a
EZ
8881Show whether C@t{++} static members are printed or not.
8882
8883@item set print pascal_static-members
8884@itemx set print pascal_static-members on
d3e8051b
EZ
8885@cindex static members of Pascal objects
8886@cindex Pascal objects, static members display
9c16f35a
EZ
8887Print static members when displaying a Pascal object. The default is on.
8888
8889@item set print pascal_static-members off
8890Do not print static members when displaying a Pascal object.
8891
8892@item show print pascal_static-members
8893Show whether Pascal static members are printed or not.
c906108c
SS
8894
8895@c These don't work with HP ANSI C++ yet.
c906108c
SS
8896@item set print vtbl
8897@itemx set print vtbl on
4644b6e3 8898@cindex pretty print C@t{++} virtual function tables
9c16f35a
EZ
8899@cindex virtual functions (C@t{++}) display
8900@cindex VTBL display
b37052ae 8901Pretty print C@t{++} virtual function tables. The default is off.
c906108c 8902(The @code{vtbl} commands do not work on programs compiled with the HP
b37052ae 8903ANSI C@t{++} compiler (@code{aCC}).)
c906108c
SS
8904
8905@item set print vtbl off
b37052ae 8906Do not pretty print C@t{++} virtual function tables.
c906108c 8907
c906108c 8908@item show print vtbl
b37052ae 8909Show whether C@t{++} virtual function tables are pretty printed, or not.
c906108c 8910@end table
c906108c 8911
4c374409
JK
8912@node Pretty Printing
8913@section Pretty Printing
8914
8915@value{GDBN} provides a mechanism to allow pretty-printing of values using
8916Python code. It greatly simplifies the display of complex objects. This
8917mechanism works for both MI and the CLI.
8918
7b51bc51
DE
8919@menu
8920* Pretty-Printer Introduction:: Introduction to pretty-printers
8921* Pretty-Printer Example:: An example pretty-printer
8922* Pretty-Printer Commands:: Pretty-printer commands
8923@end menu
8924
8925@node Pretty-Printer Introduction
8926@subsection Pretty-Printer Introduction
8927
8928When @value{GDBN} prints a value, it first sees if there is a pretty-printer
8929registered for the value. If there is then @value{GDBN} invokes the
8930pretty-printer to print the value. Otherwise the value is printed normally.
8931
8932Pretty-printers are normally named. This makes them easy to manage.
8933The @samp{info pretty-printer} command will list all the installed
8934pretty-printers with their names.
8935If a pretty-printer can handle multiple data types, then its
8936@dfn{subprinters} are the printers for the individual data types.
8937Each such subprinter has its own name.
4e04c971 8938The format of the name is @var{printer-name};@var{subprinter-name}.
7b51bc51
DE
8939
8940Pretty-printers are installed by @dfn{registering} them with @value{GDBN}.
8941Typically they are automatically loaded and registered when the corresponding
8942debug information is loaded, thus making them available without having to
8943do anything special.
8944
8945There are three places where a pretty-printer can be registered.
8946
8947@itemize @bullet
8948@item
8949Pretty-printers registered globally are available when debugging
8950all inferiors.
8951
8952@item
8953Pretty-printers registered with a program space are available only
8954when debugging that program.
8955@xref{Progspaces In Python}, for more details on program spaces in Python.
8956
8957@item
8958Pretty-printers registered with an objfile are loaded and unloaded
8959with the corresponding objfile (e.g., shared library).
8960@xref{Objfiles In Python}, for more details on objfiles in Python.
8961@end itemize
8962
8963@xref{Selecting Pretty-Printers}, for further information on how
8964pretty-printers are selected,
8965
8966@xref{Writing a Pretty-Printer}, for implementing pretty printers
8967for new types.
8968
8969@node Pretty-Printer Example
8970@subsection Pretty-Printer Example
8971
8972Here is how a C@t{++} @code{std::string} looks without a pretty-printer:
4c374409
JK
8973
8974@smallexample
8975(@value{GDBP}) print s
8976$1 = @{
8977 static npos = 4294967295,
8978 _M_dataplus = @{
8979 <std::allocator<char>> = @{
8980 <__gnu_cxx::new_allocator<char>> = @{
8981 <No data fields>@}, <No data fields>
8982 @},
8983 members of std::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>,
8984 std::allocator<char> >::_Alloc_hider:
8985 _M_p = 0x804a014 "abcd"
8986 @}
8987@}
8988@end smallexample
8989
8990With a pretty-printer for @code{std::string} only the contents are printed:
8991
8992@smallexample
8993(@value{GDBP}) print s
8994$2 = "abcd"
8995@end smallexample
8996
7b51bc51
DE
8997@node Pretty-Printer Commands
8998@subsection Pretty-Printer Commands
8999@cindex pretty-printer commands
9000
9001@table @code
9002@kindex info pretty-printer
9003@item info pretty-printer [@var{object-regexp} [@var{name-regexp}]]
9004Print the list of installed pretty-printers.
9005This includes disabled pretty-printers, which are marked as such.
9006
9007@var{object-regexp} is a regular expression matching the objects
9008whose pretty-printers to list.
9009Objects can be @code{global}, the program space's file
9010(@pxref{Progspaces In Python}),
9011and the object files within that program space (@pxref{Objfiles In Python}).
9012@xref{Selecting Pretty-Printers}, for details on how @value{GDBN}
9013looks up a printer from these three objects.
9014
9015@var{name-regexp} is a regular expression matching the name of the printers
9016to list.
9017
9018@kindex disable pretty-printer
9019@item disable pretty-printer [@var{object-regexp} [@var{name-regexp}]]
9020Disable pretty-printers matching @var{object-regexp} and @var{name-regexp}.
9021A disabled pretty-printer is not forgotten, it may be enabled again later.
9022
9023@kindex enable pretty-printer
9024@item enable pretty-printer [@var{object-regexp} [@var{name-regexp}]]
9025Enable pretty-printers matching @var{object-regexp} and @var{name-regexp}.
9026@end table
9027
9028Example:
9029
9030Suppose we have three pretty-printers installed: one from library1.so
9031named @code{foo} that prints objects of type @code{foo}, and
9032another from library2.so named @code{bar} that prints two types of objects,
9033@code{bar1} and @code{bar2}.
9034
9035@smallexample
9036(gdb) info pretty-printer
9037library1.so:
9038 foo
9039library2.so:
9040 bar
9041 bar1
9042 bar2
9043(gdb) info pretty-printer library2
9044library2.so:
9045 bar
9046 bar1
9047 bar2
9048(gdb) disable pretty-printer library1
90491 printer disabled
90502 of 3 printers enabled
9051(gdb) info pretty-printer
9052library1.so:
9053 foo [disabled]
9054library2.so:
9055 bar
9056 bar1
9057 bar2
9058(gdb) disable pretty-printer library2 bar:bar1
90591 printer disabled
90601 of 3 printers enabled
9061(gdb) info pretty-printer library2
9062library1.so:
9063 foo [disabled]
9064library2.so:
9065 bar
9066 bar1 [disabled]
9067 bar2
9068(gdb) disable pretty-printer library2 bar
90691 printer disabled
90700 of 3 printers enabled
9071(gdb) info pretty-printer library2
9072library1.so:
9073 foo [disabled]
9074library2.so:
9075 bar [disabled]
9076 bar1 [disabled]
9077 bar2
9078@end smallexample
9079
9080Note that for @code{bar} the entire printer can be disabled,
9081as can each individual subprinter.
4c374409 9082
6d2ebf8b 9083@node Value History
79a6e687 9084@section Value History
c906108c
SS
9085
9086@cindex value history
9c16f35a 9087@cindex history of values printed by @value{GDBN}
5d161b24
DB
9088Values printed by the @code{print} command are saved in the @value{GDBN}
9089@dfn{value history}. This allows you to refer to them in other expressions.
9090Values are kept until the symbol table is re-read or discarded
9091(for example with the @code{file} or @code{symbol-file} commands).
9092When the symbol table changes, the value history is discarded,
9093since the values may contain pointers back to the types defined in the
c906108c
SS
9094symbol table.
9095
9096@cindex @code{$}
9097@cindex @code{$$}
9098@cindex history number
9099The values printed are given @dfn{history numbers} by which you can
9100refer to them. These are successive integers starting with one.
9101@code{print} shows you the history number assigned to a value by
9102printing @samp{$@var{num} = } before the value; here @var{num} is the
9103history number.
9104
9105To refer to any previous value, use @samp{$} followed by the value's
9106history number. The way @code{print} labels its output is designed to
9107remind you of this. Just @code{$} refers to the most recent value in
9108the history, and @code{$$} refers to the value before that.
9109@code{$$@var{n}} refers to the @var{n}th value from the end; @code{$$2}
9110is the value just prior to @code{$$}, @code{$$1} is equivalent to
9111@code{$$}, and @code{$$0} is equivalent to @code{$}.
9112
9113For example, suppose you have just printed a pointer to a structure and
9114want to see the contents of the structure. It suffices to type
9115
474c8240 9116@smallexample
c906108c 9117p *$
474c8240 9118@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
9119
9120If you have a chain of structures where the component @code{next} points
9121to the next one, you can print the contents of the next one with this:
9122
474c8240 9123@smallexample
c906108c 9124p *$.next
474c8240 9125@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
9126
9127@noindent
9128You can print successive links in the chain by repeating this
9129command---which you can do by just typing @key{RET}.
9130
9131Note that the history records values, not expressions. If the value of
9132@code{x} is 4 and you type these commands:
9133
474c8240 9134@smallexample
c906108c
SS
9135print x
9136set x=5
474c8240 9137@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
9138
9139@noindent
9140then the value recorded in the value history by the @code{print} command
9141remains 4 even though the value of @code{x} has changed.
9142
9143@table @code
9144@kindex show values
9145@item show values
9146Print the last ten values in the value history, with their item numbers.
9147This is like @samp{p@ $$9} repeated ten times, except that @code{show
9148values} does not change the history.
9149
9150@item show values @var{n}
9151Print ten history values centered on history item number @var{n}.
9152
9153@item show values +
9154Print ten history values just after the values last printed. If no more
9155values are available, @code{show values +} produces no display.
9156@end table
9157
9158Pressing @key{RET} to repeat @code{show values @var{n}} has exactly the
9159same effect as @samp{show values +}.
9160
6d2ebf8b 9161@node Convenience Vars
79a6e687 9162@section Convenience Variables
c906108c
SS
9163
9164@cindex convenience variables
9c16f35a 9165@cindex user-defined variables
c906108c
SS
9166@value{GDBN} provides @dfn{convenience variables} that you can use within
9167@value{GDBN} to hold on to a value and refer to it later. These variables
9168exist entirely within @value{GDBN}; they are not part of your program, and
9169setting a convenience variable has no direct effect on further execution
9170of your program. That is why you can use them freely.
9171
9172Convenience variables are prefixed with @samp{$}. Any name preceded by
9173@samp{$} can be used for a convenience variable, unless it is one of
d4f3574e 9174the predefined machine-specific register names (@pxref{Registers, ,Registers}).
c906108c 9175(Value history references, in contrast, are @emph{numbers} preceded
79a6e687 9176by @samp{$}. @xref{Value History, ,Value History}.)
c906108c
SS
9177
9178You can save a value in a convenience variable with an assignment
9179expression, just as you would set a variable in your program.
9180For example:
9181
474c8240 9182@smallexample
c906108c 9183set $foo = *object_ptr
474c8240 9184@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
9185
9186@noindent
9187would save in @code{$foo} the value contained in the object pointed to by
9188@code{object_ptr}.
9189
9190Using a convenience variable for the first time creates it, but its
9191value is @code{void} until you assign a new value. You can alter the
9192value with another assignment at any time.
9193
9194Convenience variables have no fixed types. You can assign a convenience
9195variable any type of value, including structures and arrays, even if
9196that variable already has a value of a different type. The convenience
9197variable, when used as an expression, has the type of its current value.
9198
9199@table @code
9200@kindex show convenience
9c16f35a 9201@cindex show all user variables
c906108c
SS
9202@item show convenience
9203Print a list of convenience variables used so far, and their values.
d4f3574e 9204Abbreviated @code{show conv}.
53e5f3cf
AS
9205
9206@kindex init-if-undefined
9207@cindex convenience variables, initializing
9208@item init-if-undefined $@var{variable} = @var{expression}
9209Set a convenience variable if it has not already been set. This is useful
9210for user-defined commands that keep some state. It is similar, in concept,
9211to using local static variables with initializers in C (except that
9212convenience variables are global). It can also be used to allow users to
9213override default values used in a command script.
9214
9215If the variable is already defined then the expression is not evaluated so
9216any side-effects do not occur.
c906108c
SS
9217@end table
9218
9219One of the ways to use a convenience variable is as a counter to be
9220incremented or a pointer to be advanced. For example, to print
9221a field from successive elements of an array of structures:
9222
474c8240 9223@smallexample
c906108c
SS
9224set $i = 0
9225print bar[$i++]->contents
474c8240 9226@end smallexample
c906108c 9227
d4f3574e
SS
9228@noindent
9229Repeat that command by typing @key{RET}.
c906108c
SS
9230
9231Some convenience variables are created automatically by @value{GDBN} and given
9232values likely to be useful.
9233
9234@table @code
41afff9a 9235@vindex $_@r{, convenience variable}
c906108c
SS
9236@item $_
9237The variable @code{$_} is automatically set by the @code{x} command to
79a6e687 9238the last address examined (@pxref{Memory, ,Examining Memory}). Other
c906108c
SS
9239commands which provide a default address for @code{x} to examine also
9240set @code{$_} to that address; these commands include @code{info line}
9241and @code{info breakpoint}. The type of @code{$_} is @code{void *}
9242except when set by the @code{x} command, in which case it is a pointer
9243to the type of @code{$__}.
9244
41afff9a 9245@vindex $__@r{, convenience variable}
c906108c
SS
9246@item $__
9247The variable @code{$__} is automatically set by the @code{x} command
9248to the value found in the last address examined. Its type is chosen
9249to match the format in which the data was printed.
9250
9251@item $_exitcode
41afff9a 9252@vindex $_exitcode@r{, convenience variable}
c906108c
SS
9253The variable @code{$_exitcode} is automatically set to the exit code when
9254the program being debugged terminates.
4aa995e1 9255
62e5f89c
SDJ
9256@item $_probe_argc
9257@itemx $_probe_arg0@dots{}$_probe_arg11
9258Arguments to a static probe. @xref{Static Probe Points}.
9259
0fb4aa4b
PA
9260@item $_sdata
9261@vindex $_sdata@r{, inspect, convenience variable}
9262The variable @code{$_sdata} contains extra collected static tracepoint
9263data. @xref{Tracepoint Actions,,Tracepoint Action Lists}. Note that
9264@code{$_sdata} could be empty, if not inspecting a trace buffer, or
9265if extra static tracepoint data has not been collected.
9266
4aa995e1
PA
9267@item $_siginfo
9268@vindex $_siginfo@r{, convenience variable}
ec7e75e7
PP
9269The variable @code{$_siginfo} contains extra signal information
9270(@pxref{extra signal information}). Note that @code{$_siginfo}
9271could be empty, if the application has not yet received any signals.
9272For example, it will be empty before you execute the @code{run} command.
711e434b
PM
9273
9274@item $_tlb
9275@vindex $_tlb@r{, convenience variable}
9276The variable @code{$_tlb} is automatically set when debugging
9277applications running on MS-Windows in native mode or connected to
9278gdbserver that supports the @code{qGetTIBAddr} request.
9279@xref{General Query Packets}.
9280This variable contains the address of the thread information block.
9281
c906108c
SS
9282@end table
9283
53a5351d
JM
9284On HP-UX systems, if you refer to a function or variable name that
9285begins with a dollar sign, @value{GDBN} searches for a user or system
9286name first, before it searches for a convenience variable.
c906108c 9287
bc3b79fd
TJB
9288@cindex convenience functions
9289@value{GDBN} also supplies some @dfn{convenience functions}. These
9290have a syntax similar to convenience variables. A convenience
9291function can be used in an expression just like an ordinary function;
9292however, a convenience function is implemented internally to
9293@value{GDBN}.
9294
9295@table @code
9296@item help function
9297@kindex help function
9298@cindex show all convenience functions
9299Print a list of all convenience functions.
9300@end table
9301
6d2ebf8b 9302@node Registers
c906108c
SS
9303@section Registers
9304
9305@cindex registers
9306You can refer to machine register contents, in expressions, as variables
9307with names starting with @samp{$}. The names of registers are different
9308for each machine; use @code{info registers} to see the names used on
9309your machine.
9310
9311@table @code
9312@kindex info registers
9313@item info registers
9314Print the names and values of all registers except floating-point
c85508ee 9315and vector registers (in the selected stack frame).
c906108c
SS
9316
9317@kindex info all-registers
9318@cindex floating point registers
9319@item info all-registers
9320Print the names and values of all registers, including floating-point
c85508ee 9321and vector registers (in the selected stack frame).
c906108c
SS
9322
9323@item info registers @var{regname} @dots{}
9324Print the @dfn{relativized} value of each specified register @var{regname}.
5d161b24
DB
9325As discussed in detail below, register values are normally relative to
9326the selected stack frame. @var{regname} may be any register name valid on
c906108c
SS
9327the machine you are using, with or without the initial @samp{$}.
9328@end table
9329
e09f16f9
EZ
9330@cindex stack pointer register
9331@cindex program counter register
9332@cindex process status register
9333@cindex frame pointer register
9334@cindex standard registers
c906108c
SS
9335@value{GDBN} has four ``standard'' register names that are available (in
9336expressions) on most machines---whenever they do not conflict with an
9337architecture's canonical mnemonics for registers. The register names
9338@code{$pc} and @code{$sp} are used for the program counter register and
9339the stack pointer. @code{$fp} is used for a register that contains a
9340pointer to the current stack frame, and @code{$ps} is used for a
9341register that contains the processor status. For example,
9342you could print the program counter in hex with
9343
474c8240 9344@smallexample
c906108c 9345p/x $pc
474c8240 9346@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
9347
9348@noindent
9349or print the instruction to be executed next with
9350
474c8240 9351@smallexample
c906108c 9352x/i $pc
474c8240 9353@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
9354
9355@noindent
9356or add four to the stack pointer@footnote{This is a way of removing
9357one word from the stack, on machines where stacks grow downward in
9358memory (most machines, nowadays). This assumes that the innermost
9359stack frame is selected; setting @code{$sp} is not allowed when other
9360stack frames are selected. To pop entire frames off the stack,
9361regardless of machine architecture, use @code{return};
79a6e687 9362see @ref{Returning, ,Returning from a Function}.} with
c906108c 9363
474c8240 9364@smallexample
c906108c 9365set $sp += 4
474c8240 9366@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
9367
9368Whenever possible, these four standard register names are available on
9369your machine even though the machine has different canonical mnemonics,
9370so long as there is no conflict. The @code{info registers} command
9371shows the canonical names. For example, on the SPARC, @code{info
9372registers} displays the processor status register as @code{$psr} but you
d4f3574e
SS
9373can also refer to it as @code{$ps}; and on x86-based machines @code{$ps}
9374is an alias for the @sc{eflags} register.
c906108c
SS
9375
9376@value{GDBN} always considers the contents of an ordinary register as an
9377integer when the register is examined in this way. Some machines have
9378special registers which can hold nothing but floating point; these
9379registers are considered to have floating point values. There is no way
9380to refer to the contents of an ordinary register as floating point value
9381(although you can @emph{print} it as a floating point value with
9382@samp{print/f $@var{regname}}).
9383
9384Some registers have distinct ``raw'' and ``virtual'' data formats. This
9385means that the data format in which the register contents are saved by
9386the operating system is not the same one that your program normally
9387sees. For example, the registers of the 68881 floating point
9388coprocessor are always saved in ``extended'' (raw) format, but all C
9389programs expect to work with ``double'' (virtual) format. In such
5d161b24 9390cases, @value{GDBN} normally works with the virtual format only (the format
c906108c
SS
9391that makes sense for your program), but the @code{info registers} command
9392prints the data in both formats.
9393
36b80e65
EZ
9394@cindex SSE registers (x86)
9395@cindex MMX registers (x86)
9396Some machines have special registers whose contents can be interpreted
9397in several different ways. For example, modern x86-based machines
9398have SSE and MMX registers that can hold several values packed
9399together in several different formats. @value{GDBN} refers to such
9400registers in @code{struct} notation:
9401
9402@smallexample
9403(@value{GDBP}) print $xmm1
9404$1 = @{
9405 v4_float = @{0, 3.43859137e-038, 1.54142831e-044, 1.821688e-044@},
9406 v2_double = @{9.92129282474342e-303, 2.7585945287983262e-313@},
9407 v16_int8 = "\000\000\000\000\3706;\001\v\000\000\000\r\000\000",
9408 v8_int16 = @{0, 0, 14072, 315, 11, 0, 13, 0@},
9409 v4_int32 = @{0, 20657912, 11, 13@},
9410 v2_int64 = @{88725056443645952, 55834574859@},
9411 uint128 = 0x0000000d0000000b013b36f800000000
9412@}
9413@end smallexample
9414
9415@noindent
9416To set values of such registers, you need to tell @value{GDBN} which
9417view of the register you wish to change, as if you were assigning
9418value to a @code{struct} member:
9419
9420@smallexample
9421 (@value{GDBP}) set $xmm1.uint128 = 0x000000000000000000000000FFFFFFFF
9422@end smallexample
9423
c906108c 9424Normally, register values are relative to the selected stack frame
79a6e687 9425(@pxref{Selection, ,Selecting a Frame}). This means that you get the
c906108c
SS
9426value that the register would contain if all stack frames farther in
9427were exited and their saved registers restored. In order to see the
9428true contents of hardware registers, you must select the innermost
9429frame (with @samp{frame 0}).
9430
9431However, @value{GDBN} must deduce where registers are saved, from the machine
9432code generated by your compiler. If some registers are not saved, or if
9433@value{GDBN} is unable to locate the saved registers, the selected stack
9434frame makes no difference.
9435
6d2ebf8b 9436@node Floating Point Hardware
79a6e687 9437@section Floating Point Hardware
c906108c
SS
9438@cindex floating point
9439
9440Depending on the configuration, @value{GDBN} may be able to give
9441you more information about the status of the floating point hardware.
9442
9443@table @code
9444@kindex info float
9445@item info float
9446Display hardware-dependent information about the floating
9447point unit. The exact contents and layout vary depending on the
9448floating point chip. Currently, @samp{info float} is supported on
9449the ARM and x86 machines.
9450@end table
c906108c 9451
e76f1f2e
AC
9452@node Vector Unit
9453@section Vector Unit
9454@cindex vector unit
9455
9456Depending on the configuration, @value{GDBN} may be able to give you
9457more information about the status of the vector unit.
9458
9459@table @code
9460@kindex info vector
9461@item info vector
9462Display information about the vector unit. The exact contents and
9463layout vary depending on the hardware.
9464@end table
9465
721c2651 9466@node OS Information
79a6e687 9467@section Operating System Auxiliary Information
721c2651
EZ
9468@cindex OS information
9469
9470@value{GDBN} provides interfaces to useful OS facilities that can help
9471you debug your program.
9472
9473@cindex @code{ptrace} system call
9474@cindex @code{struct user} contents
9475When @value{GDBN} runs on a @dfn{Posix system} (such as GNU or Unix
9476machines), it interfaces with the inferior via the @code{ptrace}
9477system call. The operating system creates a special sata structure,
9478called @code{struct user}, for this interface. You can use the
9479command @code{info udot} to display the contents of this data
9480structure.
9481
9482@table @code
9483@item info udot
9484@kindex info udot
9485Display the contents of the @code{struct user} maintained by the OS
9486kernel for the program being debugged. @value{GDBN} displays the
9487contents of @code{struct user} as a list of hex numbers, similar to
9488the @code{examine} command.
9489@end table
9490
b383017d
RM
9491@cindex auxiliary vector
9492@cindex vector, auxiliary
b383017d
RM
9493Some operating systems supply an @dfn{auxiliary vector} to programs at
9494startup. This is akin to the arguments and environment that you
9495specify for a program, but contains a system-dependent variety of
9496binary values that tell system libraries important details about the
9497hardware, operating system, and process. Each value's purpose is
9498identified by an integer tag; the meanings are well-known but system-specific.
9499Depending on the configuration and operating system facilities,
9c16f35a
EZ
9500@value{GDBN} may be able to show you this information. For remote
9501targets, this functionality may further depend on the remote stub's
427c3a89
DJ
9502support of the @samp{qXfer:auxv:read} packet, see
9503@ref{qXfer auxiliary vector read}.
b383017d
RM
9504
9505@table @code
9506@kindex info auxv
9507@item info auxv
9508Display the auxiliary vector of the inferior, which can be either a
e4937fc1 9509live process or a core dump file. @value{GDBN} prints each tag value
b383017d
RM
9510numerically, and also shows names and text descriptions for recognized
9511tags. Some values in the vector are numbers, some bit masks, and some
e4937fc1 9512pointers to strings or other data. @value{GDBN} displays each value in the
b383017d
RM
9513most appropriate form for a recognized tag, and in hexadecimal for
9514an unrecognized tag.
9515@end table
9516
85d4a676
SS
9517On some targets, @value{GDBN} can access operating system-specific
9518information and show it to you. The types of information available
9519will differ depending on the type of operating system running on the
9520target. The mechanism used to fetch the data is described in
9521@ref{Operating System Information}. For remote targets, this
9522functionality depends on the remote stub's support of the
07e059b5
VP
9523@samp{qXfer:osdata:read} packet, see @ref{qXfer osdata read}.
9524
9525@table @code
a61408f8 9526@kindex info os
85d4a676
SS
9527@item info os @var{infotype}
9528
9529Display OS information of the requested type.
a61408f8 9530
85d4a676
SS
9531On @sc{gnu}/Linux, the following values of @var{infotype} are valid:
9532
9533@anchor{linux info os infotypes}
9534@table @code
07e059b5 9535@kindex info os processes
85d4a676 9536@item processes
07e059b5 9537Display the list of processes on the target. For each process,
85d4a676
SS
9538@value{GDBN} prints the process identifier, the name of the user, the
9539command corresponding to the process, and the list of processor cores
9540that the process is currently running on. (To understand what these
9541properties mean, for this and the following info types, please consult
9542the general @sc{gnu}/Linux documentation.)
9543
9544@kindex info os procgroups
9545@item procgroups
9546Display the list of process groups on the target. For each process,
9547@value{GDBN} prints the identifier of the process group that it belongs
9548to, the command corresponding to the process group leader, the process
9549identifier, and the command line of the process. The list is sorted
9550first by the process group identifier, then by the process identifier,
9551so that processes belonging to the same process group are grouped together
9552and the process group leader is listed first.
9553
9554@kindex info os threads
9555@item threads
9556Display the list of threads running on the target. For each thread,
9557@value{GDBN} prints the identifier of the process that the thread
9558belongs to, the command of the process, the thread identifier, and the
9559processor core that it is currently running on. The main thread of a
9560process is not listed.
9561
9562@kindex info os files
9563@item files
9564Display the list of open file descriptors on the target. For each
9565file descriptor, @value{GDBN} prints the identifier of the process
9566owning the descriptor, the command of the owning process, the value
9567of the descriptor, and the target of the descriptor.
9568
9569@kindex info os sockets
9570@item sockets
9571Display the list of Internet-domain sockets on the target. For each
9572socket, @value{GDBN} prints the address and port of the local and
9573remote endpoints, the current state of the connection, the creator of
9574the socket, the IP address family of the socket, and the type of the
9575connection.
9576
9577@kindex info os shm
9578@item shm
9579Display the list of all System V shared-memory regions on the target.
9580For each shared-memory region, @value{GDBN} prints the region key,
9581the shared-memory identifier, the access permissions, the size of the
9582region, the process that created the region, the process that last
9583attached to or detached from the region, the current number of live
9584attaches to the region, and the times at which the region was last
9585attached to, detach from, and changed.
9586
9587@kindex info os semaphores
9588@item semaphores
9589Display the list of all System V semaphore sets on the target. For each
9590semaphore set, @value{GDBN} prints the semaphore set key, the semaphore
9591set identifier, the access permissions, the number of semaphores in the
9592set, the user and group of the owner and creator of the semaphore set,
9593and the times at which the semaphore set was operated upon and changed.
9594
9595@kindex info os msg
9596@item msg
9597Display the list of all System V message queues on the target. For each
9598message queue, @value{GDBN} prints the message queue key, the message
9599queue identifier, the access permissions, the current number of bytes
9600on the queue, the current number of messages on the queue, the processes
9601that last sent and received a message on the queue, the user and group
9602of the owner and creator of the message queue, the times at which a
9603message was last sent and received on the queue, and the time at which
9604the message queue was last changed.
9605
9606@kindex info os modules
9607@item modules
9608Display the list of all loaded kernel modules on the target. For each
9609module, @value{GDBN} prints the module name, the size of the module in
9610bytes, the number of times the module is used, the dependencies of the
9611module, the status of the module, and the address of the loaded module
9612in memory.
9613@end table
9614
9615@item info os
9616If @var{infotype} is omitted, then list the possible values for
9617@var{infotype} and the kind of OS information available for each
9618@var{infotype}. If the target does not return a list of possible
9619types, this command will report an error.
07e059b5 9620@end table
721c2651 9621
29e57380 9622@node Memory Region Attributes
79a6e687 9623@section Memory Region Attributes
29e57380
C
9624@cindex memory region attributes
9625
b383017d 9626@dfn{Memory region attributes} allow you to describe special handling
fd79ecee
DJ
9627required by regions of your target's memory. @value{GDBN} uses
9628attributes to determine whether to allow certain types of memory
9629accesses; whether to use specific width accesses; and whether to cache
9630target memory. By default the description of memory regions is
9631fetched from the target (if the current target supports this), but the
9632user can override the fetched regions.
29e57380
C
9633
9634Defined memory regions can be individually enabled and disabled. When a
9635memory region is disabled, @value{GDBN} uses the default attributes when
9636accessing memory in that region. Similarly, if no memory regions have
9637been defined, @value{GDBN} uses the default attributes when accessing
9638all memory.
9639
b383017d 9640When a memory region is defined, it is given a number to identify it;
29e57380
C
9641to enable, disable, or remove a memory region, you specify that number.
9642
9643@table @code
9644@kindex mem
bfac230e 9645@item mem @var{lower} @var{upper} @var{attributes}@dots{}
09d4efe1
EZ
9646Define a memory region bounded by @var{lower} and @var{upper} with
9647attributes @var{attributes}@dots{}, and add it to the list of regions
9648monitored by @value{GDBN}. Note that @var{upper} == 0 is a special
d3e8051b 9649case: it is treated as the target's maximum memory address.
bfac230e 9650(0xffff on 16 bit targets, 0xffffffff on 32 bit targets, etc.)
29e57380 9651
fd79ecee
DJ
9652@item mem auto
9653Discard any user changes to the memory regions and use target-supplied
9654regions, if available, or no regions if the target does not support.
9655
29e57380
C
9656@kindex delete mem
9657@item delete mem @var{nums}@dots{}
09d4efe1
EZ
9658Remove memory regions @var{nums}@dots{} from the list of regions
9659monitored by @value{GDBN}.
29e57380
C
9660
9661@kindex disable mem
9662@item disable mem @var{nums}@dots{}
09d4efe1 9663Disable monitoring of memory regions @var{nums}@dots{}.
b383017d 9664A disabled memory region is not forgotten.
29e57380
C
9665It may be enabled again later.
9666
9667@kindex enable mem
9668@item enable mem @var{nums}@dots{}
09d4efe1 9669Enable monitoring of memory regions @var{nums}@dots{}.
29e57380
C
9670
9671@kindex info mem
9672@item info mem
9673Print a table of all defined memory regions, with the following columns
09d4efe1 9674for each region:
29e57380
C
9675
9676@table @emph
9677@item Memory Region Number
9678@item Enabled or Disabled.
b383017d 9679Enabled memory regions are marked with @samp{y}.
29e57380
C
9680Disabled memory regions are marked with @samp{n}.
9681
9682@item Lo Address
9683The address defining the inclusive lower bound of the memory region.
9684
9685@item Hi Address
9686The address defining the exclusive upper bound of the memory region.
9687
9688@item Attributes
9689The list of attributes set for this memory region.
9690@end table
9691@end table
9692
9693
9694@subsection Attributes
9695
b383017d 9696@subsubsection Memory Access Mode
29e57380
C
9697The access mode attributes set whether @value{GDBN} may make read or
9698write accesses to a memory region.
9699
9700While these attributes prevent @value{GDBN} from performing invalid
9701memory accesses, they do nothing to prevent the target system, I/O DMA,
359df76b 9702etc.@: from accessing memory.
29e57380
C
9703
9704@table @code
9705@item ro
9706Memory is read only.
9707@item wo
9708Memory is write only.
9709@item rw
6ca652b0 9710Memory is read/write. This is the default.
29e57380
C
9711@end table
9712
9713@subsubsection Memory Access Size
d3e8051b 9714The access size attribute tells @value{GDBN} to use specific sized
29e57380
C
9715accesses in the memory region. Often memory mapped device registers
9716require specific sized accesses. If no access size attribute is
9717specified, @value{GDBN} may use accesses of any size.
9718
9719@table @code
9720@item 8
9721Use 8 bit memory accesses.
9722@item 16
9723Use 16 bit memory accesses.
9724@item 32
9725Use 32 bit memory accesses.
9726@item 64
9727Use 64 bit memory accesses.
9728@end table
9729
9730@c @subsubsection Hardware/Software Breakpoints
9731@c The hardware/software breakpoint attributes set whether @value{GDBN}
9732@c will use hardware or software breakpoints for the internal breakpoints
9733@c used by the step, next, finish, until, etc. commands.
9734@c
9735@c @table @code
9736@c @item hwbreak
b383017d 9737@c Always use hardware breakpoints
29e57380
C
9738@c @item swbreak (default)
9739@c @end table
9740
9741@subsubsection Data Cache
9742The data cache attributes set whether @value{GDBN} will cache target
9743memory. While this generally improves performance by reducing debug
9744protocol overhead, it can lead to incorrect results because @value{GDBN}
9745does not know about volatile variables or memory mapped device
9746registers.
9747
9748@table @code
9749@item cache
b383017d 9750Enable @value{GDBN} to cache target memory.
6ca652b0
EZ
9751@item nocache
9752Disable @value{GDBN} from caching target memory. This is the default.
29e57380
C
9753@end table
9754
4b5752d0
VP
9755@subsection Memory Access Checking
9756@value{GDBN} can be instructed to refuse accesses to memory that is
9757not explicitly described. This can be useful if accessing such
9758regions has undesired effects for a specific target, or to provide
9759better error checking. The following commands control this behaviour.
9760
9761@table @code
9762@kindex set mem inaccessible-by-default
9763@item set mem inaccessible-by-default [on|off]
9764If @code{on} is specified, make @value{GDBN} treat memory not
9765explicitly described by the memory ranges as non-existent and refuse accesses
9766to such memory. The checks are only performed if there's at least one
9767memory range defined. If @code{off} is specified, make @value{GDBN}
9768treat the memory not explicitly described by the memory ranges as RAM.
56cf5405 9769The default value is @code{on}.
4b5752d0
VP
9770@kindex show mem inaccessible-by-default
9771@item show mem inaccessible-by-default
9772Show the current handling of accesses to unknown memory.
9773@end table
9774
9775
29e57380 9776@c @subsubsection Memory Write Verification
b383017d 9777@c The memory write verification attributes set whether @value{GDBN}
29e57380
C
9778@c will re-reads data after each write to verify the write was successful.
9779@c
9780@c @table @code
9781@c @item verify
9782@c @item noverify (default)
9783@c @end table
9784
16d9dec6 9785@node Dump/Restore Files
79a6e687 9786@section Copy Between Memory and a File
16d9dec6
MS
9787@cindex dump/restore files
9788@cindex append data to a file
9789@cindex dump data to a file
9790@cindex restore data from a file
16d9dec6 9791
df5215a6
JB
9792You can use the commands @code{dump}, @code{append}, and
9793@code{restore} to copy data between target memory and a file. The
9794@code{dump} and @code{append} commands write data to a file, and the
9795@code{restore} command reads data from a file back into the inferior's
9796memory. Files may be in binary, Motorola S-record, Intel hex, or
9797Tektronix Hex format; however, @value{GDBN} can only append to binary
9798files.
9799
9800@table @code
9801
9802@kindex dump
9803@item dump @r{[}@var{format}@r{]} memory @var{filename} @var{start_addr} @var{end_addr}
9804@itemx dump @r{[}@var{format}@r{]} value @var{filename} @var{expr}
9805Dump the contents of memory from @var{start_addr} to @var{end_addr},
9806or the value of @var{expr}, to @var{filename} in the given format.
16d9dec6 9807
df5215a6 9808The @var{format} parameter may be any one of:
16d9dec6 9809@table @code
df5215a6
JB
9810@item binary
9811Raw binary form.
9812@item ihex
9813Intel hex format.
9814@item srec
9815Motorola S-record format.
9816@item tekhex
9817Tektronix Hex format.
9818@end table
9819
9820@value{GDBN} uses the same definitions of these formats as the
9821@sc{gnu} binary utilities, like @samp{objdump} and @samp{objcopy}. If
9822@var{format} is omitted, @value{GDBN} dumps the data in raw binary
9823form.
9824
9825@kindex append
9826@item append @r{[}binary@r{]} memory @var{filename} @var{start_addr} @var{end_addr}
9827@itemx append @r{[}binary@r{]} value @var{filename} @var{expr}
9828Append the contents of memory from @var{start_addr} to @var{end_addr},
09d4efe1 9829or the value of @var{expr}, to the file @var{filename}, in raw binary form.
df5215a6
JB
9830(@value{GDBN} can only append data to files in raw binary form.)
9831
9832@kindex restore
9833@item restore @var{filename} @r{[}binary@r{]} @var{bias} @var{start} @var{end}
9834Restore the contents of file @var{filename} into memory. The
9835@code{restore} command can automatically recognize any known @sc{bfd}
9836file format, except for raw binary. To restore a raw binary file you
9837must specify the optional keyword @code{binary} after the filename.
16d9dec6 9838
b383017d 9839If @var{bias} is non-zero, its value will be added to the addresses
16d9dec6
MS
9840contained in the file. Binary files always start at address zero, so
9841they will be restored at address @var{bias}. Other bfd files have
9842a built-in location; they will be restored at offset @var{bias}
9843from that location.
9844
9845If @var{start} and/or @var{end} are non-zero, then only data between
9846file offset @var{start} and file offset @var{end} will be restored.
b383017d 9847These offsets are relative to the addresses in the file, before
16d9dec6
MS
9848the @var{bias} argument is applied.
9849
9850@end table
9851
384ee23f
EZ
9852@node Core File Generation
9853@section How to Produce a Core File from Your Program
9854@cindex dump core from inferior
9855
9856A @dfn{core file} or @dfn{core dump} is a file that records the memory
9857image of a running process and its process status (register values
9858etc.). Its primary use is post-mortem debugging of a program that
9859crashed while it ran outside a debugger. A program that crashes
9860automatically produces a core file, unless this feature is disabled by
9861the user. @xref{Files}, for information on invoking @value{GDBN} in
9862the post-mortem debugging mode.
9863
9864Occasionally, you may wish to produce a core file of the program you
9865are debugging in order to preserve a snapshot of its state.
9866@value{GDBN} has a special command for that.
9867
9868@table @code
9869@kindex gcore
9870@kindex generate-core-file
9871@item generate-core-file [@var{file}]
9872@itemx gcore [@var{file}]
9873Produce a core dump of the inferior process. The optional argument
9874@var{file} specifies the file name where to put the core dump. If not
9875specified, the file name defaults to @file{core.@var{pid}}, where
9876@var{pid} is the inferior process ID.
9877
9878Note that this command is implemented only for some systems (as of
9879this writing, @sc{gnu}/Linux, FreeBSD, Solaris, Unixware, and S390).
9880@end table
9881
a0eb71c5
KB
9882@node Character Sets
9883@section Character Sets
9884@cindex character sets
9885@cindex charset
9886@cindex translating between character sets
9887@cindex host character set
9888@cindex target character set
9889
9890If the program you are debugging uses a different character set to
9891represent characters and strings than the one @value{GDBN} uses itself,
9892@value{GDBN} can automatically translate between the character sets for
9893you. The character set @value{GDBN} uses we call the @dfn{host
9894character set}; the one the inferior program uses we call the
9895@dfn{target character set}.
9896
9897For example, if you are running @value{GDBN} on a @sc{gnu}/Linux system, which
9898uses the ISO Latin 1 character set, but you are using @value{GDBN}'s
ea35711c 9899remote protocol (@pxref{Remote Debugging}) to debug a program
a0eb71c5
KB
9900running on an IBM mainframe, which uses the @sc{ebcdic} character set,
9901then the host character set is Latin-1, and the target character set is
9902@sc{ebcdic}. If you give @value{GDBN} the command @code{set
e33d66ec 9903target-charset EBCDIC-US}, then @value{GDBN} translates between
a0eb71c5
KB
9904@sc{ebcdic} and Latin 1 as you print character or string values, or use
9905character and string literals in expressions.
9906
9907@value{GDBN} has no way to automatically recognize which character set
9908the inferior program uses; you must tell it, using the @code{set
9909target-charset} command, described below.
9910
9911Here are the commands for controlling @value{GDBN}'s character set
9912support:
9913
9914@table @code
9915@item set target-charset @var{charset}
9916@kindex set target-charset
10af6951
EZ
9917Set the current target character set to @var{charset}. To display the
9918list of supported target character sets, type
9919@kbd{@w{set target-charset @key{TAB}@key{TAB}}}.
a0eb71c5 9920
a0eb71c5
KB
9921@item set host-charset @var{charset}
9922@kindex set host-charset
9923Set the current host character set to @var{charset}.
9924
9925By default, @value{GDBN} uses a host character set appropriate to the
9926system it is running on; you can override that default using the
732f6a93
TT
9927@code{set host-charset} command. On some systems, @value{GDBN} cannot
9928automatically determine the appropriate host character set. In this
9929case, @value{GDBN} uses @samp{UTF-8}.
a0eb71c5
KB
9930
9931@value{GDBN} can only use certain character sets as its host character
c1b6b909 9932set. If you type @kbd{@w{set host-charset @key{TAB}@key{TAB}}},
10af6951 9933@value{GDBN} will list the host character sets it supports.
a0eb71c5
KB
9934
9935@item set charset @var{charset}
9936@kindex set charset
e33d66ec 9937Set the current host and target character sets to @var{charset}. As
10af6951
EZ
9938above, if you type @kbd{@w{set charset @key{TAB}@key{TAB}}},
9939@value{GDBN} will list the names of the character sets that can be used
e33d66ec
EZ
9940for both host and target.
9941
a0eb71c5 9942@item show charset
a0eb71c5 9943@kindex show charset
10af6951 9944Show the names of the current host and target character sets.
e33d66ec 9945
10af6951 9946@item show host-charset
a0eb71c5 9947@kindex show host-charset
10af6951 9948Show the name of the current host character set.
e33d66ec 9949
10af6951 9950@item show target-charset
a0eb71c5 9951@kindex show target-charset
10af6951 9952Show the name of the current target character set.
a0eb71c5 9953
10af6951
EZ
9954@item set target-wide-charset @var{charset}
9955@kindex set target-wide-charset
9956Set the current target's wide character set to @var{charset}. This is
9957the character set used by the target's @code{wchar_t} type. To
9958display the list of supported wide character sets, type
9959@kbd{@w{set target-wide-charset @key{TAB}@key{TAB}}}.
9960
9961@item show target-wide-charset
9962@kindex show target-wide-charset
9963Show the name of the current target's wide character set.
a0eb71c5
KB
9964@end table
9965
a0eb71c5
KB
9966Here is an example of @value{GDBN}'s character set support in action.
9967Assume that the following source code has been placed in the file
9968@file{charset-test.c}:
9969
9970@smallexample
9971#include <stdio.h>
9972
9973char ascii_hello[]
9974 = @{72, 101, 108, 108, 111, 44, 32, 119,
9975 111, 114, 108, 100, 33, 10, 0@};
9976char ibm1047_hello[]
9977 = @{200, 133, 147, 147, 150, 107, 64, 166,
9978 150, 153, 147, 132, 90, 37, 0@};
9979
9980main ()
9981@{
9982 printf ("Hello, world!\n");
9983@}
10998722 9984@end smallexample
a0eb71c5
KB
9985
9986In this program, @code{ascii_hello} and @code{ibm1047_hello} are arrays
9987containing the string @samp{Hello, world!} followed by a newline,
9988encoded in the @sc{ascii} and @sc{ibm1047} character sets.
9989
9990We compile the program, and invoke the debugger on it:
9991
9992@smallexample
9993$ gcc -g charset-test.c -o charset-test
9994$ gdb -nw charset-test
9995GNU gdb 2001-12-19-cvs
9996Copyright 2001 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
9997@dots{}
f7dc1244 9998(@value{GDBP})
10998722 9999@end smallexample
a0eb71c5
KB
10000
10001We can use the @code{show charset} command to see what character sets
10002@value{GDBN} is currently using to interpret and display characters and
10003strings:
10004
10005@smallexample
f7dc1244 10006(@value{GDBP}) show charset
e33d66ec 10007The current host and target character set is `ISO-8859-1'.
f7dc1244 10008(@value{GDBP})
10998722 10009@end smallexample
a0eb71c5
KB
10010
10011For the sake of printing this manual, let's use @sc{ascii} as our
10012initial character set:
10013@smallexample
f7dc1244
EZ
10014(@value{GDBP}) set charset ASCII
10015(@value{GDBP}) show charset
e33d66ec 10016The current host and target character set is `ASCII'.
f7dc1244 10017(@value{GDBP})
10998722 10018@end smallexample
a0eb71c5
KB
10019
10020Let's assume that @sc{ascii} is indeed the correct character set for our
10021host system --- in other words, let's assume that if @value{GDBN} prints
10022characters using the @sc{ascii} character set, our terminal will display
10023them properly. Since our current target character set is also
10024@sc{ascii}, the contents of @code{ascii_hello} print legibly:
10025
10026@smallexample
f7dc1244 10027(@value{GDBP}) print ascii_hello
a0eb71c5 10028$1 = 0x401698 "Hello, world!\n"
f7dc1244 10029(@value{GDBP}) print ascii_hello[0]
a0eb71c5 10030$2 = 72 'H'
f7dc1244 10031(@value{GDBP})
10998722 10032@end smallexample
a0eb71c5
KB
10033
10034@value{GDBN} uses the target character set for character and string
10035literals you use in expressions:
10036
10037@smallexample
f7dc1244 10038(@value{GDBP}) print '+'
a0eb71c5 10039$3 = 43 '+'
f7dc1244 10040(@value{GDBP})
10998722 10041@end smallexample
a0eb71c5
KB
10042
10043The @sc{ascii} character set uses the number 43 to encode the @samp{+}
10044character.
10045
10046@value{GDBN} relies on the user to tell it which character set the
10047target program uses. If we print @code{ibm1047_hello} while our target
10048character set is still @sc{ascii}, we get jibberish:
10049
10050@smallexample
f7dc1244 10051(@value{GDBP}) print ibm1047_hello
a0eb71c5 10052$4 = 0x4016a8 "\310\205\223\223\226k@@\246\226\231\223\204Z%"
f7dc1244 10053(@value{GDBP}) print ibm1047_hello[0]
a0eb71c5 10054$5 = 200 '\310'
f7dc1244 10055(@value{GDBP})
10998722 10056@end smallexample
a0eb71c5 10057
e33d66ec 10058If we invoke the @code{set target-charset} followed by @key{TAB}@key{TAB},
a0eb71c5
KB
10059@value{GDBN} tells us the character sets it supports:
10060
10061@smallexample
f7dc1244 10062(@value{GDBP}) set target-charset
b383017d 10063ASCII EBCDIC-US IBM1047 ISO-8859-1
f7dc1244 10064(@value{GDBP}) set target-charset
10998722 10065@end smallexample
a0eb71c5
KB
10066
10067We can select @sc{ibm1047} as our target character set, and examine the
10068program's strings again. Now the @sc{ascii} string is wrong, but
10069@value{GDBN} translates the contents of @code{ibm1047_hello} from the
10070target character set, @sc{ibm1047}, to the host character set,
10071@sc{ascii}, and they display correctly:
10072
10073@smallexample
f7dc1244
EZ
10074(@value{GDBP}) set target-charset IBM1047
10075(@value{GDBP}) show charset
e33d66ec
EZ
10076The current host character set is `ASCII'.
10077The current target character set is `IBM1047'.
f7dc1244 10078(@value{GDBP}) print ascii_hello
a0eb71c5 10079$6 = 0x401698 "\110\145%%?\054\040\167?\162%\144\041\012"
f7dc1244 10080(@value{GDBP}) print ascii_hello[0]
a0eb71c5 10081$7 = 72 '\110'
f7dc1244 10082(@value{GDBP}) print ibm1047_hello
a0eb71c5 10083$8 = 0x4016a8 "Hello, world!\n"
f7dc1244 10084(@value{GDBP}) print ibm1047_hello[0]
a0eb71c5 10085$9 = 200 'H'
f7dc1244 10086(@value{GDBP})
10998722 10087@end smallexample
a0eb71c5
KB
10088
10089As above, @value{GDBN} uses the target character set for character and
10090string literals you use in expressions:
10091
10092@smallexample
f7dc1244 10093(@value{GDBP}) print '+'
a0eb71c5 10094$10 = 78 '+'
f7dc1244 10095(@value{GDBP})
10998722 10096@end smallexample
a0eb71c5 10097
e33d66ec 10098The @sc{ibm1047} character set uses the number 78 to encode the @samp{+}
a0eb71c5
KB
10099character.
10100
09d4efe1
EZ
10101@node Caching Remote Data
10102@section Caching Data of Remote Targets
10103@cindex caching data of remote targets
10104
4e5d721f 10105@value{GDBN} caches data exchanged between the debugger and a
ea35711c 10106remote target (@pxref{Remote Debugging}). Such caching generally improves
09d4efe1 10107performance, because it reduces the overhead of the remote protocol by
4e5d721f
DE
10108bundling memory reads and writes into large chunks. Unfortunately, simply
10109caching everything would lead to incorrect results, since @value{GDBN}
10110does not necessarily know anything about volatile values, memory-mapped I/O
29b090c0
DE
10111addresses, etc. Furthermore, in non-stop mode (@pxref{Non-Stop Mode})
10112memory can be changed @emph{while} a gdb command is executing.
10113Therefore, by default, @value{GDBN} only caches data
10114known to be on the stack@footnote{In non-stop mode, it is moderately
10115rare for a running thread to modify the stack of a stopped thread
10116in a way that would interfere with a backtrace, and caching of
10117stack reads provides a significant speed up of remote backtraces.}.
10118Other regions of memory can be explicitly marked as
4e5d721f 10119cacheable; see @pxref{Memory Region Attributes}.
09d4efe1
EZ
10120
10121@table @code
10122@kindex set remotecache
10123@item set remotecache on
10124@itemx set remotecache off
4e5d721f
DE
10125This option no longer does anything; it exists for compatibility
10126with old scripts.
09d4efe1
EZ
10127
10128@kindex show remotecache
10129@item show remotecache
4e5d721f
DE
10130Show the current state of the obsolete remotecache flag.
10131
10132@kindex set stack-cache
10133@item set stack-cache on
10134@itemx set stack-cache off
10135Enable or disable caching of stack accesses. When @code{ON}, use
10136caching. By default, this option is @code{ON}.
10137
10138@kindex show stack-cache
10139@item show stack-cache
10140Show the current state of data caching for memory accesses.
09d4efe1
EZ
10141
10142@kindex info dcache
4e5d721f 10143@item info dcache @r{[}line@r{]}
09d4efe1 10144Print the information about the data cache performance. The
4e5d721f
DE
10145information displayed includes the dcache width and depth, and for
10146each cache line, its number, address, and how many times it was
10147referenced. This command is useful for debugging the data cache
10148operation.
10149
10150If a line number is specified, the contents of that line will be
10151printed in hex.
1a532630
PP
10152
10153@item set dcache size @var{size}
10154@cindex dcache size
10155@kindex set dcache size
10156Set maximum number of entries in dcache (dcache depth above).
10157
10158@item set dcache line-size @var{line-size}
10159@cindex dcache line-size
10160@kindex set dcache line-size
10161Set number of bytes each dcache entry caches (dcache width above).
10162Must be a power of 2.
10163
10164@item show dcache size
10165@kindex show dcache size
10166Show maximum number of dcache entries. See also @ref{Caching Remote Data, info dcache}.
10167
10168@item show dcache line-size
10169@kindex show dcache line-size
10170Show default size of dcache lines. See also @ref{Caching Remote Data, info dcache}.
10171
09d4efe1
EZ
10172@end table
10173
08388c79
DE
10174@node Searching Memory
10175@section Search Memory
10176@cindex searching memory
10177
10178Memory can be searched for a particular sequence of bytes with the
10179@code{find} command.
10180
10181@table @code
10182@kindex find
10183@item find @r{[}/@var{sn}@r{]} @var{start_addr}, +@var{len}, @var{val1} @r{[}, @var{val2}, @dots{}@r{]}
10184@itemx find @r{[}/@var{sn}@r{]} @var{start_addr}, @var{end_addr}, @var{val1} @r{[}, @var{val2}, @dots{}@r{]}
10185Search memory for the sequence of bytes specified by @var{val1}, @var{val2},
10186etc. The search begins at address @var{start_addr} and continues for either
10187@var{len} bytes or through to @var{end_addr} inclusive.
10188@end table
10189
10190@var{s} and @var{n} are optional parameters.
10191They may be specified in either order, apart or together.
10192
10193@table @r
10194@item @var{s}, search query size
10195The size of each search query value.
10196
10197@table @code
10198@item b
10199bytes
10200@item h
10201halfwords (two bytes)
10202@item w
10203words (four bytes)
10204@item g
10205giant words (eight bytes)
10206@end table
10207
10208All values are interpreted in the current language.
10209This means, for example, that if the current source language is C/C@t{++}
10210then searching for the string ``hello'' includes the trailing '\0'.
10211
10212If the value size is not specified, it is taken from the
10213value's type in the current language.
10214This is useful when one wants to specify the search
10215pattern as a mixture of types.
10216Note that this means, for example, that in the case of C-like languages
10217a search for an untyped 0x42 will search for @samp{(int) 0x42}
10218which is typically four bytes.
10219
10220@item @var{n}, maximum number of finds
10221The maximum number of matches to print. The default is to print all finds.
10222@end table
10223
10224You can use strings as search values. Quote them with double-quotes
10225 (@code{"}).
10226The string value is copied into the search pattern byte by byte,
10227regardless of the endianness of the target and the size specification.
10228
10229The address of each match found is printed as well as a count of the
10230number of matches found.
10231
10232The address of the last value found is stored in convenience variable
10233@samp{$_}.
10234A count of the number of matches is stored in @samp{$numfound}.
10235
10236For example, if stopped at the @code{printf} in this function:
10237
10238@smallexample
10239void
10240hello ()
10241@{
10242 static char hello[] = "hello-hello";
10243 static struct @{ char c; short s; int i; @}
10244 __attribute__ ((packed)) mixed
10245 = @{ 'c', 0x1234, 0x87654321 @};
10246 printf ("%s\n", hello);
10247@}
10248@end smallexample
10249
10250@noindent
10251you get during debugging:
10252
10253@smallexample
10254(gdb) find &hello[0], +sizeof(hello), "hello"
102550x804956d <hello.1620+6>
102561 pattern found
10257(gdb) find &hello[0], +sizeof(hello), 'h', 'e', 'l', 'l', 'o'
102580x8049567 <hello.1620>
102590x804956d <hello.1620+6>
102602 patterns found
10261(gdb) find /b1 &hello[0], +sizeof(hello), 'h', 0x65, 'l'
102620x8049567 <hello.1620>
102631 pattern found
10264(gdb) find &mixed, +sizeof(mixed), (char) 'c', (short) 0x1234, (int) 0x87654321
102650x8049560 <mixed.1625>
102661 pattern found
10267(gdb) print $numfound
10268$1 = 1
10269(gdb) print $_
10270$2 = (void *) 0x8049560
10271@end smallexample
a0eb71c5 10272
edb3359d
DJ
10273@node Optimized Code
10274@chapter Debugging Optimized Code
10275@cindex optimized code, debugging
10276@cindex debugging optimized code
10277
10278Almost all compilers support optimization. With optimization
10279disabled, the compiler generates assembly code that corresponds
10280directly to your source code, in a simplistic way. As the compiler
10281applies more powerful optimizations, the generated assembly code
10282diverges from your original source code. With help from debugging
10283information generated by the compiler, @value{GDBN} can map from
10284the running program back to constructs from your original source.
10285
10286@value{GDBN} is more accurate with optimization disabled. If you
10287can recompile without optimization, it is easier to follow the
10288progress of your program during debugging. But, there are many cases
10289where you may need to debug an optimized version.
10290
10291When you debug a program compiled with @samp{-g -O}, remember that the
10292optimizer has rearranged your code; the debugger shows you what is
10293really there. Do not be too surprised when the execution path does not
10294exactly match your source file! An extreme example: if you define a
10295variable, but never use it, @value{GDBN} never sees that
10296variable---because the compiler optimizes it out of existence.
10297
10298Some things do not work as well with @samp{-g -O} as with just
10299@samp{-g}, particularly on machines with instruction scheduling. If in
10300doubt, recompile with @samp{-g} alone, and if this fixes the problem,
10301please report it to us as a bug (including a test case!).
10302@xref{Variables}, for more information about debugging optimized code.
10303
10304@menu
10305* Inline Functions:: How @value{GDBN} presents inlining
111c6489 10306* Tail Call Frames:: @value{GDBN} analysis of jumps to functions
edb3359d
DJ
10307@end menu
10308
10309@node Inline Functions
10310@section Inline Functions
10311@cindex inline functions, debugging
10312
10313@dfn{Inlining} is an optimization that inserts a copy of the function
10314body directly at each call site, instead of jumping to a shared
10315routine. @value{GDBN} displays inlined functions just like
10316non-inlined functions. They appear in backtraces. You can view their
10317arguments and local variables, step into them with @code{step}, skip
10318them with @code{next}, and escape from them with @code{finish}.
10319You can check whether a function was inlined by using the
10320@code{info frame} command.
10321
10322For @value{GDBN} to support inlined functions, the compiler must
10323record information about inlining in the debug information ---
10324@value{NGCC} using the @sc{dwarf 2} format does this, and several
10325other compilers do also. @value{GDBN} only supports inlined functions
10326when using @sc{dwarf 2}. Versions of @value{NGCC} before 4.1
10327do not emit two required attributes (@samp{DW_AT_call_file} and
10328@samp{DW_AT_call_line}); @value{GDBN} does not display inlined
10329function calls with earlier versions of @value{NGCC}. It instead
10330displays the arguments and local variables of inlined functions as
10331local variables in the caller.
10332
10333The body of an inlined function is directly included at its call site;
10334unlike a non-inlined function, there are no instructions devoted to
10335the call. @value{GDBN} still pretends that the call site and the
10336start of the inlined function are different instructions. Stepping to
10337the call site shows the call site, and then stepping again shows
10338the first line of the inlined function, even though no additional
10339instructions are executed.
10340
10341This makes source-level debugging much clearer; you can see both the
10342context of the call and then the effect of the call. Only stepping by
10343a single instruction using @code{stepi} or @code{nexti} does not do
10344this; single instruction steps always show the inlined body.
10345
10346There are some ways that @value{GDBN} does not pretend that inlined
10347function calls are the same as normal calls:
10348
10349@itemize @bullet
edb3359d
DJ
10350@item
10351Setting breakpoints at the call site of an inlined function may not
10352work, because the call site does not contain any code. @value{GDBN}
10353may incorrectly move the breakpoint to the next line of the enclosing
10354function, after the call. This limitation will be removed in a future
10355version of @value{GDBN}; until then, set a breakpoint on an earlier line
10356or inside the inlined function instead.
10357
10358@item
10359@value{GDBN} cannot locate the return value of inlined calls after
10360using the @code{finish} command. This is a limitation of compiler-generated
10361debugging information; after @code{finish}, you can step to the next line
10362and print a variable where your program stored the return value.
10363
10364@end itemize
10365
111c6489
JK
10366@node Tail Call Frames
10367@section Tail Call Frames
10368@cindex tail call frames, debugging
10369
10370Function @code{B} can call function @code{C} in its very last statement. In
10371unoptimized compilation the call of @code{C} is immediately followed by return
10372instruction at the end of @code{B} code. Optimizing compiler may replace the
10373call and return in function @code{B} into one jump to function @code{C}
10374instead. Such use of a jump instruction is called @dfn{tail call}.
10375
10376During execution of function @code{C}, there will be no indication in the
10377function call stack frames that it was tail-called from @code{B}. If function
10378@code{A} regularly calls function @code{B} which tail-calls function @code{C},
10379then @value{GDBN} will see @code{A} as the caller of @code{C}. However, in
10380some cases @value{GDBN} can determine that @code{C} was tail-called from
10381@code{B}, and it will then create fictitious call frame for that, with the
10382return address set up as if @code{B} called @code{C} normally.
10383
10384This functionality is currently supported only by DWARF 2 debugging format and
10385the compiler has to produce @samp{DW_TAG_GNU_call_site} tags. With
10386@value{NGCC}, you need to specify @option{-O -g} during compilation, to get
10387this information.
10388
10389@kbd{info frame} command (@pxref{Frame Info}) will indicate the tail call frame
10390kind by text @code{tail call frame} such as in this sample @value{GDBN} output:
10391
10392@smallexample
10393(gdb) x/i $pc - 2
10394 0x40066b <b(int, double)+11>: jmp 0x400640 <c(int, double)>
10395(gdb) info frame
10396Stack level 1, frame at 0x7fffffffda30:
10397 rip = 0x40066d in b (amd64-entry-value.cc:59); saved rip 0x4004c5
10398 tail call frame, caller of frame at 0x7fffffffda30
10399 source language c++.
10400 Arglist at unknown address.
10401 Locals at unknown address, Previous frame's sp is 0x7fffffffda30
10402@end smallexample
10403
10404The detection of all the possible code path executions can find them ambiguous.
10405There is no execution history stored (possible @ref{Reverse Execution} is never
10406used for this purpose) and the last known caller could have reached the known
10407callee by multiple different jump sequences. In such case @value{GDBN} still
10408tries to show at least all the unambiguous top tail callers and all the
10409unambiguous bottom tail calees, if any.
10410
10411@table @code
e18b2753 10412@anchor{set debug entry-values}
111c6489
JK
10413@item set debug entry-values
10414@kindex set debug entry-values
10415When set to on, enables printing of analysis messages for both frame argument
10416values at function entry and tail calls. It will show all the possible valid
10417tail calls code paths it has considered. It will also print the intersection
10418of them with the final unambiguous (possibly partial or even empty) code path
10419result.
10420
10421@item show debug entry-values
10422@kindex show debug entry-values
10423Show the current state of analysis messages printing for both frame argument
10424values at function entry and tail calls.
10425@end table
10426
10427The analysis messages for tail calls can for example show why the virtual tail
10428call frame for function @code{c} has not been recognized (due to the indirect
10429reference by variable @code{x}):
10430
10431@smallexample
10432static void __attribute__((noinline, noclone)) c (void);
10433void (*x) (void) = c;
10434static void __attribute__((noinline, noclone)) a (void) @{ x++; @}
10435static void __attribute__((noinline, noclone)) c (void) @{ a (); @}
10436int main (void) @{ x (); return 0; @}
10437
10438Breakpoint 1, DW_OP_GNU_entry_value resolving cannot find
10439DW_TAG_GNU_call_site 0x40039a in main
10440a () at t.c:3
104413 static void __attribute__((noinline, noclone)) a (void) @{ x++; @}
10442(gdb) bt
10443#0 a () at t.c:3
10444#1 0x000000000040039a in main () at t.c:5
10445@end smallexample
10446
10447Another possibility is an ambiguous virtual tail call frames resolution:
10448
10449@smallexample
10450int i;
10451static void __attribute__((noinline, noclone)) f (void) @{ i++; @}
10452static void __attribute__((noinline, noclone)) e (void) @{ f (); @}
10453static void __attribute__((noinline, noclone)) d (void) @{ f (); @}
10454static void __attribute__((noinline, noclone)) c (void) @{ d (); @}
10455static void __attribute__((noinline, noclone)) b (void)
10456@{ if (i) c (); else e (); @}
10457static void __attribute__((noinline, noclone)) a (void) @{ b (); @}
10458int main (void) @{ a (); return 0; @}
10459
10460tailcall: initial: 0x4004d2(a) 0x4004ce(b) 0x4004b2(c) 0x4004a2(d)
10461tailcall: compare: 0x4004d2(a) 0x4004cc(b) 0x400492(e)
10462tailcall: reduced: 0x4004d2(a) |
10463(gdb) bt
10464#0 f () at t.c:2
10465#1 0x00000000004004d2 in a () at t.c:8
10466#2 0x0000000000400395 in main () at t.c:9
10467@end smallexample
10468
5048e516
JK
10469@set CALLSEQ1A @code{main@value{ARROW}a@value{ARROW}b@value{ARROW}c@value{ARROW}d@value{ARROW}f}
10470@set CALLSEQ2A @code{main@value{ARROW}a@value{ARROW}b@value{ARROW}e@value{ARROW}f}
10471
10472@c Convert CALLSEQ#A to CALLSEQ#B depending on HAVE_MAKEINFO_CLICK.
10473@ifset HAVE_MAKEINFO_CLICK
10474@set ARROW @click{}
10475@set CALLSEQ1B @clicksequence{@value{CALLSEQ1A}}
10476@set CALLSEQ2B @clicksequence{@value{CALLSEQ2A}}
10477@end ifset
10478@ifclear HAVE_MAKEINFO_CLICK
10479@set ARROW ->
10480@set CALLSEQ1B @value{CALLSEQ1A}
10481@set CALLSEQ2B @value{CALLSEQ2A}
10482@end ifclear
10483
10484Frames #0 and #2 are real, #1 is a virtual tail call frame.
10485The code can have possible execution paths @value{CALLSEQ1B} or
10486@value{CALLSEQ2B}, @value{GDBN} cannot find which one from the inferior state.
111c6489
JK
10487
10488@code{initial:} state shows some random possible calling sequence @value{GDBN}
10489has found. It then finds another possible calling sequcen - that one is
10490prefixed by @code{compare:}. The non-ambiguous intersection of these two is
10491printed as the @code{reduced:} calling sequence. That one could have many
10492futher @code{compare:} and @code{reduced:} statements as long as there remain
10493any non-ambiguous sequence entries.
10494
10495For the frame of function @code{b} in both cases there are different possible
10496@code{$pc} values (@code{0x4004cc} or @code{0x4004ce}), therefore this frame is
10497also ambigous. The only non-ambiguous frame is the one for function @code{a},
10498therefore this one is displayed to the user while the ambiguous frames are
10499omitted.
edb3359d 10500
e18b2753
JK
10501There can be also reasons why printing of frame argument values at function
10502entry may fail:
10503
10504@smallexample
10505int v;
10506static void __attribute__((noinline, noclone)) c (int i) @{ v++; @}
10507static void __attribute__((noinline, noclone)) a (int i);
10508static void __attribute__((noinline, noclone)) b (int i) @{ a (i); @}
10509static void __attribute__((noinline, noclone)) a (int i)
10510@{ if (i) b (i - 1); else c (0); @}
10511int main (void) @{ a (5); return 0; @}
10512
10513(gdb) bt
10514#0 c (i=i@@entry=0) at t.c:2
10515#1 0x0000000000400428 in a (DW_OP_GNU_entry_value resolving has found
10516function "a" at 0x400420 can call itself via tail calls
10517i=<optimized out>) at t.c:6
10518#2 0x000000000040036e in main () at t.c:7
10519@end smallexample
10520
10521@value{GDBN} cannot find out from the inferior state if and how many times did
10522function @code{a} call itself (via function @code{b}) as these calls would be
10523tail calls. Such tail calls would modify thue @code{i} variable, therefore
10524@value{GDBN} cannot be sure the value it knows would be right - @value{GDBN}
10525prints @code{<optimized out>} instead.
10526
e2e0bcd1
JB
10527@node Macros
10528@chapter C Preprocessor Macros
10529
49efadf5 10530Some languages, such as C and C@t{++}, provide a way to define and invoke
e2e0bcd1
JB
10531``preprocessor macros'' which expand into strings of tokens.
10532@value{GDBN} can evaluate expressions containing macro invocations, show
10533the result of macro expansion, and show a macro's definition, including
10534where it was defined.
10535
10536You may need to compile your program specially to provide @value{GDBN}
10537with information about preprocessor macros. Most compilers do not
10538include macros in their debugging information, even when you compile
10539with the @option{-g} flag. @xref{Compilation}.
10540
10541A program may define a macro at one point, remove that definition later,
10542and then provide a different definition after that. Thus, at different
10543points in the program, a macro may have different definitions, or have
10544no definition at all. If there is a current stack frame, @value{GDBN}
10545uses the macros in scope at that frame's source code line. Otherwise,
10546@value{GDBN} uses the macros in scope at the current listing location;
10547see @ref{List}.
10548
e2e0bcd1
JB
10549Whenever @value{GDBN} evaluates an expression, it always expands any
10550macro invocations present in the expression. @value{GDBN} also provides
10551the following commands for working with macros explicitly.
10552
10553@table @code
10554
10555@kindex macro expand
10556@cindex macro expansion, showing the results of preprocessor
10557@cindex preprocessor macro expansion, showing the results of
10558@cindex expanding preprocessor macros
10559@item macro expand @var{expression}
10560@itemx macro exp @var{expression}
10561Show the results of expanding all preprocessor macro invocations in
10562@var{expression}. Since @value{GDBN} simply expands macros, but does
10563not parse the result, @var{expression} need not be a valid expression;
10564it can be any string of tokens.
10565
09d4efe1 10566@kindex macro exp1
e2e0bcd1
JB
10567@item macro expand-once @var{expression}
10568@itemx macro exp1 @var{expression}
4644b6e3 10569@cindex expand macro once
e2e0bcd1
JB
10570@i{(This command is not yet implemented.)} Show the results of
10571expanding those preprocessor macro invocations that appear explicitly in
10572@var{expression}. Macro invocations appearing in that expansion are
10573left unchanged. This command allows you to see the effect of a
10574particular macro more clearly, without being confused by further
10575expansions. Since @value{GDBN} simply expands macros, but does not
10576parse the result, @var{expression} need not be a valid expression; it
10577can be any string of tokens.
10578
475b0867 10579@kindex info macro
e2e0bcd1 10580@cindex macro definition, showing
9b158ba0 10581@cindex definition of a macro, showing
10582@cindex macros, from debug info
71eba9c2 10583@item info macro [-a|-all] [--] @var{macro}
10584Show the current definition or all definitions of the named @var{macro},
10585and describe the source location or compiler command-line where that
10586definition was established. The optional double dash is to signify the end of
10587argument processing and the beginning of @var{macro} for non C-like macros where
10588the macro may begin with a hyphen.
e2e0bcd1 10589
9b158ba0 10590@kindex info macros
10591@item info macros @var{linespec}
10592Show all macro definitions that are in effect at the location specified
10593by @var{linespec}, and describe the source location or compiler
10594command-line where those definitions were established.
10595
e2e0bcd1
JB
10596@kindex macro define
10597@cindex user-defined macros
10598@cindex defining macros interactively
10599@cindex macros, user-defined
10600@item macro define @var{macro} @var{replacement-list}
10601@itemx macro define @var{macro}(@var{arglist}) @var{replacement-list}
d7d9f01e
TT
10602Introduce a definition for a preprocessor macro named @var{macro},
10603invocations of which are replaced by the tokens given in
10604@var{replacement-list}. The first form of this command defines an
10605``object-like'' macro, which takes no arguments; the second form
10606defines a ``function-like'' macro, which takes the arguments given in
10607@var{arglist}.
10608
10609A definition introduced by this command is in scope in every
10610expression evaluated in @value{GDBN}, until it is removed with the
10611@code{macro undef} command, described below. The definition overrides
10612all definitions for @var{macro} present in the program being debugged,
10613as well as any previous user-supplied definition.
e2e0bcd1
JB
10614
10615@kindex macro undef
10616@item macro undef @var{macro}
d7d9f01e
TT
10617Remove any user-supplied definition for the macro named @var{macro}.
10618This command only affects definitions provided with the @code{macro
10619define} command, described above; it cannot remove definitions present
10620in the program being debugged.
e2e0bcd1 10621
09d4efe1
EZ
10622@kindex macro list
10623@item macro list
d7d9f01e 10624List all the macros defined using the @code{macro define} command.
e2e0bcd1
JB
10625@end table
10626
10627@cindex macros, example of debugging with
10628Here is a transcript showing the above commands in action. First, we
10629show our source files:
10630
10631@smallexample
10632$ cat sample.c
10633#include <stdio.h>
10634#include "sample.h"
10635
10636#define M 42
10637#define ADD(x) (M + x)
10638
10639main ()
10640@{
10641#define N 28
10642 printf ("Hello, world!\n");
10643#undef N
10644 printf ("We're so creative.\n");
10645#define N 1729
10646 printf ("Goodbye, world!\n");
10647@}
10648$ cat sample.h
10649#define Q <
10650$
10651@end smallexample
10652
e0f8f636
TT
10653Now, we compile the program using the @sc{gnu} C compiler,
10654@value{NGCC}. We pass the @option{-gdwarf-2}@footnote{This is the
10655minimum. Recent versions of @value{NGCC} support @option{-gdwarf-3}
10656and @option{-gdwarf-4}; we recommend always choosing the most recent
10657version of DWARF.} @emph{and} @option{-g3} flags to ensure the compiler
10658includes information about preprocessor macros in the debugging
e2e0bcd1
JB
10659information.
10660
10661@smallexample
10662$ gcc -gdwarf-2 -g3 sample.c -o sample
10663$
10664@end smallexample
10665
10666Now, we start @value{GDBN} on our sample program:
10667
10668@smallexample
10669$ gdb -nw sample
10670GNU gdb 2002-05-06-cvs
10671Copyright 2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
10672GDB is free software, @dots{}
f7dc1244 10673(@value{GDBP})
e2e0bcd1
JB
10674@end smallexample
10675
10676We can expand macros and examine their definitions, even when the
10677program is not running. @value{GDBN} uses the current listing position
10678to decide which macro definitions are in scope:
10679
10680@smallexample
f7dc1244 10681(@value{GDBP}) list main
e2e0bcd1
JB
106823
106834 #define M 42
106845 #define ADD(x) (M + x)
106856
106867 main ()
106878 @{
106889 #define N 28
1068910 printf ("Hello, world!\n");
1069011 #undef N
1069112 printf ("We're so creative.\n");
f7dc1244 10692(@value{GDBP}) info macro ADD
e2e0bcd1
JB
10693Defined at /home/jimb/gdb/macros/play/sample.c:5
10694#define ADD(x) (M + x)
f7dc1244 10695(@value{GDBP}) info macro Q
e2e0bcd1
JB
10696Defined at /home/jimb/gdb/macros/play/sample.h:1
10697 included at /home/jimb/gdb/macros/play/sample.c:2
10698#define Q <
f7dc1244 10699(@value{GDBP}) macro expand ADD(1)
e2e0bcd1 10700expands to: (42 + 1)
f7dc1244 10701(@value{GDBP}) macro expand-once ADD(1)
e2e0bcd1 10702expands to: once (M + 1)
f7dc1244 10703(@value{GDBP})
e2e0bcd1
JB
10704@end smallexample
10705
d7d9f01e 10706In the example above, note that @code{macro expand-once} expands only
e2e0bcd1
JB
10707the macro invocation explicit in the original text --- the invocation of
10708@code{ADD} --- but does not expand the invocation of the macro @code{M},
10709which was introduced by @code{ADD}.
10710
3f94c067
BW
10711Once the program is running, @value{GDBN} uses the macro definitions in
10712force at the source line of the current stack frame:
e2e0bcd1
JB
10713
10714@smallexample
f7dc1244 10715(@value{GDBP}) break main
e2e0bcd1 10716Breakpoint 1 at 0x8048370: file sample.c, line 10.
f7dc1244 10717(@value{GDBP}) run
b383017d 10718Starting program: /home/jimb/gdb/macros/play/sample
e2e0bcd1
JB
10719
10720Breakpoint 1, main () at sample.c:10
1072110 printf ("Hello, world!\n");
f7dc1244 10722(@value{GDBP})
e2e0bcd1
JB
10723@end smallexample
10724
10725At line 10, the definition of the macro @code{N} at line 9 is in force:
10726
10727@smallexample
f7dc1244 10728(@value{GDBP}) info macro N
e2e0bcd1
JB
10729Defined at /home/jimb/gdb/macros/play/sample.c:9
10730#define N 28
f7dc1244 10731(@value{GDBP}) macro expand N Q M
e2e0bcd1 10732expands to: 28 < 42
f7dc1244 10733(@value{GDBP}) print N Q M
e2e0bcd1 10734$1 = 1
f7dc1244 10735(@value{GDBP})
e2e0bcd1
JB
10736@end smallexample
10737
10738As we step over directives that remove @code{N}'s definition, and then
10739give it a new definition, @value{GDBN} finds the definition (or lack
10740thereof) in force at each point:
10741
10742@smallexample
f7dc1244 10743(@value{GDBP}) next
e2e0bcd1
JB
10744Hello, world!
1074512 printf ("We're so creative.\n");
f7dc1244 10746(@value{GDBP}) info macro N
e2e0bcd1
JB
10747The symbol `N' has no definition as a C/C++ preprocessor macro
10748at /home/jimb/gdb/macros/play/sample.c:12
f7dc1244 10749(@value{GDBP}) next
e2e0bcd1
JB
10750We're so creative.
1075114 printf ("Goodbye, world!\n");
f7dc1244 10752(@value{GDBP}) info macro N
e2e0bcd1
JB
10753Defined at /home/jimb/gdb/macros/play/sample.c:13
10754#define N 1729
f7dc1244 10755(@value{GDBP}) macro expand N Q M
e2e0bcd1 10756expands to: 1729 < 42
f7dc1244 10757(@value{GDBP}) print N Q M
e2e0bcd1 10758$2 = 0
f7dc1244 10759(@value{GDBP})
e2e0bcd1
JB
10760@end smallexample
10761
484086b7
JK
10762In addition to source files, macros can be defined on the compilation command
10763line using the @option{-D@var{name}=@var{value}} syntax. For macros defined in
10764such a way, @value{GDBN} displays the location of their definition as line zero
10765of the source file submitted to the compiler.
10766
10767@smallexample
10768(@value{GDBP}) info macro __STDC__
10769Defined at /home/jimb/gdb/macros/play/sample.c:0
10770-D__STDC__=1
10771(@value{GDBP})
10772@end smallexample
10773
e2e0bcd1 10774
b37052ae
EZ
10775@node Tracepoints
10776@chapter Tracepoints
10777@c This chapter is based on the documentation written by Michael
10778@c Snyder, David Taylor, Jim Blandy, and Elena Zannoni.
10779
10780@cindex tracepoints
10781In some applications, it is not feasible for the debugger to interrupt
10782the program's execution long enough for the developer to learn
10783anything helpful about its behavior. If the program's correctness
10784depends on its real-time behavior, delays introduced by a debugger
10785might cause the program to change its behavior drastically, or perhaps
10786fail, even when the code itself is correct. It is useful to be able
10787to observe the program's behavior without interrupting it.
10788
10789Using @value{GDBN}'s @code{trace} and @code{collect} commands, you can
10790specify locations in the program, called @dfn{tracepoints}, and
10791arbitrary expressions to evaluate when those tracepoints are reached.
10792Later, using the @code{tfind} command, you can examine the values
10793those expressions had when the program hit the tracepoints. The
10794expressions may also denote objects in memory---structures or arrays,
10795for example---whose values @value{GDBN} should record; while visiting
10796a particular tracepoint, you may inspect those objects as if they were
10797in memory at that moment. However, because @value{GDBN} records these
10798values without interacting with you, it can do so quickly and
10799unobtrusively, hopefully not disturbing the program's behavior.
10800
10801The tracepoint facility is currently available only for remote
9d29849a
JB
10802targets. @xref{Targets}. In addition, your remote target must know
10803how to collect trace data. This functionality is implemented in the
10804remote stub; however, none of the stubs distributed with @value{GDBN}
10805support tracepoints as of this writing. The format of the remote
10806packets used to implement tracepoints are described in @ref{Tracepoint
10807Packets}.
b37052ae 10808
00bf0b85
SS
10809It is also possible to get trace data from a file, in a manner reminiscent
10810of corefiles; you specify the filename, and use @code{tfind} to search
10811through the file. @xref{Trace Files}, for more details.
10812
b37052ae
EZ
10813This chapter describes the tracepoint commands and features.
10814
10815@menu
b383017d
RM
10816* Set Tracepoints::
10817* Analyze Collected Data::
10818* Tracepoint Variables::
00bf0b85 10819* Trace Files::
b37052ae
EZ
10820@end menu
10821
10822@node Set Tracepoints
10823@section Commands to Set Tracepoints
10824
10825Before running such a @dfn{trace experiment}, an arbitrary number of
1042e4c0
SS
10826tracepoints can be set. A tracepoint is actually a special type of
10827breakpoint (@pxref{Set Breaks}), so you can manipulate it using
10828standard breakpoint commands. For instance, as with breakpoints,
10829tracepoint numbers are successive integers starting from one, and many
10830of the commands associated with tracepoints take the tracepoint number
10831as their argument, to identify which tracepoint to work on.
b37052ae
EZ
10832
10833For each tracepoint, you can specify, in advance, some arbitrary set
10834of data that you want the target to collect in the trace buffer when
10835it hits that tracepoint. The collected data can include registers,
10836local variables, or global data. Later, you can use @value{GDBN}
10837commands to examine the values these data had at the time the
10838tracepoint was hit.
10839
7d13fe92
SS
10840Tracepoints do not support every breakpoint feature. Ignore counts on
10841tracepoints have no effect, and tracepoints cannot run @value{GDBN}
10842commands when they are hit. Tracepoints may not be thread-specific
10843either.
1042e4c0 10844
7a697b8d
SS
10845@cindex fast tracepoints
10846Some targets may support @dfn{fast tracepoints}, which are inserted in
10847a different way (such as with a jump instead of a trap), that is
10848faster but possibly restricted in where they may be installed.
10849
0fb4aa4b
PA
10850@cindex static tracepoints
10851@cindex markers, static tracepoints
10852@cindex probing markers, static tracepoints
10853Regular and fast tracepoints are dynamic tracing facilities, meaning
10854that they can be used to insert tracepoints at (almost) any location
10855in the target. Some targets may also support controlling @dfn{static
10856tracepoints} from @value{GDBN}. With static tracing, a set of
10857instrumentation points, also known as @dfn{markers}, are embedded in
10858the target program, and can be activated or deactivated by name or
10859address. These are usually placed at locations which facilitate
10860investigating what the target is actually doing. @value{GDBN}'s
10861support for static tracing includes being able to list instrumentation
10862points, and attach them with @value{GDBN} defined high level
10863tracepoints that expose the whole range of convenience of
8786b2bd 10864@value{GDBN}'s tracepoints support. Namely, support for collecting
0fb4aa4b
PA
10865registers values and values of global or local (to the instrumentation
10866point) variables; tracepoint conditions and trace state variables.
10867The act of installing a @value{GDBN} static tracepoint on an
10868instrumentation point, or marker, is referred to as @dfn{probing} a
10869static tracepoint marker.
10870
fa593d66
PA
10871@code{gdbserver} supports tracepoints on some target systems.
10872@xref{Server,,Tracepoints support in @code{gdbserver}}.
10873
b37052ae
EZ
10874This section describes commands to set tracepoints and associated
10875conditions and actions.
10876
10877@menu
b383017d
RM
10878* Create and Delete Tracepoints::
10879* Enable and Disable Tracepoints::
10880* Tracepoint Passcounts::
782b2b07 10881* Tracepoint Conditions::
f61e138d 10882* Trace State Variables::
b383017d
RM
10883* Tracepoint Actions::
10884* Listing Tracepoints::
0fb4aa4b 10885* Listing Static Tracepoint Markers::
79a6e687 10886* Starting and Stopping Trace Experiments::
c9429232 10887* Tracepoint Restrictions::
b37052ae
EZ
10888@end menu
10889
10890@node Create and Delete Tracepoints
10891@subsection Create and Delete Tracepoints
10892
10893@table @code
10894@cindex set tracepoint
10895@kindex trace
1042e4c0 10896@item trace @var{location}
b37052ae 10897The @code{trace} command is very similar to the @code{break} command.
1042e4c0
SS
10898Its argument @var{location} can be a source line, a function name, or
10899an address in the target program. @xref{Specify Location}. The
10900@code{trace} command defines a tracepoint, which is a point in the
10901target program where the debugger will briefly stop, collect some
10902data, and then allow the program to continue. Setting a tracepoint or
1e4d1764
YQ
10903changing its actions takes effect immediately if the remote stub
10904supports the @samp{InstallInTrace} feature (@pxref{install tracepoint
10905in tracing}).
10906If remote stub doesn't support the @samp{InstallInTrace} feature, all
10907these changes don't take effect until the next @code{tstart}
1042e4c0 10908command, and once a trace experiment is running, further changes will
bfccc43c
YQ
10909not have any effect until the next trace experiment starts. In addition,
10910@value{GDBN} supports @dfn{pending tracepoints}---tracepoints whose
10911address is not yet resolved. (This is similar to pending breakpoints.)
10912Pending tracepoints are not downloaded to the target and not installed
10913until they are resolved. The resolution of pending tracepoints requires
10914@value{GDBN} support---when debugging with the remote target, and
10915@value{GDBN} disconnects from the remote stub (@pxref{disconnected
10916tracing}), pending tracepoints can not be resolved (and downloaded to
10917the remote stub) while @value{GDBN} is disconnected.
b37052ae
EZ
10918
10919Here are some examples of using the @code{trace} command:
10920
10921@smallexample
10922(@value{GDBP}) @b{trace foo.c:121} // a source file and line number
10923
10924(@value{GDBP}) @b{trace +2} // 2 lines forward
10925
10926(@value{GDBP}) @b{trace my_function} // first source line of function
10927
10928(@value{GDBP}) @b{trace *my_function} // EXACT start address of function
10929
10930(@value{GDBP}) @b{trace *0x2117c4} // an address
10931@end smallexample
10932
10933@noindent
10934You can abbreviate @code{trace} as @code{tr}.
10935
782b2b07
SS
10936@item trace @var{location} if @var{cond}
10937Set a tracepoint with condition @var{cond}; evaluate the expression
10938@var{cond} each time the tracepoint is reached, and collect data only
10939if the value is nonzero---that is, if @var{cond} evaluates as true.
10940@xref{Tracepoint Conditions, ,Tracepoint Conditions}, for more
10941information on tracepoint conditions.
10942
7a697b8d
SS
10943@item ftrace @var{location} [ if @var{cond} ]
10944@cindex set fast tracepoint
74c761c1 10945@cindex fast tracepoints, setting
7a697b8d
SS
10946@kindex ftrace
10947The @code{ftrace} command sets a fast tracepoint. For targets that
10948support them, fast tracepoints will use a more efficient but possibly
10949less general technique to trigger data collection, such as a jump
10950instruction instead of a trap, or some sort of hardware support. It
10951may not be possible to create a fast tracepoint at the desired
10952location, in which case the command will exit with an explanatory
10953message.
10954
10955@value{GDBN} handles arguments to @code{ftrace} exactly as for
10956@code{trace}.
10957
405f8e94
SS
10958On 32-bit x86-architecture systems, fast tracepoints normally need to
10959be placed at an instruction that is 5 bytes or longer, but can be
10960placed at 4-byte instructions if the low 64K of memory of the target
10961program is available to install trampolines. Some Unix-type systems,
10962such as @sc{gnu}/Linux, exclude low addresses from the program's
10963address space; but for instance with the Linux kernel it is possible
10964to let @value{GDBN} use this area by doing a @command{sysctl} command
10965to set the @code{mmap_min_addr} kernel parameter, as in
10966
10967@example
10968sudo sysctl -w vm.mmap_min_addr=32768
10969@end example
10970
10971@noindent
10972which sets the low address to 32K, which leaves plenty of room for
10973trampolines. The minimum address should be set to a page boundary.
10974
0fb4aa4b 10975@item strace @var{location} [ if @var{cond} ]
74c761c1
PA
10976@cindex set static tracepoint
10977@cindex static tracepoints, setting
10978@cindex probe static tracepoint marker
0fb4aa4b
PA
10979@kindex strace
10980The @code{strace} command sets a static tracepoint. For targets that
10981support it, setting a static tracepoint probes a static
10982instrumentation point, or marker, found at @var{location}. It may not
10983be possible to set a static tracepoint at the desired location, in
10984which case the command will exit with an explanatory message.
10985
10986@value{GDBN} handles arguments to @code{strace} exactly as for
10987@code{trace}, with the addition that the user can also specify
10988@code{-m @var{marker}} as @var{location}. This probes the marker
10989identified by the @var{marker} string identifier. This identifier
10990depends on the static tracepoint backend library your program is
10991using. You can find all the marker identifiers in the @samp{ID} field
10992of the @code{info static-tracepoint-markers} command output.
10993@xref{Listing Static Tracepoint Markers,,Listing Static Tracepoint
10994Markers}. For example, in the following small program using the UST
10995tracing engine:
10996
10997@smallexample
10998main ()
10999@{
11000 trace_mark(ust, bar33, "str %s", "FOOBAZ");
11001@}
11002@end smallexample
11003
11004@noindent
11005the marker id is composed of joining the first two arguments to the
11006@code{trace_mark} call with a slash, which translates to:
11007
11008@smallexample
11009(@value{GDBP}) info static-tracepoint-markers
11010Cnt Enb ID Address What
110111 n ust/bar33 0x0000000000400ddc in main at stexample.c:22
11012 Data: "str %s"
11013[etc...]
11014@end smallexample
11015
11016@noindent
11017so you may probe the marker above with:
11018
11019@smallexample
11020(@value{GDBP}) strace -m ust/bar33
11021@end smallexample
11022
11023Static tracepoints accept an extra collect action --- @code{collect
11024$_sdata}. This collects arbitrary user data passed in the probe point
11025call to the tracing library. In the UST example above, you'll see
11026that the third argument to @code{trace_mark} is a printf-like format
11027string. The user data is then the result of running that formating
11028string against the following arguments. Note that @code{info
11029static-tracepoint-markers} command output lists that format string in
11030the @samp{Data:} field.
11031
11032You can inspect this data when analyzing the trace buffer, by printing
11033the $_sdata variable like any other variable available to
11034@value{GDBN}. @xref{Tracepoint Actions,,Tracepoint Action Lists}.
11035
b37052ae
EZ
11036@vindex $tpnum
11037@cindex last tracepoint number
11038@cindex recent tracepoint number
11039@cindex tracepoint number
11040The convenience variable @code{$tpnum} records the tracepoint number
11041of the most recently set tracepoint.
11042
11043@kindex delete tracepoint
11044@cindex tracepoint deletion
11045@item delete tracepoint @r{[}@var{num}@r{]}
11046Permanently delete one or more tracepoints. With no argument, the
1042e4c0
SS
11047default is to delete all tracepoints. Note that the regular
11048@code{delete} command can remove tracepoints also.
b37052ae
EZ
11049
11050Examples:
11051
11052@smallexample
11053(@value{GDBP}) @b{delete trace 1 2 3} // remove three tracepoints
11054
11055(@value{GDBP}) @b{delete trace} // remove all tracepoints
11056@end smallexample
11057
11058@noindent
11059You can abbreviate this command as @code{del tr}.
11060@end table
11061
11062@node Enable and Disable Tracepoints
11063@subsection Enable and Disable Tracepoints
11064
1042e4c0
SS
11065These commands are deprecated; they are equivalent to plain @code{disable} and @code{enable}.
11066
b37052ae
EZ
11067@table @code
11068@kindex disable tracepoint
11069@item disable tracepoint @r{[}@var{num}@r{]}
11070Disable tracepoint @var{num}, or all tracepoints if no argument
11071@var{num} is given. A disabled tracepoint will have no effect during
d248b706 11072a trace experiment, but it is not forgotten. You can re-enable
b37052ae 11073a disabled tracepoint using the @code{enable tracepoint} command.
d248b706
KY
11074If the command is issued during a trace experiment and the debug target
11075has support for disabling tracepoints during a trace experiment, then the
11076change will be effective immediately. Otherwise, it will be applied to the
11077next trace experiment.
b37052ae
EZ
11078
11079@kindex enable tracepoint
11080@item enable tracepoint @r{[}@var{num}@r{]}
d248b706
KY
11081Enable tracepoint @var{num}, or all tracepoints. If this command is
11082issued during a trace experiment and the debug target supports enabling
11083tracepoints during a trace experiment, then the enabled tracepoints will
11084become effective immediately. Otherwise, they will become effective the
11085next time a trace experiment is run.
b37052ae
EZ
11086@end table
11087
11088@node Tracepoint Passcounts
11089@subsection Tracepoint Passcounts
11090
11091@table @code
11092@kindex passcount
11093@cindex tracepoint pass count
11094@item passcount @r{[}@var{n} @r{[}@var{num}@r{]]}
11095Set the @dfn{passcount} of a tracepoint. The passcount is a way to
11096automatically stop a trace experiment. If a tracepoint's passcount is
11097@var{n}, then the trace experiment will be automatically stopped on
11098the @var{n}'th time that tracepoint is hit. If the tracepoint number
11099@var{num} is not specified, the @code{passcount} command sets the
11100passcount of the most recently defined tracepoint. If no passcount is
11101given, the trace experiment will run until stopped explicitly by the
11102user.
11103
11104Examples:
11105
11106@smallexample
b383017d 11107(@value{GDBP}) @b{passcount 5 2} // Stop on the 5th execution of
6826cf00 11108@exdent @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @code{// tracepoint 2}
b37052ae
EZ
11109
11110(@value{GDBP}) @b{passcount 12} // Stop on the 12th execution of the
6826cf00 11111@exdent @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @code{// most recently defined tracepoint.}
b37052ae
EZ
11112(@value{GDBP}) @b{trace foo}
11113(@value{GDBP}) @b{pass 3}
11114(@value{GDBP}) @b{trace bar}
11115(@value{GDBP}) @b{pass 2}
11116(@value{GDBP}) @b{trace baz}
11117(@value{GDBP}) @b{pass 1} // Stop tracing when foo has been
6826cf00
EZ
11118@exdent @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @code{// executed 3 times OR when bar has}
11119@exdent @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @code{// been executed 2 times}
11120@exdent @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @code{// OR when baz has been executed 1 time.}
b37052ae
EZ
11121@end smallexample
11122@end table
11123
782b2b07
SS
11124@node Tracepoint Conditions
11125@subsection Tracepoint Conditions
11126@cindex conditional tracepoints
11127@cindex tracepoint conditions
11128
11129The simplest sort of tracepoint collects data every time your program
11130reaches a specified place. You can also specify a @dfn{condition} for
11131a tracepoint. A condition is just a Boolean expression in your
11132programming language (@pxref{Expressions, ,Expressions}). A
11133tracepoint with a condition evaluates the expression each time your
11134program reaches it, and data collection happens only if the condition
11135is true.
11136
11137Tracepoint conditions can be specified when a tracepoint is set, by
11138using @samp{if} in the arguments to the @code{trace} command.
11139@xref{Create and Delete Tracepoints, ,Setting Tracepoints}. They can
11140also be set or changed at any time with the @code{condition} command,
11141just as with breakpoints.
11142
11143Unlike breakpoint conditions, @value{GDBN} does not actually evaluate
11144the conditional expression itself. Instead, @value{GDBN} encodes the
6dcd5565 11145expression into an agent expression (@pxref{Agent Expressions})
782b2b07
SS
11146suitable for execution on the target, independently of @value{GDBN}.
11147Global variables become raw memory locations, locals become stack
11148accesses, and so forth.
11149
11150For instance, suppose you have a function that is usually called
11151frequently, but should not be called after an error has occurred. You
11152could use the following tracepoint command to collect data about calls
11153of that function that happen while the error code is propagating
11154through the program; an unconditional tracepoint could end up
11155collecting thousands of useless trace frames that you would have to
11156search through.
11157
11158@smallexample
11159(@value{GDBP}) @kbd{trace normal_operation if errcode > 0}
11160@end smallexample
11161
f61e138d
SS
11162@node Trace State Variables
11163@subsection Trace State Variables
11164@cindex trace state variables
11165
11166A @dfn{trace state variable} is a special type of variable that is
11167created and managed by target-side code. The syntax is the same as
11168that for GDB's convenience variables (a string prefixed with ``$''),
11169but they are stored on the target. They must be created explicitly,
11170using a @code{tvariable} command. They are always 64-bit signed
11171integers.
11172
11173Trace state variables are remembered by @value{GDBN}, and downloaded
11174to the target along with tracepoint information when the trace
11175experiment starts. There are no intrinsic limits on the number of
11176trace state variables, beyond memory limitations of the target.
11177
11178@cindex convenience variables, and trace state variables
11179Although trace state variables are managed by the target, you can use
11180them in print commands and expressions as if they were convenience
11181variables; @value{GDBN} will get the current value from the target
11182while the trace experiment is running. Trace state variables share
11183the same namespace as other ``$'' variables, which means that you
11184cannot have trace state variables with names like @code{$23} or
11185@code{$pc}, nor can you have a trace state variable and a convenience
11186variable with the same name.
11187
11188@table @code
11189
11190@item tvariable $@var{name} [ = @var{expression} ]
11191@kindex tvariable
11192The @code{tvariable} command creates a new trace state variable named
11193@code{$@var{name}}, and optionally gives it an initial value of
11194@var{expression}. @var{expression} is evaluated when this command is
11195entered; the result will be converted to an integer if possible,
11196otherwise @value{GDBN} will report an error. A subsequent
11197@code{tvariable} command specifying the same name does not create a
11198variable, but instead assigns the supplied initial value to the
11199existing variable of that name, overwriting any previous initial
11200value. The default initial value is 0.
11201
11202@item info tvariables
11203@kindex info tvariables
11204List all the trace state variables along with their initial values.
11205Their current values may also be displayed, if the trace experiment is
11206currently running.
11207
11208@item delete tvariable @r{[} $@var{name} @dots{} @r{]}
11209@kindex delete tvariable
11210Delete the given trace state variables, or all of them if no arguments
11211are specified.
11212
11213@end table
11214
b37052ae
EZ
11215@node Tracepoint Actions
11216@subsection Tracepoint Action Lists
11217
11218@table @code
11219@kindex actions
11220@cindex tracepoint actions
11221@item actions @r{[}@var{num}@r{]}
11222This command will prompt for a list of actions to be taken when the
11223tracepoint is hit. If the tracepoint number @var{num} is not
11224specified, this command sets the actions for the one that was most
11225recently defined (so that you can define a tracepoint and then say
11226@code{actions} without bothering about its number). You specify the
11227actions themselves on the following lines, one action at a time, and
11228terminate the actions list with a line containing just @code{end}. So
7d13fe92 11229far, the only defined actions are @code{collect}, @code{teval}, and
b37052ae
EZ
11230@code{while-stepping}.
11231
5a9351ae
SS
11232@code{actions} is actually equivalent to @code{commands} (@pxref{Break
11233Commands, ,Breakpoint Command Lists}), except that only the defined
11234actions are allowed; any other @value{GDBN} command is rejected.
11235
b37052ae
EZ
11236@cindex remove actions from a tracepoint
11237To remove all actions from a tracepoint, type @samp{actions @var{num}}
11238and follow it immediately with @samp{end}.
11239
11240@smallexample
11241(@value{GDBP}) @b{collect @var{data}} // collect some data
11242
6826cf00 11243(@value{GDBP}) @b{while-stepping 5} // single-step 5 times, collect data
b37052ae 11244
6826cf00 11245(@value{GDBP}) @b{end} // signals the end of actions.
b37052ae
EZ
11246@end smallexample
11247
11248In the following example, the action list begins with @code{collect}
11249commands indicating the things to be collected when the tracepoint is
11250hit. Then, in order to single-step and collect additional data
11251following the tracepoint, a @code{while-stepping} command is used,
7d13fe92
SS
11252followed by the list of things to be collected after each step in a
11253sequence of single steps. The @code{while-stepping} command is
11254terminated by its own separate @code{end} command. Lastly, the action
11255list is terminated by an @code{end} command.
b37052ae
EZ
11256
11257@smallexample
11258(@value{GDBP}) @b{trace foo}
11259(@value{GDBP}) @b{actions}
11260Enter actions for tracepoint 1, one per line:
11261> collect bar,baz
11262> collect $regs
11263> while-stepping 12
5a9351ae 11264 > collect $pc, arr[i]
b37052ae
EZ
11265 > end
11266end
11267@end smallexample
11268
11269@kindex collect @r{(tracepoints)}
3065dfb6 11270@item collect@r{[}/@var{mods}@r{]} @var{expr1}, @var{expr2}, @dots{}
b37052ae
EZ
11271Collect values of the given expressions when the tracepoint is hit.
11272This command accepts a comma-separated list of any valid expressions.
11273In addition to global, static, or local variables, the following
11274special arguments are supported:
11275
11276@table @code
11277@item $regs
0fb4aa4b 11278Collect all registers.
b37052ae
EZ
11279
11280@item $args
0fb4aa4b 11281Collect all function arguments.
b37052ae
EZ
11282
11283@item $locals
0fb4aa4b
PA
11284Collect all local variables.
11285
6710bf39
SS
11286@item $_ret
11287Collect the return address. This is helpful if you want to see more
11288of a backtrace.
11289
62e5f89c
SDJ
11290@item $_probe_argc
11291Collects the number of arguments from the static probe at which the
11292tracepoint is located.
11293@xref{Static Probe Points}.
11294
11295@item $_probe_arg@var{n}
11296@var{n} is an integer between 0 and 11. Collects the @var{n}th argument
11297from the static probe at which the tracepoint is located.
11298@xref{Static Probe Points}.
11299
0fb4aa4b
PA
11300@item $_sdata
11301@vindex $_sdata@r{, collect}
11302Collect static tracepoint marker specific data. Only available for
11303static tracepoints. @xref{Tracepoint Actions,,Tracepoint Action
11304Lists}. On the UST static tracepoints library backend, an
11305instrumentation point resembles a @code{printf} function call. The
11306tracing library is able to collect user specified data formatted to a
11307character string using the format provided by the programmer that
11308instrumented the program. Other backends have similar mechanisms.
11309Here's an example of a UST marker call:
11310
11311@smallexample
11312 const char master_name[] = "$your_name";
11313 trace_mark(channel1, marker1, "hello %s", master_name)
11314@end smallexample
11315
11316In this case, collecting @code{$_sdata} collects the string
11317@samp{hello $yourname}. When analyzing the trace buffer, you can
11318inspect @samp{$_sdata} like any other variable available to
11319@value{GDBN}.
b37052ae
EZ
11320@end table
11321
11322You can give several consecutive @code{collect} commands, each one
11323with a single argument, or one @code{collect} command with several
5a9351ae 11324arguments separated by commas; the effect is the same.
b37052ae 11325
3065dfb6
SS
11326The optional @var{mods} changes the usual handling of the arguments.
11327@code{s} requests that pointers to chars be handled as strings, in
11328particular collecting the contents of the memory being pointed at, up
11329to the first zero. The upper bound is by default the value of the
11330@code{print elements} variable; if @code{s} is followed by a decimal
11331number, that is the upper bound instead. So for instance
11332@samp{collect/s25 mystr} collects as many as 25 characters at
11333@samp{mystr}.
11334
f5c37c66
EZ
11335The command @code{info scope} (@pxref{Symbols, info scope}) is
11336particularly useful for figuring out what data to collect.
11337
6da95a67
SS
11338@kindex teval @r{(tracepoints)}
11339@item teval @var{expr1}, @var{expr2}, @dots{}
11340Evaluate the given expressions when the tracepoint is hit. This
11341command accepts a comma-separated list of expressions. The results
11342are discarded, so this is mainly useful for assigning values to trace
11343state variables (@pxref{Trace State Variables}) without adding those
11344values to the trace buffer, as would be the case if the @code{collect}
11345action were used.
11346
b37052ae
EZ
11347@kindex while-stepping @r{(tracepoints)}
11348@item while-stepping @var{n}
c9429232 11349Perform @var{n} single-step instruction traces after the tracepoint,
7d13fe92 11350collecting new data after each step. The @code{while-stepping}
c9429232
SS
11351command is followed by the list of what to collect while stepping
11352(followed by its own @code{end} command):
b37052ae
EZ
11353
11354@smallexample
11355> while-stepping 12
11356 > collect $regs, myglobal
11357 > end
11358>
11359@end smallexample
11360
11361@noindent
7d13fe92
SS
11362Note that @code{$pc} is not automatically collected by
11363@code{while-stepping}; you need to explicitly collect that register if
11364you need it. You may abbreviate @code{while-stepping} as @code{ws} or
b37052ae 11365@code{stepping}.
236f1d4d
SS
11366
11367@item set default-collect @var{expr1}, @var{expr2}, @dots{}
11368@kindex set default-collect
11369@cindex default collection action
11370This variable is a list of expressions to collect at each tracepoint
11371hit. It is effectively an additional @code{collect} action prepended
11372to every tracepoint action list. The expressions are parsed
11373individually for each tracepoint, so for instance a variable named
11374@code{xyz} may be interpreted as a global for one tracepoint, and a
11375local for another, as appropriate to the tracepoint's location.
11376
11377@item show default-collect
11378@kindex show default-collect
11379Show the list of expressions that are collected by default at each
11380tracepoint hit.
11381
b37052ae
EZ
11382@end table
11383
11384@node Listing Tracepoints
11385@subsection Listing Tracepoints
11386
11387@table @code
e5a67952
MS
11388@kindex info tracepoints @r{[}@var{n}@dots{}@r{]}
11389@kindex info tp @r{[}@var{n}@dots{}@r{]}
b37052ae 11390@cindex information about tracepoints
e5a67952 11391@item info tracepoints @r{[}@var{num}@dots{}@r{]}
1042e4c0
SS
11392Display information about the tracepoint @var{num}. If you don't
11393specify a tracepoint number, displays information about all the
11394tracepoints defined so far. The format is similar to that used for
11395@code{info breakpoints}; in fact, @code{info tracepoints} is the same
11396command, simply restricting itself to tracepoints.
11397
11398A tracepoint's listing may include additional information specific to
11399tracing:
b37052ae
EZ
11400
11401@itemize @bullet
11402@item
b37052ae 11403its passcount as given by the @code{passcount @var{n}} command
b37052ae
EZ
11404@end itemize
11405
11406@smallexample
11407(@value{GDBP}) @b{info trace}
1042e4c0
SS
11408Num Type Disp Enb Address What
114091 tracepoint keep y 0x0804ab57 in foo() at main.cxx:7
5a9351ae
SS
11410 while-stepping 20
11411 collect globfoo, $regs
11412 end
11413 collect globfoo2
11414 end
1042e4c0 11415 pass count 1200
b37052ae
EZ
11416(@value{GDBP})
11417@end smallexample
11418
11419@noindent
11420This command can be abbreviated @code{info tp}.
11421@end table
11422
0fb4aa4b
PA
11423@node Listing Static Tracepoint Markers
11424@subsection Listing Static Tracepoint Markers
11425
11426@table @code
11427@kindex info static-tracepoint-markers
11428@cindex information about static tracepoint markers
11429@item info static-tracepoint-markers
11430Display information about all static tracepoint markers defined in the
11431program.
11432
11433For each marker, the following columns are printed:
11434
11435@table @emph
11436@item Count
11437An incrementing counter, output to help readability. This is not a
11438stable identifier.
11439@item ID
11440The marker ID, as reported by the target.
11441@item Enabled or Disabled
11442Probed markers are tagged with @samp{y}. @samp{n} identifies marks
11443that are not enabled.
11444@item Address
11445Where the marker is in your program, as a memory address.
11446@item What
11447Where the marker is in the source for your program, as a file and line
11448number. If the debug information included in the program does not
11449allow @value{GDBN} to locate the source of the marker, this column
11450will be left blank.
11451@end table
11452
11453@noindent
11454In addition, the following information may be printed for each marker:
11455
11456@table @emph
11457@item Data
11458User data passed to the tracing library by the marker call. In the
11459UST backend, this is the format string passed as argument to the
11460marker call.
11461@item Static tracepoints probing the marker
11462The list of static tracepoints attached to the marker.
11463@end table
11464
11465@smallexample
11466(@value{GDBP}) info static-tracepoint-markers
11467Cnt ID Enb Address What
114681 ust/bar2 y 0x0000000000400e1a in main at stexample.c:25
11469 Data: number1 %d number2 %d
11470 Probed by static tracepoints: #2
114712 ust/bar33 n 0x0000000000400c87 in main at stexample.c:24
11472 Data: str %s
11473(@value{GDBP})
11474@end smallexample
11475@end table
11476
79a6e687
BW
11477@node Starting and Stopping Trace Experiments
11478@subsection Starting and Stopping Trace Experiments
b37052ae
EZ
11479
11480@table @code
f196051f 11481@kindex tstart [ @var{notes} ]
b37052ae
EZ
11482@cindex start a new trace experiment
11483@cindex collected data discarded
11484@item tstart
f196051f
SS
11485This command starts the trace experiment, and begins collecting data.
11486It has the side effect of discarding all the data collected in the
11487trace buffer during the previous trace experiment. If any arguments
11488are supplied, they are taken as a note and stored with the trace
11489experiment's state. The notes may be arbitrary text, and are
11490especially useful with disconnected tracing in a multi-user context;
11491the notes can explain what the trace is doing, supply user contact
11492information, and so forth.
11493
11494@kindex tstop [ @var{notes} ]
b37052ae
EZ
11495@cindex stop a running trace experiment
11496@item tstop
f196051f
SS
11497This command stops the trace experiment. If any arguments are
11498supplied, they are recorded with the experiment as a note. This is
11499useful if you are stopping a trace started by someone else, for
11500instance if the trace is interfering with the system's behavior and
11501needs to be stopped quickly.
b37052ae 11502
68c71a2e 11503@strong{Note}: a trace experiment and data collection may stop
b37052ae
EZ
11504automatically if any tracepoint's passcount is reached
11505(@pxref{Tracepoint Passcounts}), or if the trace buffer becomes full.
11506
11507@kindex tstatus
11508@cindex status of trace data collection
11509@cindex trace experiment, status of
11510@item tstatus
11511This command displays the status of the current trace data
11512collection.
11513@end table
11514
11515Here is an example of the commands we described so far:
11516
11517@smallexample
11518(@value{GDBP}) @b{trace gdb_c_test}
11519(@value{GDBP}) @b{actions}
11520Enter actions for tracepoint #1, one per line.
11521> collect $regs,$locals,$args
11522> while-stepping 11
11523 > collect $regs
11524 > end
11525> end
11526(@value{GDBP}) @b{tstart}
11527 [time passes @dots{}]
11528(@value{GDBP}) @b{tstop}
11529@end smallexample
11530
03f2bd59 11531@anchor{disconnected tracing}
d5551862
SS
11532@cindex disconnected tracing
11533You can choose to continue running the trace experiment even if
11534@value{GDBN} disconnects from the target, voluntarily or
11535involuntarily. For commands such as @code{detach}, the debugger will
11536ask what you want to do with the trace. But for unexpected
11537terminations (@value{GDBN} crash, network outage), it would be
11538unfortunate to lose hard-won trace data, so the variable
11539@code{disconnected-tracing} lets you decide whether the trace should
11540continue running without @value{GDBN}.
11541
11542@table @code
11543@item set disconnected-tracing on
11544@itemx set disconnected-tracing off
11545@kindex set disconnected-tracing
11546Choose whether a tracing run should continue to run if @value{GDBN}
11547has disconnected from the target. Note that @code{detach} or
11548@code{quit} will ask you directly what to do about a running trace no
11549matter what this variable's setting, so the variable is mainly useful
11550for handling unexpected situations, such as loss of the network.
11551
11552@item show disconnected-tracing
11553@kindex show disconnected-tracing
11554Show the current choice for disconnected tracing.
11555
11556@end table
11557
11558When you reconnect to the target, the trace experiment may or may not
11559still be running; it might have filled the trace buffer in the
11560meantime, or stopped for one of the other reasons. If it is running,
11561it will continue after reconnection.
11562
11563Upon reconnection, the target will upload information about the
11564tracepoints in effect. @value{GDBN} will then compare that
11565information to the set of tracepoints currently defined, and attempt
11566to match them up, allowing for the possibility that the numbers may
11567have changed due to creation and deletion in the meantime. If one of
11568the target's tracepoints does not match any in @value{GDBN}, the
11569debugger will create a new tracepoint, so that you have a number with
11570which to specify that tracepoint. This matching-up process is
11571necessarily heuristic, and it may result in useless tracepoints being
11572created; you may simply delete them if they are of no use.
b37052ae 11573
4daf5ac0
SS
11574@cindex circular trace buffer
11575If your target agent supports a @dfn{circular trace buffer}, then you
11576can run a trace experiment indefinitely without filling the trace
11577buffer; when space runs out, the agent deletes already-collected trace
11578frames, oldest first, until there is enough room to continue
11579collecting. This is especially useful if your tracepoints are being
11580hit too often, and your trace gets terminated prematurely because the
11581buffer is full. To ask for a circular trace buffer, simply set
81896e36 11582@samp{circular-trace-buffer} to on. You can set this at any time,
4daf5ac0
SS
11583including during tracing; if the agent can do it, it will change
11584buffer handling on the fly, otherwise it will not take effect until
11585the next run.
11586
11587@table @code
11588@item set circular-trace-buffer on
11589@itemx set circular-trace-buffer off
11590@kindex set circular-trace-buffer
11591Choose whether a tracing run should use a linear or circular buffer
11592for trace data. A linear buffer will not lose any trace data, but may
11593fill up prematurely, while a circular buffer will discard old trace
11594data, but it will have always room for the latest tracepoint hits.
11595
11596@item show circular-trace-buffer
11597@kindex show circular-trace-buffer
11598Show the current choice for the trace buffer. Note that this may not
11599match the agent's current buffer handling, nor is it guaranteed to
11600match the setting that might have been in effect during a past run,
11601for instance if you are looking at frames from a trace file.
11602
11603@end table
11604
f196051f
SS
11605@table @code
11606@item set trace-user @var{text}
11607@kindex set trace-user
11608
11609@item show trace-user
11610@kindex show trace-user
11611
11612@item set trace-notes @var{text}
11613@kindex set trace-notes
11614Set the trace run's notes.
11615
11616@item show trace-notes
11617@kindex show trace-notes
11618Show the trace run's notes.
11619
11620@item set trace-stop-notes @var{text}
11621@kindex set trace-stop-notes
11622Set the trace run's stop notes. The handling of the note is as for
11623@code{tstop} arguments; the set command is convenient way to fix a
11624stop note that is mistaken or incomplete.
11625
11626@item show trace-stop-notes
11627@kindex show trace-stop-notes
11628Show the trace run's stop notes.
11629
11630@end table
11631
c9429232
SS
11632@node Tracepoint Restrictions
11633@subsection Tracepoint Restrictions
11634
11635@cindex tracepoint restrictions
11636There are a number of restrictions on the use of tracepoints. As
11637described above, tracepoint data gathering occurs on the target
11638without interaction from @value{GDBN}. Thus the full capabilities of
11639the debugger are not available during data gathering, and then at data
11640examination time, you will be limited by only having what was
11641collected. The following items describe some common problems, but it
11642is not exhaustive, and you may run into additional difficulties not
11643mentioned here.
11644
11645@itemize @bullet
11646
11647@item
11648Tracepoint expressions are intended to gather objects (lvalues). Thus
11649the full flexibility of GDB's expression evaluator is not available.
11650You cannot call functions, cast objects to aggregate types, access
11651convenience variables or modify values (except by assignment to trace
11652state variables). Some language features may implicitly call
11653functions (for instance Objective-C fields with accessors), and therefore
11654cannot be collected either.
11655
11656@item
11657Collection of local variables, either individually or in bulk with
11658@code{$locals} or @code{$args}, during @code{while-stepping} may
11659behave erratically. The stepping action may enter a new scope (for
11660instance by stepping into a function), or the location of the variable
11661may change (for instance it is loaded into a register). The
11662tracepoint data recorded uses the location information for the
11663variables that is correct for the tracepoint location. When the
11664tracepoint is created, it is not possible, in general, to determine
11665where the steps of a @code{while-stepping} sequence will advance the
11666program---particularly if a conditional branch is stepped.
11667
11668@item
11669Collection of an incompletely-initialized or partially-destroyed object
11670may result in something that @value{GDBN} cannot display, or displays
11671in a misleading way.
11672
11673@item
11674When @value{GDBN} displays a pointer to character it automatically
11675dereferences the pointer to also display characters of the string
11676being pointed to. However, collecting the pointer during tracing does
11677not automatically collect the string. You need to explicitly
11678dereference the pointer and provide size information if you want to
11679collect not only the pointer, but the memory pointed to. For example,
11680@code{*ptr@@50} can be used to collect the 50 element array pointed to
11681by @code{ptr}.
11682
11683@item
11684It is not possible to collect a complete stack backtrace at a
11685tracepoint. Instead, you may collect the registers and a few hundred
d99f7e48 11686bytes from the stack pointer with something like @code{*(unsigned char *)$esp@@300}
c9429232
SS
11687(adjust to use the name of the actual stack pointer register on your
11688target architecture, and the amount of stack you wish to capture).
11689Then the @code{backtrace} command will show a partial backtrace when
11690using a trace frame. The number of stack frames that can be examined
11691depends on the sizes of the frames in the collected stack. Note that
11692if you ask for a block so large that it goes past the bottom of the
11693stack, the target agent may report an error trying to read from an
11694invalid address.
11695
af54718e
SS
11696@item
11697If you do not collect registers at a tracepoint, @value{GDBN} can
11698infer that the value of @code{$pc} must be the same as the address of
11699the tracepoint and use that when you are looking at a trace frame
11700for that tracepoint. However, this cannot work if the tracepoint has
11701multiple locations (for instance if it was set in a function that was
11702inlined), or if it has a @code{while-stepping} loop. In those cases
11703@value{GDBN} will warn you that it can't infer @code{$pc}, and default
11704it to zero.
11705
c9429232
SS
11706@end itemize
11707
b37052ae 11708@node Analyze Collected Data
79a6e687 11709@section Using the Collected Data
b37052ae
EZ
11710
11711After the tracepoint experiment ends, you use @value{GDBN} commands
11712for examining the trace data. The basic idea is that each tracepoint
11713collects a trace @dfn{snapshot} every time it is hit and another
11714snapshot every time it single-steps. All these snapshots are
11715consecutively numbered from zero and go into a buffer, and you can
11716examine them later. The way you examine them is to @dfn{focus} on a
11717specific trace snapshot. When the remote stub is focused on a trace
11718snapshot, it will respond to all @value{GDBN} requests for memory and
11719registers by reading from the buffer which belongs to that snapshot,
11720rather than from @emph{real} memory or registers of the program being
11721debugged. This means that @strong{all} @value{GDBN} commands
11722(@code{print}, @code{info registers}, @code{backtrace}, etc.) will
11723behave as if we were currently debugging the program state as it was
11724when the tracepoint occurred. Any requests for data that are not in
11725the buffer will fail.
11726
11727@menu
11728* tfind:: How to select a trace snapshot
11729* tdump:: How to display all data for a snapshot
6149aea9 11730* save tracepoints:: How to save tracepoints for a future run
b37052ae
EZ
11731@end menu
11732
11733@node tfind
11734@subsection @code{tfind @var{n}}
11735
11736@kindex tfind
11737@cindex select trace snapshot
11738@cindex find trace snapshot
11739The basic command for selecting a trace snapshot from the buffer is
11740@code{tfind @var{n}}, which finds trace snapshot number @var{n},
11741counting from zero. If no argument @var{n} is given, the next
11742snapshot is selected.
11743
11744Here are the various forms of using the @code{tfind} command.
11745
11746@table @code
11747@item tfind start
11748Find the first snapshot in the buffer. This is a synonym for
11749@code{tfind 0} (since 0 is the number of the first snapshot).
11750
11751@item tfind none
11752Stop debugging trace snapshots, resume @emph{live} debugging.
11753
11754@item tfind end
11755Same as @samp{tfind none}.
11756
11757@item tfind
11758No argument means find the next trace snapshot.
11759
11760@item tfind -
11761Find the previous trace snapshot before the current one. This permits
11762retracing earlier steps.
11763
11764@item tfind tracepoint @var{num}
11765Find the next snapshot associated with tracepoint @var{num}. Search
11766proceeds forward from the last examined trace snapshot. If no
11767argument @var{num} is given, it means find the next snapshot collected
11768for the same tracepoint as the current snapshot.
11769
11770@item tfind pc @var{addr}
11771Find the next snapshot associated with the value @var{addr} of the
11772program counter. Search proceeds forward from the last examined trace
11773snapshot. If no argument @var{addr} is given, it means find the next
11774snapshot with the same value of PC as the current snapshot.
11775
11776@item tfind outside @var{addr1}, @var{addr2}
11777Find the next snapshot whose PC is outside the given range of
081dfbf7 11778addresses (exclusive).
b37052ae
EZ
11779
11780@item tfind range @var{addr1}, @var{addr2}
11781Find the next snapshot whose PC is between @var{addr1} and
081dfbf7 11782@var{addr2} (inclusive).
b37052ae
EZ
11783
11784@item tfind line @r{[}@var{file}:@r{]}@var{n}
11785Find the next snapshot associated with the source line @var{n}. If
11786the optional argument @var{file} is given, refer to line @var{n} in
11787that source file. Search proceeds forward from the last examined
11788trace snapshot. If no argument @var{n} is given, it means find the
11789next line other than the one currently being examined; thus saying
11790@code{tfind line} repeatedly can appear to have the same effect as
11791stepping from line to line in a @emph{live} debugging session.
11792@end table
11793
11794The default arguments for the @code{tfind} commands are specifically
11795designed to make it easy to scan through the trace buffer. For
11796instance, @code{tfind} with no argument selects the next trace
11797snapshot, and @code{tfind -} with no argument selects the previous
11798trace snapshot. So, by giving one @code{tfind} command, and then
11799simply hitting @key{RET} repeatedly you can examine all the trace
11800snapshots in order. Or, by saying @code{tfind -} and then hitting
11801@key{RET} repeatedly you can examine the snapshots in reverse order.
11802The @code{tfind line} command with no argument selects the snapshot
11803for the next source line executed. The @code{tfind pc} command with
11804no argument selects the next snapshot with the same program counter
11805(PC) as the current frame. The @code{tfind tracepoint} command with
11806no argument selects the next trace snapshot collected by the same
11807tracepoint as the current one.
11808
11809In addition to letting you scan through the trace buffer manually,
11810these commands make it easy to construct @value{GDBN} scripts that
11811scan through the trace buffer and print out whatever collected data
11812you are interested in. Thus, if we want to examine the PC, FP, and SP
11813registers from each trace frame in the buffer, we can say this:
11814
11815@smallexample
11816(@value{GDBP}) @b{tfind start}
11817(@value{GDBP}) @b{while ($trace_frame != -1)}
11818> printf "Frame %d, PC = %08X, SP = %08X, FP = %08X\n", \
11819 $trace_frame, $pc, $sp, $fp
11820> tfind
11821> end
11822
11823Frame 0, PC = 0020DC64, SP = 0030BF3C, FP = 0030BF44
11824Frame 1, PC = 0020DC6C, SP = 0030BF38, FP = 0030BF44
11825Frame 2, PC = 0020DC70, SP = 0030BF34, FP = 0030BF44
11826Frame 3, PC = 0020DC74, SP = 0030BF30, FP = 0030BF44
11827Frame 4, PC = 0020DC78, SP = 0030BF2C, FP = 0030BF44
11828Frame 5, PC = 0020DC7C, SP = 0030BF28, FP = 0030BF44
11829Frame 6, PC = 0020DC80, SP = 0030BF24, FP = 0030BF44
11830Frame 7, PC = 0020DC84, SP = 0030BF20, FP = 0030BF44
11831Frame 8, PC = 0020DC88, SP = 0030BF1C, FP = 0030BF44
11832Frame 9, PC = 0020DC8E, SP = 0030BF18, FP = 0030BF44
11833Frame 10, PC = 00203F6C, SP = 0030BE3C, FP = 0030BF14
11834@end smallexample
11835
11836Or, if we want to examine the variable @code{X} at each source line in
11837the buffer:
11838
11839@smallexample
11840(@value{GDBP}) @b{tfind start}
11841(@value{GDBP}) @b{while ($trace_frame != -1)}
11842> printf "Frame %d, X == %d\n", $trace_frame, X
11843> tfind line
11844> end
11845
11846Frame 0, X = 1
11847Frame 7, X = 2
11848Frame 13, X = 255
11849@end smallexample
11850
11851@node tdump
11852@subsection @code{tdump}
11853@kindex tdump
11854@cindex dump all data collected at tracepoint
11855@cindex tracepoint data, display
11856
11857This command takes no arguments. It prints all the data collected at
11858the current trace snapshot.
11859
11860@smallexample
11861(@value{GDBP}) @b{trace 444}
11862(@value{GDBP}) @b{actions}
11863Enter actions for tracepoint #2, one per line:
11864> collect $regs, $locals, $args, gdb_long_test
11865> end
11866
11867(@value{GDBP}) @b{tstart}
11868
11869(@value{GDBP}) @b{tfind line 444}
11870#0 gdb_test (p1=0x11, p2=0x22, p3=0x33, p4=0x44, p5=0x55, p6=0x66)
11871at gdb_test.c:444
11872444 printp( "%s: arguments = 0x%X 0x%X 0x%X 0x%X 0x%X 0x%X\n", )
11873
11874(@value{GDBP}) @b{tdump}
11875Data collected at tracepoint 2, trace frame 1:
11876d0 0xc4aa0085 -995491707
11877d1 0x18 24
11878d2 0x80 128
11879d3 0x33 51
11880d4 0x71aea3d 119204413
11881d5 0x22 34
11882d6 0xe0 224
11883d7 0x380035 3670069
11884a0 0x19e24a 1696330
11885a1 0x3000668 50333288
11886a2 0x100 256
11887a3 0x322000 3284992
11888a4 0x3000698 50333336
11889a5 0x1ad3cc 1758156
11890fp 0x30bf3c 0x30bf3c
11891sp 0x30bf34 0x30bf34
11892ps 0x0 0
11893pc 0x20b2c8 0x20b2c8
11894fpcontrol 0x0 0
11895fpstatus 0x0 0
11896fpiaddr 0x0 0
11897p = 0x20e5b4 "gdb-test"
11898p1 = (void *) 0x11
11899p2 = (void *) 0x22
11900p3 = (void *) 0x33
11901p4 = (void *) 0x44
11902p5 = (void *) 0x55
11903p6 = (void *) 0x66
11904gdb_long_test = 17 '\021'
11905
11906(@value{GDBP})
11907@end smallexample
11908
af54718e
SS
11909@code{tdump} works by scanning the tracepoint's current collection
11910actions and printing the value of each expression listed. So
11911@code{tdump} can fail, if after a run, you change the tracepoint's
11912actions to mention variables that were not collected during the run.
11913
11914Also, for tracepoints with @code{while-stepping} loops, @code{tdump}
11915uses the collected value of @code{$pc} to distinguish between trace
11916frames that were collected at the tracepoint hit, and frames that were
11917collected while stepping. This allows it to correctly choose whether
11918to display the basic list of collections, or the collections from the
11919body of the while-stepping loop. However, if @code{$pc} was not collected,
11920then @code{tdump} will always attempt to dump using the basic collection
11921list, and may fail if a while-stepping frame does not include all the
11922same data that is collected at the tracepoint hit.
11923@c This is getting pretty arcane, example would be good.
11924
6149aea9
PA
11925@node save tracepoints
11926@subsection @code{save tracepoints @var{filename}}
11927@kindex save tracepoints
b37052ae
EZ
11928@kindex save-tracepoints
11929@cindex save tracepoints for future sessions
11930
11931This command saves all current tracepoint definitions together with
11932their actions and passcounts, into a file @file{@var{filename}}
11933suitable for use in a later debugging session. To read the saved
11934tracepoint definitions, use the @code{source} command (@pxref{Command
6149aea9
PA
11935Files}). The @w{@code{save-tracepoints}} command is a deprecated
11936alias for @w{@code{save tracepoints}}
b37052ae
EZ
11937
11938@node Tracepoint Variables
11939@section Convenience Variables for Tracepoints
11940@cindex tracepoint variables
11941@cindex convenience variables for tracepoints
11942
11943@table @code
11944@vindex $trace_frame
11945@item (int) $trace_frame
11946The current trace snapshot (a.k.a.@: @dfn{frame}) number, or -1 if no
11947snapshot is selected.
11948
11949@vindex $tracepoint
11950@item (int) $tracepoint
11951The tracepoint for the current trace snapshot.
11952
11953@vindex $trace_line
11954@item (int) $trace_line
11955The line number for the current trace snapshot.
11956
11957@vindex $trace_file
11958@item (char []) $trace_file
11959The source file for the current trace snapshot.
11960
11961@vindex $trace_func
11962@item (char []) $trace_func
11963The name of the function containing @code{$tracepoint}.
11964@end table
11965
11966Note: @code{$trace_file} is not suitable for use in @code{printf},
11967use @code{output} instead.
11968
11969Here's a simple example of using these convenience variables for
11970stepping through all the trace snapshots and printing some of their
f61e138d
SS
11971data. Note that these are not the same as trace state variables,
11972which are managed by the target.
b37052ae
EZ
11973
11974@smallexample
11975(@value{GDBP}) @b{tfind start}
11976
11977(@value{GDBP}) @b{while $trace_frame != -1}
11978> output $trace_file
11979> printf ", line %d (tracepoint #%d)\n", $trace_line, $tracepoint
11980> tfind
11981> end
11982@end smallexample
11983
00bf0b85
SS
11984@node Trace Files
11985@section Using Trace Files
11986@cindex trace files
11987
11988In some situations, the target running a trace experiment may no
11989longer be available; perhaps it crashed, or the hardware was needed
11990for a different activity. To handle these cases, you can arrange to
11991dump the trace data into a file, and later use that file as a source
11992of trace data, via the @code{target tfile} command.
11993
11994@table @code
11995
11996@kindex tsave
11997@item tsave [ -r ] @var{filename}
11998Save the trace data to @var{filename}. By default, this command
11999assumes that @var{filename} refers to the host filesystem, so if
12000necessary @value{GDBN} will copy raw trace data up from the target and
12001then save it. If the target supports it, you can also supply the
12002optional argument @code{-r} (``remote'') to direct the target to save
12003the data directly into @var{filename} in its own filesystem, which may be
12004more efficient if the trace buffer is very large. (Note, however, that
12005@code{target tfile} can only read from files accessible to the host.)
12006
12007@kindex target tfile
12008@kindex tfile
12009@item target tfile @var{filename}
12010Use the file named @var{filename} as a source of trace data. Commands
12011that examine data work as they do with a live target, but it is not
12012possible to run any new trace experiments. @code{tstatus} will report
12013the state of the trace run at the moment the data was saved, as well
12014as the current trace frame you are examining. @var{filename} must be
12015on a filesystem accessible to the host.
12016
12017@end table
12018
df0cd8c5
JB
12019@node Overlays
12020@chapter Debugging Programs That Use Overlays
12021@cindex overlays
12022
12023If your program is too large to fit completely in your target system's
12024memory, you can sometimes use @dfn{overlays} to work around this
12025problem. @value{GDBN} provides some support for debugging programs that
12026use overlays.
12027
12028@menu
12029* How Overlays Work:: A general explanation of overlays.
12030* Overlay Commands:: Managing overlays in @value{GDBN}.
12031* Automatic Overlay Debugging:: @value{GDBN} can find out which overlays are
12032 mapped by asking the inferior.
12033* Overlay Sample Program:: A sample program using overlays.
12034@end menu
12035
12036@node How Overlays Work
12037@section How Overlays Work
12038@cindex mapped overlays
12039@cindex unmapped overlays
12040@cindex load address, overlay's
12041@cindex mapped address
12042@cindex overlay area
12043
12044Suppose you have a computer whose instruction address space is only 64
12045kilobytes long, but which has much more memory which can be accessed by
12046other means: special instructions, segment registers, or memory
12047management hardware, for example. Suppose further that you want to
12048adapt a program which is larger than 64 kilobytes to run on this system.
12049
12050One solution is to identify modules of your program which are relatively
12051independent, and need not call each other directly; call these modules
12052@dfn{overlays}. Separate the overlays from the main program, and place
12053their machine code in the larger memory. Place your main program in
12054instruction memory, but leave at least enough space there to hold the
12055largest overlay as well.
12056
12057Now, to call a function located in an overlay, you must first copy that
12058overlay's machine code from the large memory into the space set aside
12059for it in the instruction memory, and then jump to its entry point
12060there.
12061
c928edc0
AC
12062@c NB: In the below the mapped area's size is greater or equal to the
12063@c size of all overlays. This is intentional to remind the developer
12064@c that overlays don't necessarily need to be the same size.
12065
474c8240 12066@smallexample
df0cd8c5 12067@group
c928edc0
AC
12068 Data Instruction Larger
12069Address Space Address Space Address Space
12070+-----------+ +-----------+ +-----------+
12071| | | | | |
12072+-----------+ +-----------+ +-----------+<-- overlay 1
12073| program | | main | .----| overlay 1 | load address
12074| variables | | program | | +-----------+
12075| and heap | | | | | |
12076+-----------+ | | | +-----------+<-- overlay 2
12077| | +-----------+ | | | load address
12078+-----------+ | | | .-| overlay 2 |
12079 | | | | | |
12080 mapped --->+-----------+ | | +-----------+
12081 address | | | | | |
12082 | overlay | <-' | | |
12083 | area | <---' +-----------+<-- overlay 3
12084 | | <---. | | load address
12085 +-----------+ `--| overlay 3 |
12086 | | | |
12087 +-----------+ | |
12088 +-----------+
12089 | |
12090 +-----------+
12091
12092 @anchor{A code overlay}A code overlay
df0cd8c5 12093@end group
474c8240 12094@end smallexample
df0cd8c5 12095
c928edc0
AC
12096The diagram (@pxref{A code overlay}) shows a system with separate data
12097and instruction address spaces. To map an overlay, the program copies
12098its code from the larger address space to the instruction address space.
12099Since the overlays shown here all use the same mapped address, only one
12100may be mapped at a time. For a system with a single address space for
12101data and instructions, the diagram would be similar, except that the
12102program variables and heap would share an address space with the main
12103program and the overlay area.
df0cd8c5
JB
12104
12105An overlay loaded into instruction memory and ready for use is called a
12106@dfn{mapped} overlay; its @dfn{mapped address} is its address in the
12107instruction memory. An overlay not present (or only partially present)
12108in instruction memory is called @dfn{unmapped}; its @dfn{load address}
12109is its address in the larger memory. The mapped address is also called
12110the @dfn{virtual memory address}, or @dfn{VMA}; the load address is also
12111called the @dfn{load memory address}, or @dfn{LMA}.
12112
12113Unfortunately, overlays are not a completely transparent way to adapt a
12114program to limited instruction memory. They introduce a new set of
12115global constraints you must keep in mind as you design your program:
12116
12117@itemize @bullet
12118
12119@item
12120Before calling or returning to a function in an overlay, your program
12121must make sure that overlay is actually mapped. Otherwise, the call or
12122return will transfer control to the right address, but in the wrong
12123overlay, and your program will probably crash.
12124
12125@item
12126If the process of mapping an overlay is expensive on your system, you
12127will need to choose your overlays carefully to minimize their effect on
12128your program's performance.
12129
12130@item
12131The executable file you load onto your system must contain each
12132overlay's instructions, appearing at the overlay's load address, not its
12133mapped address. However, each overlay's instructions must be relocated
12134and its symbols defined as if the overlay were at its mapped address.
12135You can use GNU linker scripts to specify different load and relocation
12136addresses for pieces of your program; see @ref{Overlay Description,,,
12137ld.info, Using ld: the GNU linker}.
12138
12139@item
12140The procedure for loading executable files onto your system must be able
12141to load their contents into the larger address space as well as the
12142instruction and data spaces.
12143
12144@end itemize
12145
12146The overlay system described above is rather simple, and could be
12147improved in many ways:
12148
12149@itemize @bullet
12150
12151@item
12152If your system has suitable bank switch registers or memory management
12153hardware, you could use those facilities to make an overlay's load area
12154contents simply appear at their mapped address in instruction space.
12155This would probably be faster than copying the overlay to its mapped
12156area in the usual way.
12157
12158@item
12159If your overlays are small enough, you could set aside more than one
12160overlay area, and have more than one overlay mapped at a time.
12161
12162@item
12163You can use overlays to manage data, as well as instructions. In
12164general, data overlays are even less transparent to your design than
12165code overlays: whereas code overlays only require care when you call or
12166return to functions, data overlays require care every time you access
12167the data. Also, if you change the contents of a data overlay, you
12168must copy its contents back out to its load address before you can copy a
12169different data overlay into the same mapped area.
12170
12171@end itemize
12172
12173
12174@node Overlay Commands
12175@section Overlay Commands
12176
12177To use @value{GDBN}'s overlay support, each overlay in your program must
12178correspond to a separate section of the executable file. The section's
12179virtual memory address and load memory address must be the overlay's
12180mapped and load addresses. Identifying overlays with sections allows
12181@value{GDBN} to determine the appropriate address of a function or
12182variable, depending on whether the overlay is mapped or not.
12183
12184@value{GDBN}'s overlay commands all start with the word @code{overlay};
12185you can abbreviate this as @code{ov} or @code{ovly}. The commands are:
12186
12187@table @code
12188@item overlay off
4644b6e3 12189@kindex overlay
df0cd8c5
JB
12190Disable @value{GDBN}'s overlay support. When overlay support is
12191disabled, @value{GDBN} assumes that all functions and variables are
12192always present at their mapped addresses. By default, @value{GDBN}'s
12193overlay support is disabled.
12194
12195@item overlay manual
df0cd8c5
JB
12196@cindex manual overlay debugging
12197Enable @dfn{manual} overlay debugging. In this mode, @value{GDBN}
12198relies on you to tell it which overlays are mapped, and which are not,
12199using the @code{overlay map-overlay} and @code{overlay unmap-overlay}
12200commands described below.
12201
12202@item overlay map-overlay @var{overlay}
12203@itemx overlay map @var{overlay}
df0cd8c5
JB
12204@cindex map an overlay
12205Tell @value{GDBN} that @var{overlay} is now mapped; @var{overlay} must
12206be the name of the object file section containing the overlay. When an
12207overlay is mapped, @value{GDBN} assumes it can find the overlay's
12208functions and variables at their mapped addresses. @value{GDBN} assumes
12209that any other overlays whose mapped ranges overlap that of
12210@var{overlay} are now unmapped.
12211
12212@item overlay unmap-overlay @var{overlay}
12213@itemx overlay unmap @var{overlay}
df0cd8c5
JB
12214@cindex unmap an overlay
12215Tell @value{GDBN} that @var{overlay} is no longer mapped; @var{overlay}
12216must be the name of the object file section containing the overlay.
12217When an overlay is unmapped, @value{GDBN} assumes it can find the
12218overlay's functions and variables at their load addresses.
12219
12220@item overlay auto
df0cd8c5
JB
12221Enable @dfn{automatic} overlay debugging. In this mode, @value{GDBN}
12222consults a data structure the overlay manager maintains in the inferior
12223to see which overlays are mapped. For details, see @ref{Automatic
12224Overlay Debugging}.
12225
12226@item overlay load-target
12227@itemx overlay load
df0cd8c5
JB
12228@cindex reloading the overlay table
12229Re-read the overlay table from the inferior. Normally, @value{GDBN}
12230re-reads the table @value{GDBN} automatically each time the inferior
12231stops, so this command should only be necessary if you have changed the
12232overlay mapping yourself using @value{GDBN}. This command is only
12233useful when using automatic overlay debugging.
12234
12235@item overlay list-overlays
12236@itemx overlay list
12237@cindex listing mapped overlays
12238Display a list of the overlays currently mapped, along with their mapped
12239addresses, load addresses, and sizes.
12240
12241@end table
12242
12243Normally, when @value{GDBN} prints a code address, it includes the name
12244of the function the address falls in:
12245
474c8240 12246@smallexample
f7dc1244 12247(@value{GDBP}) print main
df0cd8c5 12248$3 = @{int ()@} 0x11a0 <main>
474c8240 12249@end smallexample
df0cd8c5
JB
12250@noindent
12251When overlay debugging is enabled, @value{GDBN} recognizes code in
12252unmapped overlays, and prints the names of unmapped functions with
12253asterisks around them. For example, if @code{foo} is a function in an
12254unmapped overlay, @value{GDBN} prints it this way:
12255
474c8240 12256@smallexample
f7dc1244 12257(@value{GDBP}) overlay list
df0cd8c5 12258No sections are mapped.
f7dc1244 12259(@value{GDBP}) print foo
df0cd8c5 12260$5 = @{int (int)@} 0x100000 <*foo*>
474c8240 12261@end smallexample
df0cd8c5
JB
12262@noindent
12263When @code{foo}'s overlay is mapped, @value{GDBN} prints the function's
12264name normally:
12265
474c8240 12266@smallexample
f7dc1244 12267(@value{GDBP}) overlay list
b383017d 12268Section .ov.foo.text, loaded at 0x100000 - 0x100034,
df0cd8c5 12269 mapped at 0x1016 - 0x104a
f7dc1244 12270(@value{GDBP}) print foo
df0cd8c5 12271$6 = @{int (int)@} 0x1016 <foo>
474c8240 12272@end smallexample
df0cd8c5
JB
12273
12274When overlay debugging is enabled, @value{GDBN} can find the correct
12275address for functions and variables in an overlay, whether or not the
12276overlay is mapped. This allows most @value{GDBN} commands, like
12277@code{break} and @code{disassemble}, to work normally, even on unmapped
12278code. However, @value{GDBN}'s breakpoint support has some limitations:
12279
12280@itemize @bullet
12281@item
12282@cindex breakpoints in overlays
12283@cindex overlays, setting breakpoints in
12284You can set breakpoints in functions in unmapped overlays, as long as
12285@value{GDBN} can write to the overlay at its load address.
12286@item
12287@value{GDBN} can not set hardware or simulator-based breakpoints in
12288unmapped overlays. However, if you set a breakpoint at the end of your
12289overlay manager (and tell @value{GDBN} which overlays are now mapped, if
12290you are using manual overlay management), @value{GDBN} will re-set its
12291breakpoints properly.
12292@end itemize
12293
12294
12295@node Automatic Overlay Debugging
12296@section Automatic Overlay Debugging
12297@cindex automatic overlay debugging
12298
12299@value{GDBN} can automatically track which overlays are mapped and which
12300are not, given some simple co-operation from the overlay manager in the
12301inferior. If you enable automatic overlay debugging with the
12302@code{overlay auto} command (@pxref{Overlay Commands}), @value{GDBN}
12303looks in the inferior's memory for certain variables describing the
12304current state of the overlays.
12305
12306Here are the variables your overlay manager must define to support
12307@value{GDBN}'s automatic overlay debugging:
12308
12309@table @asis
12310
12311@item @code{_ovly_table}:
12312This variable must be an array of the following structures:
12313
474c8240 12314@smallexample
df0cd8c5
JB
12315struct
12316@{
12317 /* The overlay's mapped address. */
12318 unsigned long vma;
12319
12320 /* The size of the overlay, in bytes. */
12321 unsigned long size;
12322
12323 /* The overlay's load address. */
12324 unsigned long lma;
12325
12326 /* Non-zero if the overlay is currently mapped;
12327 zero otherwise. */
12328 unsigned long mapped;
12329@}
474c8240 12330@end smallexample
df0cd8c5
JB
12331
12332@item @code{_novlys}:
12333This variable must be a four-byte signed integer, holding the total
12334number of elements in @code{_ovly_table}.
12335
12336@end table
12337
12338To decide whether a particular overlay is mapped or not, @value{GDBN}
12339looks for an entry in @w{@code{_ovly_table}} whose @code{vma} and
12340@code{lma} members equal the VMA and LMA of the overlay's section in the
12341executable file. When @value{GDBN} finds a matching entry, it consults
12342the entry's @code{mapped} member to determine whether the overlay is
12343currently mapped.
12344
81d46470 12345In addition, your overlay manager may define a function called
def71bfa 12346@code{_ovly_debug_event}. If this function is defined, @value{GDBN}
81d46470
MS
12347will silently set a breakpoint there. If the overlay manager then
12348calls this function whenever it has changed the overlay table, this
12349will enable @value{GDBN} to accurately keep track of which overlays
12350are in program memory, and update any breakpoints that may be set
b383017d 12351in overlays. This will allow breakpoints to work even if the
81d46470
MS
12352overlays are kept in ROM or other non-writable memory while they
12353are not being executed.
df0cd8c5
JB
12354
12355@node Overlay Sample Program
12356@section Overlay Sample Program
12357@cindex overlay example program
12358
12359When linking a program which uses overlays, you must place the overlays
12360at their load addresses, while relocating them to run at their mapped
12361addresses. To do this, you must write a linker script (@pxref{Overlay
12362Description,,, ld.info, Using ld: the GNU linker}). Unfortunately,
12363since linker scripts are specific to a particular host system, target
12364architecture, and target memory layout, this manual cannot provide
12365portable sample code demonstrating @value{GDBN}'s overlay support.
12366
12367However, the @value{GDBN} source distribution does contain an overlaid
12368program, with linker scripts for a few systems, as part of its test
12369suite. The program consists of the following files from
12370@file{gdb/testsuite/gdb.base}:
12371
12372@table @file
12373@item overlays.c
12374The main program file.
12375@item ovlymgr.c
12376A simple overlay manager, used by @file{overlays.c}.
12377@item foo.c
12378@itemx bar.c
12379@itemx baz.c
12380@itemx grbx.c
12381Overlay modules, loaded and used by @file{overlays.c}.
12382@item d10v.ld
12383@itemx m32r.ld
12384Linker scripts for linking the test program on the @code{d10v-elf}
12385and @code{m32r-elf} targets.
12386@end table
12387
12388You can build the test program using the @code{d10v-elf} GCC
12389cross-compiler like this:
12390
474c8240 12391@smallexample
df0cd8c5
JB
12392$ d10v-elf-gcc -g -c overlays.c
12393$ d10v-elf-gcc -g -c ovlymgr.c
12394$ d10v-elf-gcc -g -c foo.c
12395$ d10v-elf-gcc -g -c bar.c
12396$ d10v-elf-gcc -g -c baz.c
12397$ d10v-elf-gcc -g -c grbx.c
12398$ d10v-elf-gcc -g overlays.o ovlymgr.o foo.o bar.o \
12399 baz.o grbx.o -Wl,-Td10v.ld -o overlays
474c8240 12400@end smallexample
df0cd8c5
JB
12401
12402The build process is identical for any other architecture, except that
12403you must substitute the appropriate compiler and linker script for the
12404target system for @code{d10v-elf-gcc} and @code{d10v.ld}.
12405
12406
6d2ebf8b 12407@node Languages
c906108c
SS
12408@chapter Using @value{GDBN} with Different Languages
12409@cindex languages
12410
c906108c
SS
12411Although programming languages generally have common aspects, they are
12412rarely expressed in the same manner. For instance, in ANSI C,
12413dereferencing a pointer @code{p} is accomplished by @code{*p}, but in
12414Modula-2, it is accomplished by @code{p^}. Values can also be
5d161b24 12415represented (and displayed) differently. Hex numbers in C appear as
c906108c 12416@samp{0x1ae}, while in Modula-2 they appear as @samp{1AEH}.
c906108c
SS
12417
12418@cindex working language
12419Language-specific information is built into @value{GDBN} for some languages,
12420allowing you to express operations like the above in your program's
12421native language, and allowing @value{GDBN} to output values in a manner
12422consistent with the syntax of your program's native language. The
12423language you use to build expressions is called the @dfn{working
12424language}.
12425
12426@menu
12427* Setting:: Switching between source languages
12428* Show:: Displaying the language
c906108c 12429* Checks:: Type and range checks
79a6e687
BW
12430* Supported Languages:: Supported languages
12431* Unsupported Languages:: Unsupported languages
c906108c
SS
12432@end menu
12433
6d2ebf8b 12434@node Setting
79a6e687 12435@section Switching Between Source Languages
c906108c
SS
12436
12437There are two ways to control the working language---either have @value{GDBN}
12438set it automatically, or select it manually yourself. You can use the
12439@code{set language} command for either purpose. On startup, @value{GDBN}
12440defaults to setting the language automatically. The working language is
12441used to determine how expressions you type are interpreted, how values
12442are printed, etc.
12443
12444In addition to the working language, every source file that
12445@value{GDBN} knows about has its own working language. For some object
12446file formats, the compiler might indicate which language a particular
12447source file is in. However, most of the time @value{GDBN} infers the
12448language from the name of the file. The language of a source file
b37052ae 12449controls whether C@t{++} names are demangled---this way @code{backtrace} can
c906108c 12450show each frame appropriately for its own language. There is no way to
d4f3574e
SS
12451set the language of a source file from within @value{GDBN}, but you can
12452set the language associated with a filename extension. @xref{Show, ,
79a6e687 12453Displaying the Language}.
c906108c
SS
12454
12455This is most commonly a problem when you use a program, such
5d161b24 12456as @code{cfront} or @code{f2c}, that generates C but is written in
c906108c
SS
12457another language. In that case, make the
12458program use @code{#line} directives in its C output; that way
12459@value{GDBN} will know the correct language of the source code of the original
12460program, and will display that source code, not the generated C code.
12461
12462@menu
12463* Filenames:: Filename extensions and languages.
12464* Manually:: Setting the working language manually
12465* Automatically:: Having @value{GDBN} infer the source language
12466@end menu
12467
6d2ebf8b 12468@node Filenames
79a6e687 12469@subsection List of Filename Extensions and Languages
c906108c
SS
12470
12471If a source file name ends in one of the following extensions, then
12472@value{GDBN} infers that its language is the one indicated.
12473
12474@table @file
e07c999f
PH
12475@item .ada
12476@itemx .ads
12477@itemx .adb
12478@itemx .a
12479Ada source file.
c906108c
SS
12480
12481@item .c
12482C source file
12483
12484@item .C
12485@itemx .cc
12486@itemx .cp
12487@itemx .cpp
12488@itemx .cxx
12489@itemx .c++
b37052ae 12490C@t{++} source file
c906108c 12491
6aecb9c2
JB
12492@item .d
12493D source file
12494
b37303ee
AF
12495@item .m
12496Objective-C source file
12497
c906108c
SS
12498@item .f
12499@itemx .F
12500Fortran source file
12501
c906108c
SS
12502@item .mod
12503Modula-2 source file
c906108c
SS
12504
12505@item .s
12506@itemx .S
12507Assembler source file. This actually behaves almost like C, but
12508@value{GDBN} does not skip over function prologues when stepping.
12509@end table
12510
12511In addition, you may set the language associated with a filename
79a6e687 12512extension. @xref{Show, , Displaying the Language}.
c906108c 12513
6d2ebf8b 12514@node Manually
79a6e687 12515@subsection Setting the Working Language
c906108c
SS
12516
12517If you allow @value{GDBN} to set the language automatically,
12518expressions are interpreted the same way in your debugging session and
12519your program.
12520
12521@kindex set language
12522If you wish, you may set the language manually. To do this, issue the
12523command @samp{set language @var{lang}}, where @var{lang} is the name of
5d161b24 12524a language, such as
c906108c 12525@code{c} or @code{modula-2}.
c906108c
SS
12526For a list of the supported languages, type @samp{set language}.
12527
c906108c
SS
12528Setting the language manually prevents @value{GDBN} from updating the working
12529language automatically. This can lead to confusion if you try
12530to debug a program when the working language is not the same as the
12531source language, when an expression is acceptable to both
12532languages---but means different things. For instance, if the current
12533source file were written in C, and @value{GDBN} was parsing Modula-2, a
12534command such as:
12535
474c8240 12536@smallexample
c906108c 12537print a = b + c
474c8240 12538@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
12539
12540@noindent
12541might not have the effect you intended. In C, this means to add
12542@code{b} and @code{c} and place the result in @code{a}. The result
12543printed would be the value of @code{a}. In Modula-2, this means to compare
12544@code{a} to the result of @code{b+c}, yielding a @code{BOOLEAN} value.
c906108c 12545
6d2ebf8b 12546@node Automatically
79a6e687 12547@subsection Having @value{GDBN} Infer the Source Language
c906108c
SS
12548
12549To have @value{GDBN} set the working language automatically, use
12550@samp{set language local} or @samp{set language auto}. @value{GDBN}
12551then infers the working language. That is, when your program stops in a
12552frame (usually by encountering a breakpoint), @value{GDBN} sets the
12553working language to the language recorded for the function in that
12554frame. If the language for a frame is unknown (that is, if the function
12555or block corresponding to the frame was defined in a source file that
12556does not have a recognized extension), the current working language is
12557not changed, and @value{GDBN} issues a warning.
12558
12559This may not seem necessary for most programs, which are written
12560entirely in one source language. However, program modules and libraries
12561written in one source language can be used by a main program written in
12562a different source language. Using @samp{set language auto} in this
12563case frees you from having to set the working language manually.
12564
6d2ebf8b 12565@node Show
79a6e687 12566@section Displaying the Language
c906108c
SS
12567
12568The following commands help you find out which language is the
12569working language, and also what language source files were written in.
12570
c906108c
SS
12571@table @code
12572@item show language
9c16f35a 12573@kindex show language
c906108c
SS
12574Display the current working language. This is the
12575language you can use with commands such as @code{print} to
12576build and compute expressions that may involve variables in your program.
12577
12578@item info frame
4644b6e3 12579@kindex info frame@r{, show the source language}
5d161b24 12580Display the source language for this frame. This language becomes the
c906108c 12581working language if you use an identifier from this frame.
79a6e687 12582@xref{Frame Info, ,Information about a Frame}, to identify the other
c906108c
SS
12583information listed here.
12584
12585@item info source
4644b6e3 12586@kindex info source@r{, show the source language}
c906108c 12587Display the source language of this source file.
5d161b24 12588@xref{Symbols, ,Examining the Symbol Table}, to identify the other
c906108c
SS
12589information listed here.
12590@end table
12591
12592In unusual circumstances, you may have source files with extensions
12593not in the standard list. You can then set the extension associated
12594with a language explicitly:
12595
c906108c 12596@table @code
09d4efe1 12597@item set extension-language @var{ext} @var{language}
9c16f35a 12598@kindex set extension-language
09d4efe1
EZ
12599Tell @value{GDBN} that source files with extension @var{ext} are to be
12600assumed as written in the source language @var{language}.
c906108c
SS
12601
12602@item info extensions
9c16f35a 12603@kindex info extensions
c906108c
SS
12604List all the filename extensions and the associated languages.
12605@end table
12606
6d2ebf8b 12607@node Checks
79a6e687 12608@section Type and Range Checking
c906108c
SS
12609
12610@quotation
12611@emph{Warning:} In this release, the @value{GDBN} commands for type and range
12612checking are included, but they do not yet have any effect. This
12613section documents the intended facilities.
12614@end quotation
12615@c FIXME remove warning when type/range code added
12616
12617Some languages are designed to guard you against making seemingly common
12618errors through a series of compile- and run-time checks. These include
12619checking the type of arguments to functions and operators, and making
12620sure mathematical overflows are caught at run time. Checks such as
12621these help to ensure a program's correctness once it has been compiled
12622by eliminating type mismatches, and providing active checks for range
12623errors when your program is running.
12624
12625@value{GDBN} can check for conditions like the above if you wish.
9c16f35a
EZ
12626Although @value{GDBN} does not check the statements in your program,
12627it can check expressions entered directly into @value{GDBN} for
12628evaluation via the @code{print} command, for example. As with the
12629working language, @value{GDBN} can also decide whether or not to check
12630automatically based on your program's source language.
79a6e687 12631@xref{Supported Languages, ,Supported Languages}, for the default
9c16f35a 12632settings of supported languages.
c906108c
SS
12633
12634@menu
12635* Type Checking:: An overview of type checking
12636* Range Checking:: An overview of range checking
12637@end menu
12638
12639@cindex type checking
12640@cindex checks, type
6d2ebf8b 12641@node Type Checking
79a6e687 12642@subsection An Overview of Type Checking
c906108c
SS
12643
12644Some languages, such as Modula-2, are strongly typed, meaning that the
12645arguments to operators and functions have to be of the correct type,
12646otherwise an error occurs. These checks prevent type mismatch
12647errors from ever causing any run-time problems. For example,
12648
12649@smallexample
126501 + 2 @result{} 3
12651@exdent but
12652@error{} 1 + 2.3
12653@end smallexample
12654
12655The second example fails because the @code{CARDINAL} 1 is not
12656type-compatible with the @code{REAL} 2.3.
12657
5d161b24
DB
12658For the expressions you use in @value{GDBN} commands, you can tell the
12659@value{GDBN} type checker to skip checking;
12660to treat any mismatches as errors and abandon the expression;
12661or to only issue warnings when type mismatches occur,
c906108c
SS
12662but evaluate the expression anyway. When you choose the last of
12663these, @value{GDBN} evaluates expressions like the second example above, but
12664also issues a warning.
12665
5d161b24
DB
12666Even if you turn type checking off, there may be other reasons
12667related to type that prevent @value{GDBN} from evaluating an expression.
12668For instance, @value{GDBN} does not know how to add an @code{int} and
12669a @code{struct foo}. These particular type errors have nothing to do
12670with the language in use, and usually arise from expressions, such as
c906108c
SS
12671the one described above, which make little sense to evaluate anyway.
12672
12673Each language defines to what degree it is strict about type. For
12674instance, both Modula-2 and C require the arguments to arithmetical
12675operators to be numbers. In C, enumerated types and pointers can be
12676represented as numbers, so that they are valid arguments to mathematical
79a6e687 12677operators. @xref{Supported Languages, ,Supported Languages}, for further
c906108c
SS
12678details on specific languages.
12679
12680@value{GDBN} provides some additional commands for controlling the type checker:
12681
c906108c
SS
12682@kindex set check type
12683@kindex show check type
12684@table @code
12685@item set check type auto
12686Set type checking on or off based on the current working language.
79a6e687 12687@xref{Supported Languages, ,Supported Languages}, for the default settings for
c906108c
SS
12688each language.
12689
12690@item set check type on
12691@itemx set check type off
12692Set type checking on or off, overriding the default setting for the
12693current working language. Issue a warning if the setting does not
12694match the language default. If any type mismatches occur in
d4f3574e 12695evaluating an expression while type checking is on, @value{GDBN} prints a
c906108c
SS
12696message and aborts evaluation of the expression.
12697
12698@item set check type warn
12699Cause the type checker to issue warnings, but to always attempt to
12700evaluate the expression. Evaluating the expression may still
12701be impossible for other reasons. For example, @value{GDBN} cannot add
12702numbers and structures.
12703
12704@item show type
5d161b24 12705Show the current setting of the type checker, and whether or not @value{GDBN}
c906108c
SS
12706is setting it automatically.
12707@end table
12708
12709@cindex range checking
12710@cindex checks, range
6d2ebf8b 12711@node Range Checking
79a6e687 12712@subsection An Overview of Range Checking
c906108c
SS
12713
12714In some languages (such as Modula-2), it is an error to exceed the
12715bounds of a type; this is enforced with run-time checks. Such range
12716checking is meant to ensure program correctness by making sure
12717computations do not overflow, or indices on an array element access do
12718not exceed the bounds of the array.
12719
12720For expressions you use in @value{GDBN} commands, you can tell
12721@value{GDBN} to treat range errors in one of three ways: ignore them,
12722always treat them as errors and abandon the expression, or issue
12723warnings but evaluate the expression anyway.
12724
12725A range error can result from numerical overflow, from exceeding an
12726array index bound, or when you type a constant that is not a member
12727of any type. Some languages, however, do not treat overflows as an
12728error. In many implementations of C, mathematical overflow causes the
12729result to ``wrap around'' to lower values---for example, if @var{m} is
12730the largest integer value, and @var{s} is the smallest, then
12731
474c8240 12732@smallexample
c906108c 12733@var{m} + 1 @result{} @var{s}
474c8240 12734@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
12735
12736This, too, is specific to individual languages, and in some cases
79a6e687
BW
12737specific to individual compilers or machines. @xref{Supported Languages, ,
12738Supported Languages}, for further details on specific languages.
c906108c
SS
12739
12740@value{GDBN} provides some additional commands for controlling the range checker:
12741
c906108c
SS
12742@kindex set check range
12743@kindex show check range
12744@table @code
12745@item set check range auto
12746Set range checking on or off based on the current working language.
79a6e687 12747@xref{Supported Languages, ,Supported Languages}, for the default settings for
c906108c
SS
12748each language.
12749
12750@item set check range on
12751@itemx set check range off
12752Set range checking on or off, overriding the default setting for the
12753current working language. A warning is issued if the setting does not
c3f6f71d
JM
12754match the language default. If a range error occurs and range checking is on,
12755then a message is printed and evaluation of the expression is aborted.
c906108c
SS
12756
12757@item set check range warn
12758Output messages when the @value{GDBN} range checker detects a range error,
12759but attempt to evaluate the expression anyway. Evaluating the
12760expression may still be impossible for other reasons, such as accessing
12761memory that the process does not own (a typical example from many Unix
12762systems).
12763
12764@item show range
12765Show the current setting of the range checker, and whether or not it is
12766being set automatically by @value{GDBN}.
12767@end table
c906108c 12768
79a6e687
BW
12769@node Supported Languages
12770@section Supported Languages
c906108c 12771
a766d390
DE
12772@value{GDBN} supports C, C@t{++}, D, Go, Objective-C, Fortran, Java,
12773OpenCL C, Pascal, assembly, Modula-2, and Ada.
cce74817 12774@c This is false ...
c906108c
SS
12775Some @value{GDBN} features may be used in expressions regardless of the
12776language you use: the @value{GDBN} @code{@@} and @code{::} operators,
12777and the @samp{@{type@}addr} construct (@pxref{Expressions,
12778,Expressions}) can be used with the constructs of any supported
12779language.
12780
12781The following sections detail to what degree each source language is
12782supported by @value{GDBN}. These sections are not meant to be language
12783tutorials or references, but serve only as a reference guide to what the
12784@value{GDBN} expression parser accepts, and what input and output
12785formats should look like for different languages. There are many good
12786books written on each of these languages; please look to these for a
12787language reference or tutorial.
12788
c906108c 12789@menu
b37303ee 12790* C:: C and C@t{++}
6aecb9c2 12791* D:: D
a766d390 12792* Go:: Go
b383017d 12793* Objective-C:: Objective-C
f4b8a18d 12794* OpenCL C:: OpenCL C
09d4efe1 12795* Fortran:: Fortran
9c16f35a 12796* Pascal:: Pascal
b37303ee 12797* Modula-2:: Modula-2
e07c999f 12798* Ada:: Ada
c906108c
SS
12799@end menu
12800
6d2ebf8b 12801@node C
b37052ae 12802@subsection C and C@t{++}
7a292a7a 12803
b37052ae
EZ
12804@cindex C and C@t{++}
12805@cindex expressions in C or C@t{++}
c906108c 12806
b37052ae 12807Since C and C@t{++} are so closely related, many features of @value{GDBN} apply
c906108c
SS
12808to both languages. Whenever this is the case, we discuss those languages
12809together.
12810
41afff9a
EZ
12811@cindex C@t{++}
12812@cindex @code{g++}, @sc{gnu} C@t{++} compiler
b37052ae
EZ
12813@cindex @sc{gnu} C@t{++}
12814The C@t{++} debugging facilities are jointly implemented by the C@t{++}
12815compiler and @value{GDBN}. Therefore, to debug your C@t{++} code
12816effectively, you must compile your C@t{++} programs with a supported
12817C@t{++} compiler, such as @sc{gnu} @code{g++}, or the HP ANSI C@t{++}
c906108c
SS
12818compiler (@code{aCC}).
12819
c906108c 12820@menu
b37052ae
EZ
12821* C Operators:: C and C@t{++} operators
12822* C Constants:: C and C@t{++} constants
79a6e687 12823* C Plus Plus Expressions:: C@t{++} expressions
b37052ae
EZ
12824* C Defaults:: Default settings for C and C@t{++}
12825* C Checks:: C and C@t{++} type and range checks
c906108c 12826* Debugging C:: @value{GDBN} and C
79a6e687 12827* Debugging C Plus Plus:: @value{GDBN} features for C@t{++}
febe4383 12828* Decimal Floating Point:: Numbers in Decimal Floating Point format
c906108c 12829@end menu
c906108c 12830
6d2ebf8b 12831@node C Operators
79a6e687 12832@subsubsection C and C@t{++} Operators
7a292a7a 12833
b37052ae 12834@cindex C and C@t{++} operators
c906108c
SS
12835
12836Operators must be defined on values of specific types. For instance,
12837@code{+} is defined on numbers, but not on structures. Operators are
5d161b24 12838often defined on groups of types.
c906108c 12839
b37052ae 12840For the purposes of C and C@t{++}, the following definitions hold:
c906108c
SS
12841
12842@itemize @bullet
53a5351d 12843
c906108c 12844@item
c906108c 12845@emph{Integral types} include @code{int} with any of its storage-class
b37052ae 12846specifiers; @code{char}; @code{enum}; and, for C@t{++}, @code{bool}.
c906108c
SS
12847
12848@item
d4f3574e
SS
12849@emph{Floating-point types} include @code{float}, @code{double}, and
12850@code{long double} (if supported by the target platform).
c906108c
SS
12851
12852@item
53a5351d 12853@emph{Pointer types} include all types defined as @code{(@var{type} *)}.
c906108c
SS
12854
12855@item
12856@emph{Scalar types} include all of the above.
53a5351d 12857
c906108c
SS
12858@end itemize
12859
12860@noindent
12861The following operators are supported. They are listed here
12862in order of increasing precedence:
12863
12864@table @code
12865@item ,
12866The comma or sequencing operator. Expressions in a comma-separated list
12867are evaluated from left to right, with the result of the entire
12868expression being the last expression evaluated.
12869
12870@item =
12871Assignment. The value of an assignment expression is the value
12872assigned. Defined on scalar types.
12873
12874@item @var{op}=
12875Used in an expression of the form @w{@code{@var{a} @var{op}= @var{b}}},
12876and translated to @w{@code{@var{a} = @var{a op b}}}.
d4f3574e 12877@w{@code{@var{op}=}} and @code{=} have the same precedence.
c906108c
SS
12878@var{op} is any one of the operators @code{|}, @code{^}, @code{&},
12879@code{<<}, @code{>>}, @code{+}, @code{-}, @code{*}, @code{/}, @code{%}.
12880
12881@item ?:
12882The ternary operator. @code{@var{a} ? @var{b} : @var{c}} can be thought
12883of as: if @var{a} then @var{b} else @var{c}. @var{a} should be of an
12884integral type.
12885
12886@item ||
12887Logical @sc{or}. Defined on integral types.
12888
12889@item &&
12890Logical @sc{and}. Defined on integral types.
12891
12892@item |
12893Bitwise @sc{or}. Defined on integral types.
12894
12895@item ^
12896Bitwise exclusive-@sc{or}. Defined on integral types.
12897
12898@item &
12899Bitwise @sc{and}. Defined on integral types.
12900
12901@item ==@r{, }!=
12902Equality and inequality. Defined on scalar types. The value of these
12903expressions is 0 for false and non-zero for true.
12904
12905@item <@r{, }>@r{, }<=@r{, }>=
12906Less than, greater than, less than or equal, greater than or equal.
12907Defined on scalar types. The value of these expressions is 0 for false
12908and non-zero for true.
12909
12910@item <<@r{, }>>
12911left shift, and right shift. Defined on integral types.
12912
12913@item @@
12914The @value{GDBN} ``artificial array'' operator (@pxref{Expressions, ,Expressions}).
12915
12916@item +@r{, }-
12917Addition and subtraction. Defined on integral types, floating-point types and
12918pointer types.
12919
12920@item *@r{, }/@r{, }%
12921Multiplication, division, and modulus. Multiplication and division are
12922defined on integral and floating-point types. Modulus is defined on
12923integral types.
12924
12925@item ++@r{, }--
12926Increment and decrement. When appearing before a variable, the
12927operation is performed before the variable is used in an expression;
12928when appearing after it, the variable's value is used before the
12929operation takes place.
12930
12931@item *
12932Pointer dereferencing. Defined on pointer types. Same precedence as
12933@code{++}.
12934
12935@item &
12936Address operator. Defined on variables. Same precedence as @code{++}.
12937
b37052ae
EZ
12938For debugging C@t{++}, @value{GDBN} implements a use of @samp{&} beyond what is
12939allowed in the C@t{++} language itself: you can use @samp{&(&@var{ref})}
b17828ca 12940to examine the address
b37052ae 12941where a C@t{++} reference variable (declared with @samp{&@var{ref}}) is
c906108c 12942stored.
c906108c
SS
12943
12944@item -
12945Negative. Defined on integral and floating-point types. Same
12946precedence as @code{++}.
12947
12948@item !
12949Logical negation. Defined on integral types. Same precedence as
12950@code{++}.
12951
12952@item ~
12953Bitwise complement operator. Defined on integral types. Same precedence as
12954@code{++}.
12955
12956
12957@item .@r{, }->
12958Structure member, and pointer-to-structure member. For convenience,
12959@value{GDBN} regards the two as equivalent, choosing whether to dereference a
12960pointer based on the stored type information.
12961Defined on @code{struct} and @code{union} data.
12962
c906108c
SS
12963@item .*@r{, }->*
12964Dereferences of pointers to members.
c906108c
SS
12965
12966@item []
12967Array indexing. @code{@var{a}[@var{i}]} is defined as
12968@code{*(@var{a}+@var{i})}. Same precedence as @code{->}.
12969
12970@item ()
12971Function parameter list. Same precedence as @code{->}.
12972
c906108c 12973@item ::
b37052ae 12974C@t{++} scope resolution operator. Defined on @code{struct}, @code{union},
7a292a7a 12975and @code{class} types.
c906108c
SS
12976
12977@item ::
7a292a7a
SS
12978Doubled colons also represent the @value{GDBN} scope operator
12979(@pxref{Expressions, ,Expressions}). Same precedence as @code{::},
12980above.
c906108c
SS
12981@end table
12982
c906108c
SS
12983If an operator is redefined in the user code, @value{GDBN} usually
12984attempts to invoke the redefined version instead of using the operator's
12985predefined meaning.
c906108c 12986
6d2ebf8b 12987@node C Constants
79a6e687 12988@subsubsection C and C@t{++} Constants
c906108c 12989
b37052ae 12990@cindex C and C@t{++} constants
c906108c 12991
b37052ae 12992@value{GDBN} allows you to express the constants of C and C@t{++} in the
c906108c 12993following ways:
c906108c
SS
12994
12995@itemize @bullet
12996@item
12997Integer constants are a sequence of digits. Octal constants are
6ca652b0
EZ
12998specified by a leading @samp{0} (i.e.@: zero), and hexadecimal constants
12999by a leading @samp{0x} or @samp{0X}. Constants may also end with a letter
c906108c
SS
13000@samp{l}, specifying that the constant should be treated as a
13001@code{long} value.
13002
13003@item
13004Floating point constants are a sequence of digits, followed by a decimal
13005point, followed by a sequence of digits, and optionally followed by an
13006exponent. An exponent is of the form:
13007@samp{@w{e@r{[[}+@r{]|}-@r{]}@var{nnn}}}, where @var{nnn} is another
13008sequence of digits. The @samp{+} is optional for positive exponents.
d4f3574e
SS
13009A floating-point constant may also end with a letter @samp{f} or
13010@samp{F}, specifying that the constant should be treated as being of
13011the @code{float} (as opposed to the default @code{double}) type; or with
13012a letter @samp{l} or @samp{L}, which specifies a @code{long double}
13013constant.
c906108c
SS
13014
13015@item
13016Enumerated constants consist of enumerated identifiers, or their
13017integral equivalents.
13018
13019@item
13020Character constants are a single character surrounded by single quotes
13021(@code{'}), or a number---the ordinal value of the corresponding character
d4f3574e 13022(usually its @sc{ascii} value). Within quotes, the single character may
c906108c
SS
13023be represented by a letter or by @dfn{escape sequences}, which are of
13024the form @samp{\@var{nnn}}, where @var{nnn} is the octal representation
13025of the character's ordinal value; or of the form @samp{\@var{x}}, where
13026@samp{@var{x}} is a predefined special character---for example,
13027@samp{\n} for newline.
13028
e0f8f636
TT
13029Wide character constants can be written by prefixing a character
13030constant with @samp{L}, as in C. For example, @samp{L'x'} is the wide
13031form of @samp{x}. The target wide character set is used when
13032computing the value of this constant (@pxref{Character Sets}).
13033
c906108c 13034@item
96a2c332
SS
13035String constants are a sequence of character constants surrounded by
13036double quotes (@code{"}). Any valid character constant (as described
13037above) may appear. Double quotes within the string must be preceded by
13038a backslash, so for instance @samp{"a\"b'c"} is a string of five
13039characters.
c906108c 13040
e0f8f636
TT
13041Wide string constants can be written by prefixing a string constant
13042with @samp{L}, as in C. The target wide character set is used when
13043computing the value of this constant (@pxref{Character Sets}).
13044
c906108c
SS
13045@item
13046Pointer constants are an integral value. You can also write pointers
13047to constants using the C operator @samp{&}.
13048
13049@item
13050Array constants are comma-separated lists surrounded by braces @samp{@{}
13051and @samp{@}}; for example, @samp{@{1,2,3@}} is a three-element array of
13052integers, @samp{@{@{1,2@}, @{3,4@}, @{5,6@}@}} is a three-by-two array,
13053and @samp{@{&"hi", &"there", &"fred"@}} is a three-element array of pointers.
13054@end itemize
13055
79a6e687
BW
13056@node C Plus Plus Expressions
13057@subsubsection C@t{++} Expressions
b37052ae
EZ
13058
13059@cindex expressions in C@t{++}
13060@value{GDBN} expression handling can interpret most C@t{++} expressions.
13061
0179ffac
DC
13062@cindex debugging C@t{++} programs
13063@cindex C@t{++} compilers
13064@cindex debug formats and C@t{++}
13065@cindex @value{NGCC} and C@t{++}
c906108c 13066@quotation
e0f8f636
TT
13067@emph{Warning:} @value{GDBN} can only debug C@t{++} code if you use
13068the proper compiler and the proper debug format. Currently,
13069@value{GDBN} works best when debugging C@t{++} code that is compiled
13070with the most recent version of @value{NGCC} possible. The DWARF
13071debugging format is preferred; @value{NGCC} defaults to this on most
13072popular platforms. Other compilers and/or debug formats are likely to
13073work badly or not at all when using @value{GDBN} to debug C@t{++}
13074code. @xref{Compilation}.
c906108c 13075@end quotation
c906108c
SS
13076
13077@enumerate
13078
13079@cindex member functions
13080@item
13081Member function calls are allowed; you can use expressions like
13082
474c8240 13083@smallexample
c906108c 13084count = aml->GetOriginal(x, y)
474c8240 13085@end smallexample
c906108c 13086
41afff9a 13087@vindex this@r{, inside C@t{++} member functions}
b37052ae 13088@cindex namespace in C@t{++}
c906108c
SS
13089@item
13090While a member function is active (in the selected stack frame), your
13091expressions have the same namespace available as the member function;
13092that is, @value{GDBN} allows implicit references to the class instance
e0f8f636
TT
13093pointer @code{this} following the same rules as C@t{++}. @code{using}
13094declarations in the current scope are also respected by @value{GDBN}.
c906108c 13095
c906108c 13096@cindex call overloaded functions
d4f3574e 13097@cindex overloaded functions, calling
b37052ae 13098@cindex type conversions in C@t{++}
c906108c
SS
13099@item
13100You can call overloaded functions; @value{GDBN} resolves the function
d4f3574e 13101call to the right definition, with some restrictions. @value{GDBN} does not
c906108c
SS
13102perform overload resolution involving user-defined type conversions,
13103calls to constructors, or instantiations of templates that do not exist
13104in the program. It also cannot handle ellipsis argument lists or
13105default arguments.
13106
13107It does perform integral conversions and promotions, floating-point
13108promotions, arithmetic conversions, pointer conversions, conversions of
13109class objects to base classes, and standard conversions such as those of
13110functions or arrays to pointers; it requires an exact match on the
13111number of function arguments.
13112
13113Overload resolution is always performed, unless you have specified
79a6e687
BW
13114@code{set overload-resolution off}. @xref{Debugging C Plus Plus,
13115,@value{GDBN} Features for C@t{++}}.
c906108c 13116
d4f3574e 13117You must specify @code{set overload-resolution off} in order to use an
c906108c
SS
13118explicit function signature to call an overloaded function, as in
13119@smallexample
13120p 'foo(char,int)'('x', 13)
13121@end smallexample
d4f3574e 13122
c906108c 13123The @value{GDBN} command-completion facility can simplify this;
79a6e687 13124see @ref{Completion, ,Command Completion}.
c906108c 13125
c906108c
SS
13126@cindex reference declarations
13127@item
b37052ae
EZ
13128@value{GDBN} understands variables declared as C@t{++} references; you can use
13129them in expressions just as you do in C@t{++} source---they are automatically
c906108c
SS
13130dereferenced.
13131
13132In the parameter list shown when @value{GDBN} displays a frame, the values of
13133reference variables are not displayed (unlike other variables); this
13134avoids clutter, since references are often used for large structures.
13135The @emph{address} of a reference variable is always shown, unless
13136you have specified @samp{set print address off}.
13137
13138@item
b37052ae 13139@value{GDBN} supports the C@t{++} name resolution operator @code{::}---your
c906108c
SS
13140expressions can use it just as expressions in your program do. Since
13141one scope may be defined in another, you can use @code{::} repeatedly if
13142necessary, for example in an expression like
13143@samp{@var{scope1}::@var{scope2}::@var{name}}. @value{GDBN} also allows
b37052ae 13144resolving name scope by reference to source files, in both C and C@t{++}
79a6e687 13145debugging (@pxref{Variables, ,Program Variables}).
c906108c 13146
e0f8f636
TT
13147@item
13148@value{GDBN} performs argument-dependent lookup, following the C@t{++}
13149specification.
13150@end enumerate
c906108c 13151
6d2ebf8b 13152@node C Defaults
79a6e687 13153@subsubsection C and C@t{++} Defaults
7a292a7a 13154
b37052ae 13155@cindex C and C@t{++} defaults
c906108c 13156
c906108c
SS
13157If you allow @value{GDBN} to set type and range checking automatically, they
13158both default to @code{off} whenever the working language changes to
b37052ae 13159C or C@t{++}. This happens regardless of whether you or @value{GDBN}
c906108c 13160selects the working language.
c906108c
SS
13161
13162If you allow @value{GDBN} to set the language automatically, it
13163recognizes source files whose names end with @file{.c}, @file{.C}, or
13164@file{.cc}, etc, and when @value{GDBN} enters code compiled from one of
b37052ae 13165these files, it sets the working language to C or C@t{++}.
79a6e687 13166@xref{Automatically, ,Having @value{GDBN} Infer the Source Language},
c906108c
SS
13167for further details.
13168
c906108c
SS
13169@c Type checking is (a) primarily motivated by Modula-2, and (b)
13170@c unimplemented. If (b) changes, it might make sense to let this node
13171@c appear even if Mod-2 does not, but meanwhile ignore it. roland 16jul93.
7a292a7a 13172
6d2ebf8b 13173@node C Checks
79a6e687 13174@subsubsection C and C@t{++} Type and Range Checks
7a292a7a 13175
b37052ae 13176@cindex C and C@t{++} checks
c906108c 13177
b37052ae 13178By default, when @value{GDBN} parses C or C@t{++} expressions, type checking
c906108c
SS
13179is not used. However, if you turn type checking on, @value{GDBN}
13180considers two variables type equivalent if:
13181
13182@itemize @bullet
13183@item
13184The two variables are structured and have the same structure, union, or
13185enumerated tag.
13186
13187@item
13188The two variables have the same type name, or types that have been
13189declared equivalent through @code{typedef}.
13190
13191@ignore
13192@c leaving this out because neither J Gilmore nor R Pesch understand it.
13193@c FIXME--beers?
13194@item
13195The two @code{struct}, @code{union}, or @code{enum} variables are
13196declared in the same declaration. (Note: this may not be true for all C
13197compilers.)
13198@end ignore
13199@end itemize
13200
13201Range checking, if turned on, is done on mathematical operations. Array
13202indices are not checked, since they are often used to index a pointer
13203that is not itself an array.
c906108c 13204
6d2ebf8b 13205@node Debugging C
c906108c 13206@subsubsection @value{GDBN} and C
c906108c
SS
13207
13208The @code{set print union} and @code{show print union} commands apply to
13209the @code{union} type. When set to @samp{on}, any @code{union} that is
7a292a7a
SS
13210inside a @code{struct} or @code{class} is also printed. Otherwise, it
13211appears as @samp{@{...@}}.
c906108c
SS
13212
13213The @code{@@} operator aids in the debugging of dynamic arrays, formed
13214with pointers and a memory allocation function. @xref{Expressions,
13215,Expressions}.
13216
79a6e687
BW
13217@node Debugging C Plus Plus
13218@subsubsection @value{GDBN} Features for C@t{++}
c906108c 13219
b37052ae 13220@cindex commands for C@t{++}
7a292a7a 13221
b37052ae
EZ
13222Some @value{GDBN} commands are particularly useful with C@t{++}, and some are
13223designed specifically for use with C@t{++}. Here is a summary:
c906108c
SS
13224
13225@table @code
13226@cindex break in overloaded functions
13227@item @r{breakpoint menus}
13228When you want a breakpoint in a function whose name is overloaded,
6ba66d6a
JB
13229@value{GDBN} has the capability to display a menu of possible breakpoint
13230locations to help you specify which function definition you want.
13231@xref{Ambiguous Expressions,,Ambiguous Expressions}.
c906108c 13232
b37052ae 13233@cindex overloading in C@t{++}
c906108c
SS
13234@item rbreak @var{regex}
13235Setting breakpoints using regular expressions is helpful for setting
13236breakpoints on overloaded functions that are not members of any special
13237classes.
79a6e687 13238@xref{Set Breaks, ,Setting Breakpoints}.
c906108c 13239
b37052ae 13240@cindex C@t{++} exception handling
c906108c
SS
13241@item catch throw
13242@itemx catch catch
b37052ae 13243Debug C@t{++} exception handling using these commands. @xref{Set
79a6e687 13244Catchpoints, , Setting Catchpoints}.
c906108c
SS
13245
13246@cindex inheritance
13247@item ptype @var{typename}
13248Print inheritance relationships as well as other information for type
13249@var{typename}.
13250@xref{Symbols, ,Examining the Symbol Table}.
13251
c4aeac85
TT
13252@item info vtbl @var{expression}.
13253The @code{info vtbl} command can be used to display the virtual
13254method tables of the object computed by @var{expression}. This shows
13255one entry per virtual table; there may be multiple virtual tables when
13256multiple inheritance is in use.
13257
b37052ae 13258@cindex C@t{++} symbol display
c906108c
SS
13259@item set print demangle
13260@itemx show print demangle
13261@itemx set print asm-demangle
13262@itemx show print asm-demangle
b37052ae
EZ
13263Control whether C@t{++} symbols display in their source form, both when
13264displaying code as C@t{++} source and when displaying disassemblies.
79a6e687 13265@xref{Print Settings, ,Print Settings}.
c906108c
SS
13266
13267@item set print object
13268@itemx show print object
13269Choose whether to print derived (actual) or declared types of objects.
79a6e687 13270@xref{Print Settings, ,Print Settings}.
c906108c
SS
13271
13272@item set print vtbl
13273@itemx show print vtbl
13274Control the format for printing virtual function tables.
79a6e687 13275@xref{Print Settings, ,Print Settings}.
c906108c 13276(The @code{vtbl} commands do not work on programs compiled with the HP
b37052ae 13277ANSI C@t{++} compiler (@code{aCC}).)
c906108c
SS
13278
13279@kindex set overload-resolution
d4f3574e 13280@cindex overloaded functions, overload resolution
c906108c 13281@item set overload-resolution on
b37052ae 13282Enable overload resolution for C@t{++} expression evaluation. The default
c906108c
SS
13283is on. For overloaded functions, @value{GDBN} evaluates the arguments
13284and searches for a function whose signature matches the argument types,
79a6e687
BW
13285using the standard C@t{++} conversion rules (see @ref{C Plus Plus
13286Expressions, ,C@t{++} Expressions}, for details).
13287If it cannot find a match, it emits a message.
c906108c
SS
13288
13289@item set overload-resolution off
b37052ae 13290Disable overload resolution for C@t{++} expression evaluation. For
c906108c
SS
13291overloaded functions that are not class member functions, @value{GDBN}
13292chooses the first function of the specified name that it finds in the
13293symbol table, whether or not its arguments are of the correct type. For
13294overloaded functions that are class member functions, @value{GDBN}
13295searches for a function whose signature @emph{exactly} matches the
13296argument types.
c906108c 13297
9c16f35a
EZ
13298@kindex show overload-resolution
13299@item show overload-resolution
13300Show the current setting of overload resolution.
13301
c906108c
SS
13302@item @r{Overloaded symbol names}
13303You can specify a particular definition of an overloaded symbol, using
b37052ae 13304the same notation that is used to declare such symbols in C@t{++}: type
c906108c
SS
13305@code{@var{symbol}(@var{types})} rather than just @var{symbol}. You can
13306also use the @value{GDBN} command-line word completion facilities to list the
13307available choices, or to finish the type list for you.
79a6e687 13308@xref{Completion,, Command Completion}, for details on how to do this.
c906108c 13309@end table
c906108c 13310
febe4383
TJB
13311@node Decimal Floating Point
13312@subsubsection Decimal Floating Point format
13313@cindex decimal floating point format
13314
13315@value{GDBN} can examine, set and perform computations with numbers in
13316decimal floating point format, which in the C language correspond to the
13317@code{_Decimal32}, @code{_Decimal64} and @code{_Decimal128} types as
13318specified by the extension to support decimal floating-point arithmetic.
13319
13320There are two encodings in use, depending on the architecture: BID (Binary
13321Integer Decimal) for x86 and x86-64, and DPD (Densely Packed Decimal) for
99e008fe 13322PowerPC. @value{GDBN} will use the appropriate encoding for the configured
febe4383
TJB
13323target.
13324
13325Because of a limitation in @file{libdecnumber}, the library used by @value{GDBN}
13326to manipulate decimal floating point numbers, it is not possible to convert
13327(using a cast, for example) integers wider than 32-bit to decimal float.
13328
13329In addition, in order to imitate @value{GDBN}'s behaviour with binary floating
13330point computations, error checking in decimal float operations ignores
13331underflow, overflow and divide by zero exceptions.
13332
4acd40f3 13333In the PowerPC architecture, @value{GDBN} provides a set of pseudo-registers
99e008fe
EZ
13334to inspect @code{_Decimal128} values stored in floating point registers.
13335See @ref{PowerPC,,PowerPC} for more details.
4acd40f3 13336
6aecb9c2
JB
13337@node D
13338@subsection D
13339
13340@cindex D
13341@value{GDBN} can be used to debug programs written in D and compiled with
13342GDC, LDC or DMD compilers. Currently @value{GDBN} supports only one D
13343specific feature --- dynamic arrays.
13344
a766d390
DE
13345@node Go
13346@subsection Go
13347
13348@cindex Go (programming language)
13349@value{GDBN} can be used to debug programs written in Go and compiled with
13350@file{gccgo} or @file{6g} compilers.
13351
13352Here is a summary of the Go-specific features and restrictions:
13353
13354@table @code
13355@cindex current Go package
13356@item The current Go package
13357The name of the current package does not need to be specified when
13358specifying global variables and functions.
13359
13360For example, given the program:
13361
13362@example
13363package main
13364var myglob = "Shall we?"
13365func main () @{
13366 // ...
13367@}
13368@end example
13369
13370When stopped inside @code{main} either of these work:
13371
13372@example
13373(gdb) p myglob
13374(gdb) p main.myglob
13375@end example
13376
13377@cindex builtin Go types
13378@item Builtin Go types
13379The @code{string} type is recognized by @value{GDBN} and is printed
13380as a string.
13381
13382@cindex builtin Go functions
13383@item Builtin Go functions
13384The @value{GDBN} expression parser recognizes the @code{unsafe.Sizeof}
13385function and handles it internally.
a766d390
DE
13386
13387@cindex restrictions on Go expressions
13388@item Restrictions on Go expressions
13389All Go operators are supported except @code{&^}.
13390The Go @code{_} ``blank identifier'' is not supported.
13391Automatic dereferencing of pointers is not supported.
50f042b9 13392@end table
a766d390 13393
b37303ee
AF
13394@node Objective-C
13395@subsection Objective-C
13396
13397@cindex Objective-C
13398This section provides information about some commands and command
721c2651
EZ
13399options that are useful for debugging Objective-C code. See also
13400@ref{Symbols, info classes}, and @ref{Symbols, info selectors}, for a
13401few more commands specific to Objective-C support.
b37303ee
AF
13402
13403@menu
b383017d
RM
13404* Method Names in Commands::
13405* The Print Command with Objective-C::
b37303ee
AF
13406@end menu
13407
c8f4133a 13408@node Method Names in Commands
b37303ee
AF
13409@subsubsection Method Names in Commands
13410
13411The following commands have been extended to accept Objective-C method
13412names as line specifications:
13413
13414@kindex clear@r{, and Objective-C}
13415@kindex break@r{, and Objective-C}
13416@kindex info line@r{, and Objective-C}
13417@kindex jump@r{, and Objective-C}
13418@kindex list@r{, and Objective-C}
13419@itemize
13420@item @code{clear}
13421@item @code{break}
13422@item @code{info line}
13423@item @code{jump}
13424@item @code{list}
13425@end itemize
13426
13427A fully qualified Objective-C method name is specified as
13428
13429@smallexample
13430-[@var{Class} @var{methodName}]
13431@end smallexample
13432
c552b3bb
JM
13433where the minus sign is used to indicate an instance method and a
13434plus sign (not shown) is used to indicate a class method. The class
13435name @var{Class} and method name @var{methodName} are enclosed in
13436brackets, similar to the way messages are specified in Objective-C
13437source code. For example, to set a breakpoint at the @code{create}
13438instance method of class @code{Fruit} in the program currently being
13439debugged, enter:
b37303ee
AF
13440
13441@smallexample
13442break -[Fruit create]
13443@end smallexample
13444
13445To list ten program lines around the @code{initialize} class method,
13446enter:
13447
13448@smallexample
13449list +[NSText initialize]
13450@end smallexample
13451
c552b3bb
JM
13452In the current version of @value{GDBN}, the plus or minus sign is
13453required. In future versions of @value{GDBN}, the plus or minus
13454sign will be optional, but you can use it to narrow the search. It
13455is also possible to specify just a method name:
b37303ee
AF
13456
13457@smallexample
13458break create
13459@end smallexample
13460
13461You must specify the complete method name, including any colons. If
13462your program's source files contain more than one @code{create} method,
13463you'll be presented with a numbered list of classes that implement that
13464method. Indicate your choice by number, or type @samp{0} to exit if
13465none apply.
13466
13467As another example, to clear a breakpoint established at the
13468@code{makeKeyAndOrderFront:} method of the @code{NSWindow} class, enter:
13469
13470@smallexample
13471clear -[NSWindow makeKeyAndOrderFront:]
13472@end smallexample
13473
13474@node The Print Command with Objective-C
13475@subsubsection The Print Command With Objective-C
721c2651 13476@cindex Objective-C, print objects
c552b3bb
JM
13477@kindex print-object
13478@kindex po @r{(@code{print-object})}
b37303ee 13479
c552b3bb 13480The print command has also been extended to accept methods. For example:
b37303ee
AF
13481
13482@smallexample
c552b3bb 13483print -[@var{object} hash]
b37303ee
AF
13484@end smallexample
13485
13486@cindex print an Objective-C object description
c552b3bb
JM
13487@cindex @code{_NSPrintForDebugger}, and printing Objective-C objects
13488@noindent
13489will tell @value{GDBN} to send the @code{hash} message to @var{object}
13490and print the result. Also, an additional command has been added,
13491@code{print-object} or @code{po} for short, which is meant to print
13492the description of an object. However, this command may only work
13493with certain Objective-C libraries that have a particular hook
13494function, @code{_NSPrintForDebugger}, defined.
b37303ee 13495
f4b8a18d
KW
13496@node OpenCL C
13497@subsection OpenCL C
13498
13499@cindex OpenCL C
13500This section provides information about @value{GDBN}s OpenCL C support.
13501
13502@menu
13503* OpenCL C Datatypes::
13504* OpenCL C Expressions::
13505* OpenCL C Operators::
13506@end menu
13507
13508@node OpenCL C Datatypes
13509@subsubsection OpenCL C Datatypes
13510
13511@cindex OpenCL C Datatypes
13512@value{GDBN} supports the builtin scalar and vector datatypes specified
13513by OpenCL 1.1. In addition the half- and double-precision floating point
13514data types of the @code{cl_khr_fp16} and @code{cl_khr_fp64} OpenCL
13515extensions are also known to @value{GDBN}.
13516
13517@node OpenCL C Expressions
13518@subsubsection OpenCL C Expressions
13519
13520@cindex OpenCL C Expressions
13521@value{GDBN} supports accesses to vector components including the access as
13522lvalue where possible. Since OpenCL C is based on C99 most C expressions
13523supported by @value{GDBN} can be used as well.
13524
13525@node OpenCL C Operators
13526@subsubsection OpenCL C Operators
13527
13528@cindex OpenCL C Operators
13529@value{GDBN} supports the operators specified by OpenCL 1.1 for scalar and
13530vector data types.
13531
09d4efe1
EZ
13532@node Fortran
13533@subsection Fortran
13534@cindex Fortran-specific support in @value{GDBN}
13535
814e32d7
WZ
13536@value{GDBN} can be used to debug programs written in Fortran, but it
13537currently supports only the features of Fortran 77 language.
13538
13539@cindex trailing underscore, in Fortran symbols
13540Some Fortran compilers (@sc{gnu} Fortran 77 and Fortran 95 compilers
13541among them) append an underscore to the names of variables and
13542functions. When you debug programs compiled by those compilers, you
13543will need to refer to variables and functions with a trailing
13544underscore.
13545
13546@menu
13547* Fortran Operators:: Fortran operators and expressions
13548* Fortran Defaults:: Default settings for Fortran
79a6e687 13549* Special Fortran Commands:: Special @value{GDBN} commands for Fortran
814e32d7
WZ
13550@end menu
13551
13552@node Fortran Operators
79a6e687 13553@subsubsection Fortran Operators and Expressions
814e32d7
WZ
13554
13555@cindex Fortran operators and expressions
13556
13557Operators must be defined on values of specific types. For instance,
13558@code{+} is defined on numbers, but not on characters or other non-
ff2587ec 13559arithmetic types. Operators are often defined on groups of types.
814e32d7
WZ
13560
13561@table @code
13562@item **
99e008fe 13563The exponentiation operator. It raises the first operand to the power
814e32d7
WZ
13564of the second one.
13565
13566@item :
13567The range operator. Normally used in the form of array(low:high) to
13568represent a section of array.
68837c9d
MD
13569
13570@item %
13571The access component operator. Normally used to access elements in derived
13572types. Also suitable for unions. As unions aren't part of regular Fortran,
13573this can only happen when accessing a register that uses a gdbarch-defined
13574union type.
814e32d7
WZ
13575@end table
13576
13577@node Fortran Defaults
13578@subsubsection Fortran Defaults
13579
13580@cindex Fortran Defaults
13581
13582Fortran symbols are usually case-insensitive, so @value{GDBN} by
13583default uses case-insensitive matches for Fortran symbols. You can
13584change that with the @samp{set case-insensitive} command, see
13585@ref{Symbols}, for the details.
13586
79a6e687
BW
13587@node Special Fortran Commands
13588@subsubsection Special Fortran Commands
814e32d7
WZ
13589
13590@cindex Special Fortran commands
13591
db2e3e2e
BW
13592@value{GDBN} has some commands to support Fortran-specific features,
13593such as displaying common blocks.
814e32d7 13594
09d4efe1
EZ
13595@table @code
13596@cindex @code{COMMON} blocks, Fortran
13597@kindex info common
13598@item info common @r{[}@var{common-name}@r{]}
13599This command prints the values contained in the Fortran @code{COMMON}
13600block whose name is @var{common-name}. With no argument, the names of
d52fb0e9 13601all @code{COMMON} blocks visible at the current program location are
09d4efe1
EZ
13602printed.
13603@end table
13604
9c16f35a
EZ
13605@node Pascal
13606@subsection Pascal
13607
13608@cindex Pascal support in @value{GDBN}, limitations
13609Debugging Pascal programs which use sets, subranges, file variables, or
13610nested functions does not currently work. @value{GDBN} does not support
13611entering expressions, printing values, or similar features using Pascal
13612syntax.
13613
13614The Pascal-specific command @code{set print pascal_static-members}
13615controls whether static members of Pascal objects are displayed.
13616@xref{Print Settings, pascal_static-members}.
13617
09d4efe1 13618@node Modula-2
c906108c 13619@subsection Modula-2
7a292a7a 13620
d4f3574e 13621@cindex Modula-2, @value{GDBN} support
c906108c
SS
13622
13623The extensions made to @value{GDBN} to support Modula-2 only support
13624output from the @sc{gnu} Modula-2 compiler (which is currently being
13625developed). Other Modula-2 compilers are not currently supported, and
13626attempting to debug executables produced by them is most likely
13627to give an error as @value{GDBN} reads in the executable's symbol
13628table.
13629
13630@cindex expressions in Modula-2
13631@menu
13632* M2 Operators:: Built-in operators
13633* Built-In Func/Proc:: Built-in functions and procedures
13634* M2 Constants:: Modula-2 constants
72019c9c 13635* M2 Types:: Modula-2 types
c906108c
SS
13636* M2 Defaults:: Default settings for Modula-2
13637* Deviations:: Deviations from standard Modula-2
13638* M2 Checks:: Modula-2 type and range checks
13639* M2 Scope:: The scope operators @code{::} and @code{.}
13640* GDB/M2:: @value{GDBN} and Modula-2
13641@end menu
13642
6d2ebf8b 13643@node M2 Operators
c906108c
SS
13644@subsubsection Operators
13645@cindex Modula-2 operators
13646
13647Operators must be defined on values of specific types. For instance,
13648@code{+} is defined on numbers, but not on structures. Operators are
13649often defined on groups of types. For the purposes of Modula-2, the
13650following definitions hold:
13651
13652@itemize @bullet
13653
13654@item
13655@emph{Integral types} consist of @code{INTEGER}, @code{CARDINAL}, and
13656their subranges.
13657
13658@item
13659@emph{Character types} consist of @code{CHAR} and its subranges.
13660
13661@item
13662@emph{Floating-point types} consist of @code{REAL}.
13663
13664@item
13665@emph{Pointer types} consist of anything declared as @code{POINTER TO
13666@var{type}}.
13667
13668@item
13669@emph{Scalar types} consist of all of the above.
13670
13671@item
13672@emph{Set types} consist of @code{SET} and @code{BITSET} types.
13673
13674@item
13675@emph{Boolean types} consist of @code{BOOLEAN}.
13676@end itemize
13677
13678@noindent
13679The following operators are supported, and appear in order of
13680increasing precedence:
13681
13682@table @code
13683@item ,
13684Function argument or array index separator.
13685
13686@item :=
13687Assignment. The value of @var{var} @code{:=} @var{value} is
13688@var{value}.
13689
13690@item <@r{, }>
13691Less than, greater than on integral, floating-point, or enumerated
13692types.
13693
13694@item <=@r{, }>=
96a2c332 13695Less than or equal to, greater than or equal to
c906108c
SS
13696on integral, floating-point and enumerated types, or set inclusion on
13697set types. Same precedence as @code{<}.
13698
13699@item =@r{, }<>@r{, }#
13700Equality and two ways of expressing inequality, valid on scalar types.
13701Same precedence as @code{<}. In @value{GDBN} scripts, only @code{<>} is
13702available for inequality, since @code{#} conflicts with the script
13703comment character.
13704
13705@item IN
13706Set membership. Defined on set types and the types of their members.
13707Same precedence as @code{<}.
13708
13709@item OR
13710Boolean disjunction. Defined on boolean types.
13711
13712@item AND@r{, }&
d4f3574e 13713Boolean conjunction. Defined on boolean types.
c906108c
SS
13714
13715@item @@
13716The @value{GDBN} ``artificial array'' operator (@pxref{Expressions, ,Expressions}).
13717
13718@item +@r{, }-
13719Addition and subtraction on integral and floating-point types, or union
13720and difference on set types.
13721
13722@item *
13723Multiplication on integral and floating-point types, or set intersection
13724on set types.
13725
13726@item /
13727Division on floating-point types, or symmetric set difference on set
13728types. Same precedence as @code{*}.
13729
13730@item DIV@r{, }MOD
13731Integer division and remainder. Defined on integral types. Same
13732precedence as @code{*}.
13733
13734@item -
99e008fe 13735Negative. Defined on @code{INTEGER} and @code{REAL} data.
c906108c
SS
13736
13737@item ^
13738Pointer dereferencing. Defined on pointer types.
13739
13740@item NOT
13741Boolean negation. Defined on boolean types. Same precedence as
13742@code{^}.
13743
13744@item .
13745@code{RECORD} field selector. Defined on @code{RECORD} data. Same
13746precedence as @code{^}.
13747
13748@item []
13749Array indexing. Defined on @code{ARRAY} data. Same precedence as @code{^}.
13750
13751@item ()
13752Procedure argument list. Defined on @code{PROCEDURE} objects. Same precedence
13753as @code{^}.
13754
13755@item ::@r{, }.
13756@value{GDBN} and Modula-2 scope operators.
13757@end table
13758
13759@quotation
72019c9c 13760@emph{Warning:} Set expressions and their operations are not yet supported, so @value{GDBN}
c906108c
SS
13761treats the use of the operator @code{IN}, or the use of operators
13762@code{+}, @code{-}, @code{*}, @code{/}, @code{=}, , @code{<>}, @code{#},
13763@code{<=}, and @code{>=} on sets as an error.
13764@end quotation
13765
cb51c4e0 13766
6d2ebf8b 13767@node Built-In Func/Proc
79a6e687 13768@subsubsection Built-in Functions and Procedures
cb51c4e0 13769@cindex Modula-2 built-ins
c906108c
SS
13770
13771Modula-2 also makes available several built-in procedures and functions.
13772In describing these, the following metavariables are used:
13773
13774@table @var
13775
13776@item a
13777represents an @code{ARRAY} variable.
13778
13779@item c
13780represents a @code{CHAR} constant or variable.
13781
13782@item i
13783represents a variable or constant of integral type.
13784
13785@item m
13786represents an identifier that belongs to a set. Generally used in the
13787same function with the metavariable @var{s}. The type of @var{s} should
13788be @code{SET OF @var{mtype}} (where @var{mtype} is the type of @var{m}).
13789
13790@item n
13791represents a variable or constant of integral or floating-point type.
13792
13793@item r
13794represents a variable or constant of floating-point type.
13795
13796@item t
13797represents a type.
13798
13799@item v
13800represents a variable.
13801
13802@item x
13803represents a variable or constant of one of many types. See the
13804explanation of the function for details.
13805@end table
13806
13807All Modula-2 built-in procedures also return a result, described below.
13808
13809@table @code
13810@item ABS(@var{n})
13811Returns the absolute value of @var{n}.
13812
13813@item CAP(@var{c})
13814If @var{c} is a lower case letter, it returns its upper case
c3f6f71d 13815equivalent, otherwise it returns its argument.
c906108c
SS
13816
13817@item CHR(@var{i})
13818Returns the character whose ordinal value is @var{i}.
13819
13820@item DEC(@var{v})
c3f6f71d 13821Decrements the value in the variable @var{v} by one. Returns the new value.
c906108c
SS
13822
13823@item DEC(@var{v},@var{i})
13824Decrements the value in the variable @var{v} by @var{i}. Returns the
13825new value.
13826
13827@item EXCL(@var{m},@var{s})
13828Removes the element @var{m} from the set @var{s}. Returns the new
13829set.
13830
13831@item FLOAT(@var{i})
13832Returns the floating point equivalent of the integer @var{i}.
13833
13834@item HIGH(@var{a})
13835Returns the index of the last member of @var{a}.
13836
13837@item INC(@var{v})
c3f6f71d 13838Increments the value in the variable @var{v} by one. Returns the new value.
c906108c
SS
13839
13840@item INC(@var{v},@var{i})
13841Increments the value in the variable @var{v} by @var{i}. Returns the
13842new value.
13843
13844@item INCL(@var{m},@var{s})
13845Adds the element @var{m} to the set @var{s} if it is not already
13846there. Returns the new set.
13847
13848@item MAX(@var{t})
13849Returns the maximum value of the type @var{t}.
13850
13851@item MIN(@var{t})
13852Returns the minimum value of the type @var{t}.
13853
13854@item ODD(@var{i})
13855Returns boolean TRUE if @var{i} is an odd number.
13856
13857@item ORD(@var{x})
13858Returns the ordinal value of its argument. For example, the ordinal
c3f6f71d
JM
13859value of a character is its @sc{ascii} value (on machines supporting the
13860@sc{ascii} character set). @var{x} must be of an ordered type, which include
c906108c
SS
13861integral, character and enumerated types.
13862
13863@item SIZE(@var{x})
13864Returns the size of its argument. @var{x} can be a variable or a type.
13865
13866@item TRUNC(@var{r})
13867Returns the integral part of @var{r}.
13868
844781a1
GM
13869@item TSIZE(@var{x})
13870Returns the size of its argument. @var{x} can be a variable or a type.
13871
c906108c
SS
13872@item VAL(@var{t},@var{i})
13873Returns the member of the type @var{t} whose ordinal value is @var{i}.
13874@end table
13875
13876@quotation
13877@emph{Warning:} Sets and their operations are not yet supported, so
13878@value{GDBN} treats the use of procedures @code{INCL} and @code{EXCL} as
13879an error.
13880@end quotation
13881
13882@cindex Modula-2 constants
6d2ebf8b 13883@node M2 Constants
c906108c
SS
13884@subsubsection Constants
13885
13886@value{GDBN} allows you to express the constants of Modula-2 in the following
13887ways:
13888
13889@itemize @bullet
13890
13891@item
13892Integer constants are simply a sequence of digits. When used in an
13893expression, a constant is interpreted to be type-compatible with the
13894rest of the expression. Hexadecimal integers are specified by a
13895trailing @samp{H}, and octal integers by a trailing @samp{B}.
13896
13897@item
13898Floating point constants appear as a sequence of digits, followed by a
13899decimal point and another sequence of digits. An optional exponent can
13900then be specified, in the form @samp{E@r{[}+@r{|}-@r{]}@var{nnn}}, where
13901@samp{@r{[}+@r{|}-@r{]}@var{nnn}} is the desired exponent. All of the
13902digits of the floating point constant must be valid decimal (base 10)
13903digits.
13904
13905@item
13906Character constants consist of a single character enclosed by a pair of
13907like quotes, either single (@code{'}) or double (@code{"}). They may
c3f6f71d 13908also be expressed by their ordinal value (their @sc{ascii} value, usually)
c906108c
SS
13909followed by a @samp{C}.
13910
13911@item
13912String constants consist of a sequence of characters enclosed by a
13913pair of like quotes, either single (@code{'}) or double (@code{"}).
13914Escape sequences in the style of C are also allowed. @xref{C
79a6e687 13915Constants, ,C and C@t{++} Constants}, for a brief explanation of escape
c906108c
SS
13916sequences.
13917
13918@item
13919Enumerated constants consist of an enumerated identifier.
13920
13921@item
13922Boolean constants consist of the identifiers @code{TRUE} and
13923@code{FALSE}.
13924
13925@item
13926Pointer constants consist of integral values only.
13927
13928@item
13929Set constants are not yet supported.
13930@end itemize
13931
72019c9c
GM
13932@node M2 Types
13933@subsubsection Modula-2 Types
13934@cindex Modula-2 types
13935
13936Currently @value{GDBN} can print the following data types in Modula-2
13937syntax: array types, record types, set types, pointer types, procedure
13938types, enumerated types, subrange types and base types. You can also
13939print the contents of variables declared using these type.
13940This section gives a number of simple source code examples together with
13941sample @value{GDBN} sessions.
13942
13943The first example contains the following section of code:
13944
13945@smallexample
13946VAR
13947 s: SET OF CHAR ;
13948 r: [20..40] ;
13949@end smallexample
13950
13951@noindent
13952and you can request @value{GDBN} to interrogate the type and value of
13953@code{r} and @code{s}.
13954
13955@smallexample
13956(@value{GDBP}) print s
13957@{'A'..'C', 'Z'@}
13958(@value{GDBP}) ptype s
13959SET OF CHAR
13960(@value{GDBP}) print r
1396121
13962(@value{GDBP}) ptype r
13963[20..40]
13964@end smallexample
13965
13966@noindent
13967Likewise if your source code declares @code{s} as:
13968
13969@smallexample
13970VAR
13971 s: SET ['A'..'Z'] ;
13972@end smallexample
13973
13974@noindent
13975then you may query the type of @code{s} by:
13976
13977@smallexample
13978(@value{GDBP}) ptype s
13979type = SET ['A'..'Z']
13980@end smallexample
13981
13982@noindent
13983Note that at present you cannot interactively manipulate set
13984expressions using the debugger.
13985
13986The following example shows how you might declare an array in Modula-2
13987and how you can interact with @value{GDBN} to print its type and contents:
13988
13989@smallexample
13990VAR
13991 s: ARRAY [-10..10] OF CHAR ;
13992@end smallexample
13993
13994@smallexample
13995(@value{GDBP}) ptype s
13996ARRAY [-10..10] OF CHAR
13997@end smallexample
13998
13999Note that the array handling is not yet complete and although the type
14000is printed correctly, expression handling still assumes that all
14001arrays have a lower bound of zero and not @code{-10} as in the example
844781a1 14002above.
72019c9c
GM
14003
14004Here are some more type related Modula-2 examples:
14005
14006@smallexample
14007TYPE
14008 colour = (blue, red, yellow, green) ;
14009 t = [blue..yellow] ;
14010VAR
14011 s: t ;
14012BEGIN
14013 s := blue ;
14014@end smallexample
14015
14016@noindent
14017The @value{GDBN} interaction shows how you can query the data type
14018and value of a variable.
14019
14020@smallexample
14021(@value{GDBP}) print s
14022$1 = blue
14023(@value{GDBP}) ptype t
14024type = [blue..yellow]
14025@end smallexample
14026
14027@noindent
14028In this example a Modula-2 array is declared and its contents
14029displayed. Observe that the contents are written in the same way as
14030their @code{C} counterparts.
14031
14032@smallexample
14033VAR
14034 s: ARRAY [1..5] OF CARDINAL ;
14035BEGIN
14036 s[1] := 1 ;
14037@end smallexample
14038
14039@smallexample
14040(@value{GDBP}) print s
14041$1 = @{1, 0, 0, 0, 0@}
14042(@value{GDBP}) ptype s
14043type = ARRAY [1..5] OF CARDINAL
14044@end smallexample
14045
14046The Modula-2 language interface to @value{GDBN} also understands
14047pointer types as shown in this example:
14048
14049@smallexample
14050VAR
14051 s: POINTER TO ARRAY [1..5] OF CARDINAL ;
14052BEGIN
14053 NEW(s) ;
14054 s^[1] := 1 ;
14055@end smallexample
14056
14057@noindent
14058and you can request that @value{GDBN} describes the type of @code{s}.
14059
14060@smallexample
14061(@value{GDBP}) ptype s
14062type = POINTER TO ARRAY [1..5] OF CARDINAL
14063@end smallexample
14064
14065@value{GDBN} handles compound types as we can see in this example.
14066Here we combine array types, record types, pointer types and subrange
14067types:
14068
14069@smallexample
14070TYPE
14071 foo = RECORD
14072 f1: CARDINAL ;
14073 f2: CHAR ;
14074 f3: myarray ;
14075 END ;
14076
14077 myarray = ARRAY myrange OF CARDINAL ;
14078 myrange = [-2..2] ;
14079VAR
14080 s: POINTER TO ARRAY myrange OF foo ;
14081@end smallexample
14082
14083@noindent
14084and you can ask @value{GDBN} to describe the type of @code{s} as shown
14085below.
14086
14087@smallexample
14088(@value{GDBP}) ptype s
14089type = POINTER TO ARRAY [-2..2] OF foo = RECORD
14090 f1 : CARDINAL;
14091 f2 : CHAR;
14092 f3 : ARRAY [-2..2] OF CARDINAL;
14093END
14094@end smallexample
14095
6d2ebf8b 14096@node M2 Defaults
79a6e687 14097@subsubsection Modula-2 Defaults
c906108c
SS
14098@cindex Modula-2 defaults
14099
14100If type and range checking are set automatically by @value{GDBN}, they
14101both default to @code{on} whenever the working language changes to
d4f3574e 14102Modula-2. This happens regardless of whether you or @value{GDBN}
c906108c
SS
14103selected the working language.
14104
14105If you allow @value{GDBN} to set the language automatically, then entering
14106code compiled from a file whose name ends with @file{.mod} sets the
79a6e687
BW
14107working language to Modula-2. @xref{Automatically, ,Having @value{GDBN}
14108Infer the Source Language}, for further details.
c906108c 14109
6d2ebf8b 14110@node Deviations
79a6e687 14111@subsubsection Deviations from Standard Modula-2
c906108c
SS
14112@cindex Modula-2, deviations from
14113
14114A few changes have been made to make Modula-2 programs easier to debug.
14115This is done primarily via loosening its type strictness:
14116
14117@itemize @bullet
14118@item
14119Unlike in standard Modula-2, pointer constants can be formed by
14120integers. This allows you to modify pointer variables during
14121debugging. (In standard Modula-2, the actual address contained in a
14122pointer variable is hidden from you; it can only be modified
14123through direct assignment to another pointer variable or expression that
14124returned a pointer.)
14125
14126@item
14127C escape sequences can be used in strings and characters to represent
14128non-printable characters. @value{GDBN} prints out strings with these
14129escape sequences embedded. Single non-printable characters are
14130printed using the @samp{CHR(@var{nnn})} format.
14131
14132@item
14133The assignment operator (@code{:=}) returns the value of its right-hand
14134argument.
14135
14136@item
14137All built-in procedures both modify @emph{and} return their argument.
14138@end itemize
14139
6d2ebf8b 14140@node M2 Checks
79a6e687 14141@subsubsection Modula-2 Type and Range Checks
c906108c
SS
14142@cindex Modula-2 checks
14143
14144@quotation
14145@emph{Warning:} in this release, @value{GDBN} does not yet perform type or
14146range checking.
14147@end quotation
14148@c FIXME remove warning when type/range checks added
14149
14150@value{GDBN} considers two Modula-2 variables type equivalent if:
14151
14152@itemize @bullet
14153@item
14154They are of types that have been declared equivalent via a @code{TYPE
14155@var{t1} = @var{t2}} statement
14156
14157@item
14158They have been declared on the same line. (Note: This is true of the
14159@sc{gnu} Modula-2 compiler, but it may not be true of other compilers.)
14160@end itemize
14161
14162As long as type checking is enabled, any attempt to combine variables
14163whose types are not equivalent is an error.
14164
14165Range checking is done on all mathematical operations, assignment, array
14166index bounds, and all built-in functions and procedures.
14167
6d2ebf8b 14168@node M2 Scope
79a6e687 14169@subsubsection The Scope Operators @code{::} and @code{.}
c906108c 14170@cindex scope
41afff9a 14171@cindex @code{.}, Modula-2 scope operator
c906108c
SS
14172@cindex colon, doubled as scope operator
14173@ifinfo
41afff9a 14174@vindex colon-colon@r{, in Modula-2}
c906108c
SS
14175@c Info cannot handle :: but TeX can.
14176@end ifinfo
a67ec3f4 14177@ifnotinfo
41afff9a 14178@vindex ::@r{, in Modula-2}
a67ec3f4 14179@end ifnotinfo
c906108c
SS
14180
14181There are a few subtle differences between the Modula-2 scope operator
14182(@code{.}) and the @value{GDBN} scope operator (@code{::}). The two have
14183similar syntax:
14184
474c8240 14185@smallexample
c906108c
SS
14186
14187@var{module} . @var{id}
14188@var{scope} :: @var{id}
474c8240 14189@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
14190
14191@noindent
14192where @var{scope} is the name of a module or a procedure,
14193@var{module} the name of a module, and @var{id} is any declared
14194identifier within your program, except another module.
14195
14196Using the @code{::} operator makes @value{GDBN} search the scope
14197specified by @var{scope} for the identifier @var{id}. If it is not
14198found in the specified scope, then @value{GDBN} searches all scopes
14199enclosing the one specified by @var{scope}.
14200
14201Using the @code{.} operator makes @value{GDBN} search the current scope for
14202the identifier specified by @var{id} that was imported from the
14203definition module specified by @var{module}. With this operator, it is
14204an error if the identifier @var{id} was not imported from definition
14205module @var{module}, or if @var{id} is not an identifier in
14206@var{module}.
14207
6d2ebf8b 14208@node GDB/M2
c906108c
SS
14209@subsubsection @value{GDBN} and Modula-2
14210
14211Some @value{GDBN} commands have little use when debugging Modula-2 programs.
14212Five subcommands of @code{set print} and @code{show print} apply
b37052ae 14213specifically to C and C@t{++}: @samp{vtbl}, @samp{demangle},
c906108c 14214@samp{asm-demangle}, @samp{object}, and @samp{union}. The first four
b37052ae 14215apply to C@t{++}, and the last to the C @code{union} type, which has no direct
c906108c
SS
14216analogue in Modula-2.
14217
14218The @code{@@} operator (@pxref{Expressions, ,Expressions}), while available
d4f3574e 14219with any language, is not useful with Modula-2. Its
c906108c 14220intent is to aid the debugging of @dfn{dynamic arrays}, which cannot be
b37052ae 14221created in Modula-2 as they can in C or C@t{++}. However, because an
c906108c 14222address can be specified by an integral constant, the construct
d4f3574e 14223@samp{@{@var{type}@}@var{adrexp}} is still useful.
c906108c
SS
14224
14225@cindex @code{#} in Modula-2
14226In @value{GDBN} scripts, the Modula-2 inequality operator @code{#} is
14227interpreted as the beginning of a comment. Use @code{<>} instead.
c906108c 14228
e07c999f
PH
14229@node Ada
14230@subsection Ada
14231@cindex Ada
14232
14233The extensions made to @value{GDBN} for Ada only support
14234output from the @sc{gnu} Ada (GNAT) compiler.
14235Other Ada compilers are not currently supported, and
14236attempting to debug executables produced by them is most likely
14237to be difficult.
14238
14239
14240@cindex expressions in Ada
14241@menu
14242* Ada Mode Intro:: General remarks on the Ada syntax
14243 and semantics supported by Ada mode
14244 in @value{GDBN}.
14245* Omissions from Ada:: Restrictions on the Ada expression syntax.
14246* Additions to Ada:: Extensions of the Ada expression syntax.
14247* Stopping Before Main Program:: Debugging the program during elaboration.
20924a55
JB
14248* Ada Tasks:: Listing and setting breakpoints in tasks.
14249* Ada Tasks and Core Files:: Tasking Support when Debugging Core Files
6e1bb179
JB
14250* Ravenscar Profile:: Tasking Support when using the Ravenscar
14251 Profile
e07c999f
PH
14252* Ada Glitches:: Known peculiarities of Ada mode.
14253@end menu
14254
14255@node Ada Mode Intro
14256@subsubsection Introduction
14257@cindex Ada mode, general
14258
14259The Ada mode of @value{GDBN} supports a fairly large subset of Ada expression
14260syntax, with some extensions.
14261The philosophy behind the design of this subset is
14262
14263@itemize @bullet
14264@item
14265That @value{GDBN} should provide basic literals and access to operations for
14266arithmetic, dereferencing, field selection, indexing, and subprogram calls,
14267leaving more sophisticated computations to subprograms written into the
14268program (which therefore may be called from @value{GDBN}).
14269
14270@item
14271That type safety and strict adherence to Ada language restrictions
14272are not particularly important to the @value{GDBN} user.
14273
14274@item
14275That brevity is important to the @value{GDBN} user.
14276@end itemize
14277
f3a2dd1a
JB
14278Thus, for brevity, the debugger acts as if all names declared in
14279user-written packages are directly visible, even if they are not visible
14280according to Ada rules, thus making it unnecessary to fully qualify most
14281names with their packages, regardless of context. Where this causes
14282ambiguity, @value{GDBN} asks the user's intent.
e07c999f
PH
14283
14284The debugger will start in Ada mode if it detects an Ada main program.
14285As for other languages, it will enter Ada mode when stopped in a program that
14286was translated from an Ada source file.
14287
14288While in Ada mode, you may use `@t{--}' for comments. This is useful
14289mostly for documenting command files. The standard @value{GDBN} comment
14290(@samp{#}) still works at the beginning of a line in Ada mode, but not in the
14291middle (to allow based literals).
14292
14293The debugger supports limited overloading. Given a subprogram call in which
14294the function symbol has multiple definitions, it will use the number of
14295actual parameters and some information about their types to attempt to narrow
14296the set of definitions. It also makes very limited use of context, preferring
14297procedures to functions in the context of the @code{call} command, and
14298functions to procedures elsewhere.
14299
14300@node Omissions from Ada
14301@subsubsection Omissions from Ada
14302@cindex Ada, omissions from
14303
14304Here are the notable omissions from the subset:
14305
14306@itemize @bullet
14307@item
14308Only a subset of the attributes are supported:
14309
14310@itemize @minus
14311@item
14312@t{'First}, @t{'Last}, and @t{'Length}
14313 on array objects (not on types and subtypes).
14314
14315@item
14316@t{'Min} and @t{'Max}.
14317
14318@item
14319@t{'Pos} and @t{'Val}.
14320
14321@item
14322@t{'Tag}.
14323
14324@item
14325@t{'Range} on array objects (not subtypes), but only as the right
14326operand of the membership (@code{in}) operator.
14327
14328@item
14329@t{'Access}, @t{'Unchecked_Access}, and
14330@t{'Unrestricted_Access} (a GNAT extension).
14331
14332@item
14333@t{'Address}.
14334@end itemize
14335
14336@item
14337The names in
14338@code{Characters.Latin_1} are not available and
14339concatenation is not implemented. Thus, escape characters in strings are
14340not currently available.
14341
14342@item
14343Equality tests (@samp{=} and @samp{/=}) on arrays test for bitwise
14344equality of representations. They will generally work correctly
14345for strings and arrays whose elements have integer or enumeration types.
14346They may not work correctly for arrays whose element
14347types have user-defined equality, for arrays of real values
14348(in particular, IEEE-conformant floating point, because of negative
14349zeroes and NaNs), and for arrays whose elements contain unused bits with
14350indeterminate values.
14351
14352@item
14353The other component-by-component array operations (@code{and}, @code{or},
14354@code{xor}, @code{not}, and relational tests other than equality)
14355are not implemented.
14356
14357@item
860701dc
PH
14358@cindex array aggregates (Ada)
14359@cindex record aggregates (Ada)
14360@cindex aggregates (Ada)
14361There is limited support for array and record aggregates. They are
14362permitted only on the right sides of assignments, as in these examples:
14363
14364@smallexample
077e0a52
JB
14365(@value{GDBP}) set An_Array := (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6)
14366(@value{GDBP}) set An_Array := (1, others => 0)
14367(@value{GDBP}) set An_Array := (0|4 => 1, 1..3 => 2, 5 => 6)
14368(@value{GDBP}) set A_2D_Array := ((1, 2, 3), (4, 5, 6), (7, 8, 9))
14369(@value{GDBP}) set A_Record := (1, "Peter", True);
14370(@value{GDBP}) set A_Record := (Name => "Peter", Id => 1, Alive => True)
860701dc
PH
14371@end smallexample
14372
14373Changing a
14374discriminant's value by assigning an aggregate has an
14375undefined effect if that discriminant is used within the record.
14376However, you can first modify discriminants by directly assigning to
14377them (which normally would not be allowed in Ada), and then performing an
14378aggregate assignment. For example, given a variable @code{A_Rec}
14379declared to have a type such as:
14380
14381@smallexample
14382type Rec (Len : Small_Integer := 0) is record
14383 Id : Integer;
14384 Vals : IntArray (1 .. Len);
14385end record;
14386@end smallexample
14387
14388you can assign a value with a different size of @code{Vals} with two
14389assignments:
14390
14391@smallexample
077e0a52
JB
14392(@value{GDBP}) set A_Rec.Len := 4
14393(@value{GDBP}) set A_Rec := (Id => 42, Vals => (1, 2, 3, 4))
860701dc
PH
14394@end smallexample
14395
14396As this example also illustrates, @value{GDBN} is very loose about the usual
14397rules concerning aggregates. You may leave out some of the
14398components of an array or record aggregate (such as the @code{Len}
14399component in the assignment to @code{A_Rec} above); they will retain their
14400original values upon assignment. You may freely use dynamic values as
14401indices in component associations. You may even use overlapping or
14402redundant component associations, although which component values are
14403assigned in such cases is not defined.
e07c999f
PH
14404
14405@item
14406Calls to dispatching subprograms are not implemented.
14407
14408@item
14409The overloading algorithm is much more limited (i.e., less selective)
ae21e955
BW
14410than that of real Ada. It makes only limited use of the context in
14411which a subexpression appears to resolve its meaning, and it is much
14412looser in its rules for allowing type matches. As a result, some
14413function calls will be ambiguous, and the user will be asked to choose
14414the proper resolution.
e07c999f
PH
14415
14416@item
14417The @code{new} operator is not implemented.
14418
14419@item
14420Entry calls are not implemented.
14421
14422@item
14423Aside from printing, arithmetic operations on the native VAX floating-point
14424formats are not supported.
14425
14426@item
14427It is not possible to slice a packed array.
158c7665
PH
14428
14429@item
14430The names @code{True} and @code{False}, when not part of a qualified name,
14431are interpreted as if implicitly prefixed by @code{Standard}, regardless of
14432context.
14433Should your program
14434redefine these names in a package or procedure (at best a dubious practice),
14435you will have to use fully qualified names to access their new definitions.
e07c999f
PH
14436@end itemize
14437
14438@node Additions to Ada
14439@subsubsection Additions to Ada
14440@cindex Ada, deviations from
14441
14442As it does for other languages, @value{GDBN} makes certain generic
14443extensions to Ada (@pxref{Expressions}):
14444
14445@itemize @bullet
14446@item
ae21e955
BW
14447If the expression @var{E} is a variable residing in memory (typically
14448a local variable or array element) and @var{N} is a positive integer,
14449then @code{@var{E}@@@var{N}} displays the values of @var{E} and the
14450@var{N}-1 adjacent variables following it in memory as an array. In
14451Ada, this operator is generally not necessary, since its prime use is
14452in displaying parts of an array, and slicing will usually do this in
14453Ada. However, there are occasional uses when debugging programs in
14454which certain debugging information has been optimized away.
e07c999f
PH
14455
14456@item
ae21e955
BW
14457@code{@var{B}::@var{var}} means ``the variable named @var{var} that
14458appears in function or file @var{B}.'' When @var{B} is a file name,
14459you must typically surround it in single quotes.
e07c999f
PH
14460
14461@item
14462The expression @code{@{@var{type}@} @var{addr}} means ``the variable of type
14463@var{type} that appears at address @var{addr}.''
14464
14465@item
14466A name starting with @samp{$} is a convenience variable
14467(@pxref{Convenience Vars}) or a machine register (@pxref{Registers}).
14468@end itemize
14469
ae21e955
BW
14470In addition, @value{GDBN} provides a few other shortcuts and outright
14471additions specific to Ada:
e07c999f
PH
14472
14473@itemize @bullet
14474@item
14475The assignment statement is allowed as an expression, returning
14476its right-hand operand as its value. Thus, you may enter
14477
14478@smallexample
077e0a52
JB
14479(@value{GDBP}) set x := y + 3
14480(@value{GDBP}) print A(tmp := y + 1)
e07c999f
PH
14481@end smallexample
14482
14483@item
14484The semicolon is allowed as an ``operator,'' returning as its value
14485the value of its right-hand operand.
14486This allows, for example,
14487complex conditional breaks:
14488
14489@smallexample
077e0a52
JB
14490(@value{GDBP}) break f
14491(@value{GDBP}) condition 1 (report(i); k += 1; A(k) > 100)
e07c999f
PH
14492@end smallexample
14493
14494@item
14495Rather than use catenation and symbolic character names to introduce special
14496characters into strings, one may instead use a special bracket notation,
14497which is also used to print strings. A sequence of characters of the form
14498@samp{["@var{XX}"]} within a string or character literal denotes the
14499(single) character whose numeric encoding is @var{XX} in hexadecimal. The
14500sequence of characters @samp{["""]} also denotes a single quotation mark
14501in strings. For example,
14502@smallexample
14503 "One line.["0a"]Next line.["0a"]"
14504@end smallexample
14505@noindent
ae21e955
BW
14506contains an ASCII newline character (@code{Ada.Characters.Latin_1.LF})
14507after each period.
e07c999f
PH
14508
14509@item
14510The subtype used as a prefix for the attributes @t{'Pos}, @t{'Min}, and
14511@t{'Max} is optional (and is ignored in any case). For example, it is valid
14512to write
14513
14514@smallexample
077e0a52 14515(@value{GDBP}) print 'max(x, y)
e07c999f
PH
14516@end smallexample
14517
14518@item
14519When printing arrays, @value{GDBN} uses positional notation when the
14520array has a lower bound of 1, and uses a modified named notation otherwise.
ae21e955
BW
14521For example, a one-dimensional array of three integers with a lower bound
14522of 3 might print as
e07c999f
PH
14523
14524@smallexample
14525(3 => 10, 17, 1)
14526@end smallexample
14527
14528@noindent
14529That is, in contrast to valid Ada, only the first component has a @code{=>}
14530clause.
14531
14532@item
14533You may abbreviate attributes in expressions with any unique,
14534multi-character subsequence of
14535their names (an exact match gets preference).
14536For example, you may use @t{a'len}, @t{a'gth}, or @t{a'lh}
14537in place of @t{a'length}.
14538
14539@item
14540@cindex quoting Ada internal identifiers
14541Since Ada is case-insensitive, the debugger normally maps identifiers you type
14542to lower case. The GNAT compiler uses upper-case characters for
14543some of its internal identifiers, which are normally of no interest to users.
14544For the rare occasions when you actually have to look at them,
14545enclose them in angle brackets to avoid the lower-case mapping.
14546For example,
14547@smallexample
077e0a52 14548(@value{GDBP}) print <JMPBUF_SAVE>[0]
e07c999f
PH
14549@end smallexample
14550
14551@item
14552Printing an object of class-wide type or dereferencing an
14553access-to-class-wide value will display all the components of the object's
14554specific type (as indicated by its run-time tag). Likewise, component
14555selection on such a value will operate on the specific type of the
14556object.
14557
14558@end itemize
14559
14560@node Stopping Before Main Program
14561@subsubsection Stopping at the Very Beginning
14562
14563@cindex breakpointing Ada elaboration code
14564It is sometimes necessary to debug the program during elaboration, and
14565before reaching the main procedure.
14566As defined in the Ada Reference
14567Manual, the elaboration code is invoked from a procedure called
14568@code{adainit}. To run your program up to the beginning of
14569elaboration, simply use the following two commands:
14570@code{tbreak adainit} and @code{run}.
14571
20924a55
JB
14572@node Ada Tasks
14573@subsubsection Extensions for Ada Tasks
14574@cindex Ada, tasking
14575
14576Support for Ada tasks is analogous to that for threads (@pxref{Threads}).
14577@value{GDBN} provides the following task-related commands:
14578
14579@table @code
14580@kindex info tasks
14581@item info tasks
14582This command shows a list of current Ada tasks, as in the following example:
14583
14584
14585@smallexample
14586@iftex
14587@leftskip=0.5cm
14588@end iftex
14589(@value{GDBP}) info tasks
14590 ID TID P-ID Pri State Name
14591 1 8088000 0 15 Child Activation Wait main_task
14592 2 80a4000 1 15 Accept Statement b
14593 3 809a800 1 15 Child Activation Wait a
32cd1edc 14594* 4 80ae800 3 15 Runnable c
20924a55
JB
14595
14596@end smallexample
14597
14598@noindent
14599In this listing, the asterisk before the last task indicates it to be the
14600task currently being inspected.
14601
14602@table @asis
14603@item ID
14604Represents @value{GDBN}'s internal task number.
14605
14606@item TID
14607The Ada task ID.
14608
14609@item P-ID
14610The parent's task ID (@value{GDBN}'s internal task number).
14611
14612@item Pri
14613The base priority of the task.
14614
14615@item State
14616Current state of the task.
14617
14618@table @code
14619@item Unactivated
14620The task has been created but has not been activated. It cannot be
14621executing.
14622
20924a55
JB
14623@item Runnable
14624The task is not blocked for any reason known to Ada. (It may be waiting
14625for a mutex, though.) It is conceptually "executing" in normal mode.
14626
14627@item Terminated
14628The task is terminated, in the sense of ARM 9.3 (5). Any dependents
14629that were waiting on terminate alternatives have been awakened and have
14630terminated themselves.
14631
14632@item Child Activation Wait
14633The task is waiting for created tasks to complete activation.
14634
14635@item Accept Statement
14636The task is waiting on an accept or selective wait statement.
14637
14638@item Waiting on entry call
14639The task is waiting on an entry call.
14640
14641@item Async Select Wait
14642The task is waiting to start the abortable part of an asynchronous
14643select statement.
14644
14645@item Delay Sleep
14646The task is waiting on a select statement with only a delay
14647alternative open.
14648
14649@item Child Termination Wait
14650The task is sleeping having completed a master within itself, and is
14651waiting for the tasks dependent on that master to become terminated or
14652waiting on a terminate Phase.
14653
14654@item Wait Child in Term Alt
14655The task is sleeping waiting for tasks on terminate alternatives to
14656finish terminating.
14657
14658@item Accepting RV with @var{taskno}
14659The task is accepting a rendez-vous with the task @var{taskno}.
14660@end table
14661
14662@item Name
14663Name of the task in the program.
14664
14665@end table
14666
14667@kindex info task @var{taskno}
14668@item info task @var{taskno}
14669This command shows detailled informations on the specified task, as in
14670the following example:
14671@smallexample
14672@iftex
14673@leftskip=0.5cm
14674@end iftex
14675(@value{GDBP}) info tasks
14676 ID TID P-ID Pri State Name
14677 1 8077880 0 15 Child Activation Wait main_task
32cd1edc 14678* 2 807c468 1 15 Runnable task_1
20924a55
JB
14679(@value{GDBP}) info task 2
14680Ada Task: 0x807c468
14681Name: task_1
14682Thread: 0x807f378
14683Parent: 1 (main_task)
14684Base Priority: 15
14685State: Runnable
14686@end smallexample
14687
14688@item task
14689@kindex task@r{ (Ada)}
14690@cindex current Ada task ID
14691This command prints the ID of the current task.
14692
14693@smallexample
14694@iftex
14695@leftskip=0.5cm
14696@end iftex
14697(@value{GDBP}) info tasks
14698 ID TID P-ID Pri State Name
14699 1 8077870 0 15 Child Activation Wait main_task
32cd1edc 14700* 2 807c458 1 15 Runnable t
20924a55
JB
14701(@value{GDBP}) task
14702[Current task is 2]
14703@end smallexample
14704
14705@item task @var{taskno}
14706@cindex Ada task switching
14707This command is like the @code{thread @var{threadno}}
14708command (@pxref{Threads}). It switches the context of debugging
14709from the current task to the given task.
14710
14711@smallexample
14712@iftex
14713@leftskip=0.5cm
14714@end iftex
14715(@value{GDBP}) info tasks
14716 ID TID P-ID Pri State Name
14717 1 8077870 0 15 Child Activation Wait main_task
32cd1edc 14718* 2 807c458 1 15 Runnable t
20924a55
JB
14719(@value{GDBP}) task 1
14720[Switching to task 1]
14721#0 0x8067726 in pthread_cond_wait ()
14722(@value{GDBP}) bt
14723#0 0x8067726 in pthread_cond_wait ()
14724#1 0x8056714 in system.os_interface.pthread_cond_wait ()
14725#2 0x805cb63 in system.task_primitives.operations.sleep ()
14726#3 0x806153e in system.tasking.stages.activate_tasks ()
14727#4 0x804aacc in un () at un.adb:5
14728@end smallexample
14729
45ac276d
JB
14730@item break @var{linespec} task @var{taskno}
14731@itemx break @var{linespec} task @var{taskno} if @dots{}
14732@cindex breakpoints and tasks, in Ada
14733@cindex task breakpoints, in Ada
14734@kindex break @dots{} task @var{taskno}@r{ (Ada)}
14735These commands are like the @code{break @dots{} thread @dots{}}
14736command (@pxref{Thread Stops}).
14737@var{linespec} specifies source lines, as described
14738in @ref{Specify Location}.
14739
14740Use the qualifier @samp{task @var{taskno}} with a breakpoint command
14741to specify that you only want @value{GDBN} to stop the program when a
14742particular Ada task reaches this breakpoint. @var{taskno} is one of the
14743numeric task identifiers assigned by @value{GDBN}, shown in the first
14744column of the @samp{info tasks} display.
14745
14746If you do not specify @samp{task @var{taskno}} when you set a
14747breakpoint, the breakpoint applies to @emph{all} tasks of your
14748program.
14749
14750You can use the @code{task} qualifier on conditional breakpoints as
14751well; in this case, place @samp{task @var{taskno}} before the
14752breakpoint condition (before the @code{if}).
14753
14754For example,
14755
14756@smallexample
14757@iftex
14758@leftskip=0.5cm
14759@end iftex
14760(@value{GDBP}) info tasks
14761 ID TID P-ID Pri State Name
14762 1 140022020 0 15 Child Activation Wait main_task
14763 2 140045060 1 15 Accept/Select Wait t2
14764 3 140044840 1 15 Runnable t1
14765* 4 140056040 1 15 Runnable t3
14766(@value{GDBP}) b 15 task 2
14767Breakpoint 5 at 0x120044cb0: file test_task_debug.adb, line 15.
14768(@value{GDBP}) cont
14769Continuing.
14770task # 1 running
14771task # 2 running
14772
14773Breakpoint 5, test_task_debug () at test_task_debug.adb:15
1477415 flush;
14775(@value{GDBP}) info tasks
14776 ID TID P-ID Pri State Name
14777 1 140022020 0 15 Child Activation Wait main_task
14778* 2 140045060 1 15 Runnable t2
14779 3 140044840 1 15 Runnable t1
14780 4 140056040 1 15 Delay Sleep t3
14781@end smallexample
20924a55
JB
14782@end table
14783
14784@node Ada Tasks and Core Files
14785@subsubsection Tasking Support when Debugging Core Files
14786@cindex Ada tasking and core file debugging
14787
14788When inspecting a core file, as opposed to debugging a live program,
14789tasking support may be limited or even unavailable, depending on
14790the platform being used.
14791For instance, on x86-linux, the list of tasks is available, but task
14792switching is not supported. On Tru64, however, task switching will work
14793as usual.
14794
14795On certain platforms, including Tru64, the debugger needs to perform some
14796memory writes in order to provide Ada tasking support. When inspecting
14797a core file, this means that the core file must be opened with read-write
14798privileges, using the command @samp{"set write on"} (@pxref{Patching}).
14799Under these circumstances, you should make a backup copy of the core
14800file before inspecting it with @value{GDBN}.
14801
6e1bb179
JB
14802@node Ravenscar Profile
14803@subsubsection Tasking Support when using the Ravenscar Profile
14804@cindex Ravenscar Profile
14805
14806The @dfn{Ravenscar Profile} is a subset of the Ada tasking features,
14807specifically designed for systems with safety-critical real-time
14808requirements.
14809
14810@table @code
14811@kindex set ravenscar task-switching on
14812@cindex task switching with program using Ravenscar Profile
14813@item set ravenscar task-switching on
14814Allows task switching when debugging a program that uses the Ravenscar
14815Profile. This is the default.
14816
14817@kindex set ravenscar task-switching off
14818@item set ravenscar task-switching off
14819Turn off task switching when debugging a program that uses the Ravenscar
14820Profile. This is mostly intended to disable the code that adds support
14821for the Ravenscar Profile, in case a bug in either @value{GDBN} or in
14822the Ravenscar runtime is preventing @value{GDBN} from working properly.
14823To be effective, this command should be run before the program is started.
14824
14825@kindex show ravenscar task-switching
14826@item show ravenscar task-switching
14827Show whether it is possible to switch from task to task in a program
14828using the Ravenscar Profile.
14829
14830@end table
14831
e07c999f
PH
14832@node Ada Glitches
14833@subsubsection Known Peculiarities of Ada Mode
14834@cindex Ada, problems
14835
14836Besides the omissions listed previously (@pxref{Omissions from Ada}),
14837we know of several problems with and limitations of Ada mode in
14838@value{GDBN},
14839some of which will be fixed with planned future releases of the debugger
14840and the GNU Ada compiler.
14841
14842@itemize @bullet
e07c999f
PH
14843@item
14844Static constants that the compiler chooses not to materialize as objects in
14845storage are invisible to the debugger.
14846
14847@item
14848Named parameter associations in function argument lists are ignored (the
14849argument lists are treated as positional).
14850
14851@item
14852Many useful library packages are currently invisible to the debugger.
14853
14854@item
14855Fixed-point arithmetic, conversions, input, and output is carried out using
14856floating-point arithmetic, and may give results that only approximate those on
14857the host machine.
14858
e07c999f
PH
14859@item
14860The GNAT compiler never generates the prefix @code{Standard} for any of
14861the standard symbols defined by the Ada language. @value{GDBN} knows about
14862this: it will strip the prefix from names when you use it, and will never
14863look for a name you have so qualified among local symbols, nor match against
14864symbols in other packages or subprograms. If you have
14865defined entities anywhere in your program other than parameters and
14866local variables whose simple names match names in @code{Standard},
14867GNAT's lack of qualification here can cause confusion. When this happens,
14868you can usually resolve the confusion
14869by qualifying the problematic names with package
14870@code{Standard} explicitly.
14871@end itemize
14872
95433b34
JB
14873Older versions of the compiler sometimes generate erroneous debugging
14874information, resulting in the debugger incorrectly printing the value
14875of affected entities. In some cases, the debugger is able to work
14876around an issue automatically. In other cases, the debugger is able
14877to work around the issue, but the work-around has to be specifically
14878enabled.
14879
14880@kindex set ada trust-PAD-over-XVS
14881@kindex show ada trust-PAD-over-XVS
14882@table @code
14883
14884@item set ada trust-PAD-over-XVS on
14885Configure GDB to strictly follow the GNAT encoding when computing the
14886value of Ada entities, particularly when @code{PAD} and @code{PAD___XVS}
14887types are involved (see @code{ada/exp_dbug.ads} in the GCC sources for
14888a complete description of the encoding used by the GNAT compiler).
14889This is the default.
14890
14891@item set ada trust-PAD-over-XVS off
14892This is related to the encoding using by the GNAT compiler. If @value{GDBN}
14893sometimes prints the wrong value for certain entities, changing @code{ada
14894trust-PAD-over-XVS} to @code{off} activates a work-around which may fix
14895the issue. It is always safe to set @code{ada trust-PAD-over-XVS} to
14896@code{off}, but this incurs a slight performance penalty, so it is
14897recommended to leave this setting to @code{on} unless necessary.
14898
14899@end table
14900
79a6e687
BW
14901@node Unsupported Languages
14902@section Unsupported Languages
4e562065
JB
14903
14904@cindex unsupported languages
14905@cindex minimal language
14906In addition to the other fully-supported programming languages,
14907@value{GDBN} also provides a pseudo-language, called @code{minimal}.
14908It does not represent a real programming language, but provides a set
14909of capabilities close to what the C or assembly languages provide.
14910This should allow most simple operations to be performed while debugging
14911an application that uses a language currently not supported by @value{GDBN}.
14912
14913If the language is set to @code{auto}, @value{GDBN} will automatically
14914select this language if the current frame corresponds to an unsupported
14915language.
14916
6d2ebf8b 14917@node Symbols
c906108c
SS
14918@chapter Examining the Symbol Table
14919
d4f3574e 14920The commands described in this chapter allow you to inquire about the
c906108c
SS
14921symbols (names of variables, functions and types) defined in your
14922program. This information is inherent in the text of your program and
14923does not change as your program executes. @value{GDBN} finds it in your
14924program's symbol table, in the file indicated when you started @value{GDBN}
79a6e687
BW
14925(@pxref{File Options, ,Choosing Files}), or by one of the
14926file-management commands (@pxref{Files, ,Commands to Specify Files}).
c906108c
SS
14927
14928@cindex symbol names
14929@cindex names of symbols
14930@cindex quoting names
14931Occasionally, you may need to refer to symbols that contain unusual
14932characters, which @value{GDBN} ordinarily treats as word delimiters. The
14933most frequent case is in referring to static variables in other
79a6e687 14934source files (@pxref{Variables,,Program Variables}). File names
c906108c
SS
14935are recorded in object files as debugging symbols, but @value{GDBN} would
14936ordinarily parse a typical file name, like @file{foo.c}, as the three words
14937@samp{foo} @samp{.} @samp{c}. To allow @value{GDBN} to recognize
14938@samp{foo.c} as a single symbol, enclose it in single quotes; for example,
14939
474c8240 14940@smallexample
c906108c 14941p 'foo.c'::x
474c8240 14942@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
14943
14944@noindent
14945looks up the value of @code{x} in the scope of the file @file{foo.c}.
14946
14947@table @code
a8f24a35
EZ
14948@cindex case-insensitive symbol names
14949@cindex case sensitivity in symbol names
14950@kindex set case-sensitive
14951@item set case-sensitive on
14952@itemx set case-sensitive off
14953@itemx set case-sensitive auto
14954Normally, when @value{GDBN} looks up symbols, it matches their names
14955with case sensitivity determined by the current source language.
14956Occasionally, you may wish to control that. The command @code{set
14957case-sensitive} lets you do that by specifying @code{on} for
14958case-sensitive matches or @code{off} for case-insensitive ones. If
14959you specify @code{auto}, case sensitivity is reset to the default
14960suitable for the source language. The default is case-sensitive
14961matches for all languages except for Fortran, for which the default is
14962case-insensitive matches.
14963
9c16f35a
EZ
14964@kindex show case-sensitive
14965@item show case-sensitive
a8f24a35
EZ
14966This command shows the current setting of case sensitivity for symbols
14967lookups.
14968
c906108c 14969@kindex info address
b37052ae 14970@cindex address of a symbol
c906108c
SS
14971@item info address @var{symbol}
14972Describe where the data for @var{symbol} is stored. For a register
14973variable, this says which register it is kept in. For a non-register
14974local variable, this prints the stack-frame offset at which the variable
14975is always stored.
14976
14977Note the contrast with @samp{print &@var{symbol}}, which does not work
14978at all for a register variable, and for a stack local variable prints
14979the exact address of the current instantiation of the variable.
14980
3d67e040 14981@kindex info symbol
b37052ae 14982@cindex symbol from address
9c16f35a 14983@cindex closest symbol and offset for an address
3d67e040
EZ
14984@item info symbol @var{addr}
14985Print the name of a symbol which is stored at the address @var{addr}.
14986If no symbol is stored exactly at @var{addr}, @value{GDBN} prints the
14987nearest symbol and an offset from it:
14988
474c8240 14989@smallexample
3d67e040
EZ
14990(@value{GDBP}) info symbol 0x54320
14991_initialize_vx + 396 in section .text
474c8240 14992@end smallexample
3d67e040
EZ
14993
14994@noindent
14995This is the opposite of the @code{info address} command. You can use
14996it to find out the name of a variable or a function given its address.
14997
c14c28ba
PP
14998For dynamically linked executables, the name of executable or shared
14999library containing the symbol is also printed:
15000
15001@smallexample
15002(@value{GDBP}) info symbol 0x400225
15003_start + 5 in section .text of /tmp/a.out
15004(@value{GDBP}) info symbol 0x2aaaac2811cf
15005__read_nocancel + 6 in section .text of /usr/lib64/libc.so.6
15006@end smallexample
15007
c906108c 15008@kindex whatis
62f3a2ba 15009@item whatis [@var{arg}]
177bc839
JK
15010Print the data type of @var{arg}, which can be either an expression
15011or a name of a data type. With no argument, print the data type of
15012@code{$}, the last value in the value history.
15013
15014If @var{arg} is an expression (@pxref{Expressions, ,Expressions}), it
15015is not actually evaluated, and any side-effecting operations (such as
15016assignments or function calls) inside it do not take place.
15017
15018If @var{arg} is a variable or an expression, @code{whatis} prints its
15019literal type as it is used in the source code. If the type was
15020defined using a @code{typedef}, @code{whatis} will @emph{not} print
15021the data type underlying the @code{typedef}. If the type of the
15022variable or the expression is a compound data type, such as
15023@code{struct} or @code{class}, @code{whatis} never prints their
15024fields or methods. It just prints the @code{struct}/@code{class}
15025name (a.k.a.@: its @dfn{tag}). If you want to see the members of
15026such a compound data type, use @code{ptype}.
15027
15028If @var{arg} is a type name that was defined using @code{typedef},
15029@code{whatis} @dfn{unrolls} only one level of that @code{typedef}.
15030Unrolling means that @code{whatis} will show the underlying type used
15031in the @code{typedef} declaration of @var{arg}. However, if that
15032underlying type is also a @code{typedef}, @code{whatis} will not
15033unroll it.
15034
15035For C code, the type names may also have the form @samp{class
15036@var{class-name}}, @samp{struct @var{struct-tag}}, @samp{union
15037@var{union-tag}} or @samp{enum @var{enum-tag}}.
c906108c 15038
c906108c 15039@kindex ptype
62f3a2ba
FF
15040@item ptype [@var{arg}]
15041@code{ptype} accepts the same arguments as @code{whatis}, but prints a
15042detailed description of the type, instead of just the name of the type.
15043@xref{Expressions, ,Expressions}.
c906108c 15044
177bc839
JK
15045Contrary to @code{whatis}, @code{ptype} always unrolls any
15046@code{typedef}s in its argument declaration, whether the argument is
15047a variable, expression, or a data type. This means that @code{ptype}
15048of a variable or an expression will not print literally its type as
15049present in the source code---use @code{whatis} for that. @code{typedef}s at
15050the pointer or reference targets are also unrolled. Only @code{typedef}s of
15051fields, methods and inner @code{class typedef}s of @code{struct}s,
15052@code{class}es and @code{union}s are not unrolled even with @code{ptype}.
15053
c906108c
SS
15054For example, for this variable declaration:
15055
474c8240 15056@smallexample
177bc839
JK
15057typedef double real_t;
15058struct complex @{ real_t real; double imag; @};
15059typedef struct complex complex_t;
15060complex_t var;
15061real_t *real_pointer_var;
474c8240 15062@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
15063
15064@noindent
15065the two commands give this output:
15066
474c8240 15067@smallexample
c906108c 15068@group
177bc839
JK
15069(@value{GDBP}) whatis var
15070type = complex_t
15071(@value{GDBP}) ptype var
15072type = struct complex @{
15073 real_t real;
15074 double imag;
15075@}
15076(@value{GDBP}) whatis complex_t
15077type = struct complex
15078(@value{GDBP}) whatis struct complex
c906108c 15079type = struct complex
177bc839 15080(@value{GDBP}) ptype struct complex
c906108c 15081type = struct complex @{
177bc839 15082 real_t real;
c906108c
SS
15083 double imag;
15084@}
177bc839
JK
15085(@value{GDBP}) whatis real_pointer_var
15086type = real_t *
15087(@value{GDBP}) ptype real_pointer_var
15088type = double *
c906108c 15089@end group
474c8240 15090@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
15091
15092@noindent
15093As with @code{whatis}, using @code{ptype} without an argument refers to
15094the type of @code{$}, the last value in the value history.
15095
ab1adacd
EZ
15096@cindex incomplete type
15097Sometimes, programs use opaque data types or incomplete specifications
15098of complex data structure. If the debug information included in the
15099program does not allow @value{GDBN} to display a full declaration of
15100the data type, it will say @samp{<incomplete type>}. For example,
15101given these declarations:
15102
15103@smallexample
15104 struct foo;
15105 struct foo *fooptr;
15106@end smallexample
15107
15108@noindent
15109but no definition for @code{struct foo} itself, @value{GDBN} will say:
15110
15111@smallexample
ddb50cd7 15112 (@value{GDBP}) ptype foo
ab1adacd
EZ
15113 $1 = <incomplete type>
15114@end smallexample
15115
15116@noindent
15117``Incomplete type'' is C terminology for data types that are not
15118completely specified.
15119
c906108c
SS
15120@kindex info types
15121@item info types @var{regexp}
15122@itemx info types
09d4efe1
EZ
15123Print a brief description of all types whose names match the regular
15124expression @var{regexp} (or all types in your program, if you supply
15125no argument). Each complete typename is matched as though it were a
15126complete line; thus, @samp{i type value} gives information on all
15127types in your program whose names include the string @code{value}, but
15128@samp{i type ^value$} gives information only on types whose complete
15129name is @code{value}.
c906108c
SS
15130
15131This command differs from @code{ptype} in two ways: first, like
15132@code{whatis}, it does not print a detailed description; second, it
15133lists all source files where a type is defined.
15134
b37052ae
EZ
15135@kindex info scope
15136@cindex local variables
09d4efe1 15137@item info scope @var{location}
b37052ae 15138List all the variables local to a particular scope. This command
09d4efe1
EZ
15139accepts a @var{location} argument---a function name, a source line, or
15140an address preceded by a @samp{*}, and prints all the variables local
2a25a5ba
EZ
15141to the scope defined by that location. (@xref{Specify Location}, for
15142details about supported forms of @var{location}.) For example:
b37052ae
EZ
15143
15144@smallexample
15145(@value{GDBP}) @b{info scope command_line_handler}
15146Scope for command_line_handler:
15147Symbol rl is an argument at stack/frame offset 8, length 4.
15148Symbol linebuffer is in static storage at address 0x150a18, length 4.
15149Symbol linelength is in static storage at address 0x150a1c, length 4.
15150Symbol p is a local variable in register $esi, length 4.
15151Symbol p1 is a local variable in register $ebx, length 4.
15152Symbol nline is a local variable in register $edx, length 4.
15153Symbol repeat is a local variable at frame offset -8, length 4.
15154@end smallexample
15155
f5c37c66
EZ
15156@noindent
15157This command is especially useful for determining what data to collect
15158during a @dfn{trace experiment}, see @ref{Tracepoint Actions,
15159collect}.
15160
c906108c
SS
15161@kindex info source
15162@item info source
919d772c
JB
15163Show information about the current source file---that is, the source file for
15164the function containing the current point of execution:
15165@itemize @bullet
15166@item
15167the name of the source file, and the directory containing it,
15168@item
15169the directory it was compiled in,
15170@item
15171its length, in lines,
15172@item
15173which programming language it is written in,
15174@item
15175whether the executable includes debugging information for that file, and
15176if so, what format the information is in (e.g., STABS, Dwarf 2, etc.), and
15177@item
15178whether the debugging information includes information about
15179preprocessor macros.
15180@end itemize
15181
c906108c
SS
15182
15183@kindex info sources
15184@item info sources
15185Print the names of all source files in your program for which there is
15186debugging information, organized into two lists: files whose symbols
15187have already been read, and files whose symbols will be read when needed.
15188
15189@kindex info functions
15190@item info functions
15191Print the names and data types of all defined functions.
15192
15193@item info functions @var{regexp}
15194Print the names and data types of all defined functions
15195whose names contain a match for regular expression @var{regexp}.
15196Thus, @samp{info fun step} finds all functions whose names
15197include @code{step}; @samp{info fun ^step} finds those whose names
b383017d 15198start with @code{step}. If a function name contains characters
c1468174 15199that conflict with the regular expression language (e.g.@:
1c5dfdad 15200@samp{operator*()}), they may be quoted with a backslash.
c906108c
SS
15201
15202@kindex info variables
15203@item info variables
0fe7935b 15204Print the names and data types of all variables that are defined
6ca652b0 15205outside of functions (i.e.@: excluding local variables).
c906108c
SS
15206
15207@item info variables @var{regexp}
15208Print the names and data types of all variables (except for local
15209variables) whose names contain a match for regular expression
15210@var{regexp}.
15211
b37303ee 15212@kindex info classes
721c2651 15213@cindex Objective-C, classes and selectors
b37303ee
AF
15214@item info classes
15215@itemx info classes @var{regexp}
15216Display all Objective-C classes in your program, or
15217(with the @var{regexp} argument) all those matching a particular regular
15218expression.
15219
15220@kindex info selectors
15221@item info selectors
15222@itemx info selectors @var{regexp}
15223Display all Objective-C selectors in your program, or
15224(with the @var{regexp} argument) all those matching a particular regular
15225expression.
15226
c906108c
SS
15227@ignore
15228This was never implemented.
15229@kindex info methods
15230@item info methods
15231@itemx info methods @var{regexp}
15232The @code{info methods} command permits the user to examine all defined
b37052ae
EZ
15233methods within C@t{++} program, or (with the @var{regexp} argument) a
15234specific set of methods found in the various C@t{++} classes. Many
15235C@t{++} classes provide a large number of methods. Thus, the output
c906108c
SS
15236from the @code{ptype} command can be overwhelming and hard to use. The
15237@code{info-methods} command filters the methods, printing only those
15238which match the regular-expression @var{regexp}.
15239@end ignore
15240
9c16f35a 15241@cindex opaque data types
c906108c
SS
15242@kindex set opaque-type-resolution
15243@item set opaque-type-resolution on
15244Tell @value{GDBN} to resolve opaque types. An opaque type is a type
15245declared as a pointer to a @code{struct}, @code{class}, or
15246@code{union}---for example, @code{struct MyType *}---that is used in one
15247source file although the full declaration of @code{struct MyType} is in
15248another source file. The default is on.
15249
15250A change in the setting of this subcommand will not take effect until
15251the next time symbols for a file are loaded.
15252
15253@item set opaque-type-resolution off
15254Tell @value{GDBN} not to resolve opaque types. In this case, the type
15255is printed as follows:
15256@smallexample
15257@{<no data fields>@}
15258@end smallexample
15259
15260@kindex show opaque-type-resolution
15261@item show opaque-type-resolution
15262Show whether opaque types are resolved or not.
c906108c
SS
15263
15264@kindex maint print symbols
15265@cindex symbol dump
15266@kindex maint print psymbols
15267@cindex partial symbol dump
15268@item maint print symbols @var{filename}
15269@itemx maint print psymbols @var{filename}
15270@itemx maint print msymbols @var{filename}
15271Write a dump of debugging symbol data into the file @var{filename}.
15272These commands are used to debug the @value{GDBN} symbol-reading code. Only
15273symbols with debugging data are included. If you use @samp{maint print
15274symbols}, @value{GDBN} includes all the symbols for which it has already
15275collected full details: that is, @var{filename} reflects symbols for
15276only those files whose symbols @value{GDBN} has read. You can use the
15277command @code{info sources} to find out which files these are. If you
15278use @samp{maint print psymbols} instead, the dump shows information about
15279symbols that @value{GDBN} only knows partially---that is, symbols defined in
15280files that @value{GDBN} has skimmed, but not yet read completely. Finally,
15281@samp{maint print msymbols} dumps just the minimal symbol information
15282required for each object file from which @value{GDBN} has read some symbols.
79a6e687 15283@xref{Files, ,Commands to Specify Files}, for a discussion of how
c906108c 15284@value{GDBN} reads symbols (in the description of @code{symbol-file}).
44ea7b70 15285
5e7b2f39
JB
15286@kindex maint info symtabs
15287@kindex maint info psymtabs
44ea7b70
JB
15288@cindex listing @value{GDBN}'s internal symbol tables
15289@cindex symbol tables, listing @value{GDBN}'s internal
15290@cindex full symbol tables, listing @value{GDBN}'s internal
15291@cindex partial symbol tables, listing @value{GDBN}'s internal
5e7b2f39
JB
15292@item maint info symtabs @r{[} @var{regexp} @r{]}
15293@itemx maint info psymtabs @r{[} @var{regexp} @r{]}
44ea7b70
JB
15294
15295List the @code{struct symtab} or @code{struct partial_symtab}
15296structures whose names match @var{regexp}. If @var{regexp} is not
15297given, list them all. The output includes expressions which you can
15298copy into a @value{GDBN} debugging this one to examine a particular
15299structure in more detail. For example:
15300
15301@smallexample
5e7b2f39 15302(@value{GDBP}) maint info psymtabs dwarf2read
44ea7b70
JB
15303@{ objfile /home/gnu/build/gdb/gdb
15304 ((struct objfile *) 0x82e69d0)
b383017d 15305 @{ psymtab /home/gnu/src/gdb/dwarf2read.c
44ea7b70
JB
15306 ((struct partial_symtab *) 0x8474b10)
15307 readin no
15308 fullname (null)
15309 text addresses 0x814d3c8 -- 0x8158074
15310 globals (* (struct partial_symbol **) 0x8507a08 @@ 9)
15311 statics (* (struct partial_symbol **) 0x40e95b78 @@ 2882)
15312 dependencies (none)
15313 @}
15314@}
5e7b2f39 15315(@value{GDBP}) maint info symtabs
44ea7b70
JB
15316(@value{GDBP})
15317@end smallexample
15318@noindent
15319We see that there is one partial symbol table whose filename contains
15320the string @samp{dwarf2read}, belonging to the @samp{gdb} executable;
15321and we see that @value{GDBN} has not read in any symtabs yet at all.
15322If we set a breakpoint on a function, that will cause @value{GDBN} to
15323read the symtab for the compilation unit containing that function:
15324
15325@smallexample
15326(@value{GDBP}) break dwarf2_psymtab_to_symtab
15327Breakpoint 1 at 0x814e5da: file /home/gnu/src/gdb/dwarf2read.c,
15328line 1574.
5e7b2f39 15329(@value{GDBP}) maint info symtabs
b383017d 15330@{ objfile /home/gnu/build/gdb/gdb
44ea7b70 15331 ((struct objfile *) 0x82e69d0)
b383017d 15332 @{ symtab /home/gnu/src/gdb/dwarf2read.c
44ea7b70
JB
15333 ((struct symtab *) 0x86c1f38)
15334 dirname (null)
15335 fullname (null)
15336 blockvector ((struct blockvector *) 0x86c1bd0) (primary)
1b39d5c0 15337 linetable ((struct linetable *) 0x8370fa0)
44ea7b70
JB
15338 debugformat DWARF 2
15339 @}
15340@}
b383017d 15341(@value{GDBP})
44ea7b70 15342@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
15343@end table
15344
44ea7b70 15345
6d2ebf8b 15346@node Altering
c906108c
SS
15347@chapter Altering Execution
15348
15349Once you think you have found an error in your program, you might want to
15350find out for certain whether correcting the apparent error would lead to
15351correct results in the rest of the run. You can find the answer by
15352experiment, using the @value{GDBN} features for altering execution of the
15353program.
15354
15355For example, you can store new values into variables or memory
7a292a7a
SS
15356locations, give your program a signal, restart it at a different
15357address, or even return prematurely from a function.
c906108c
SS
15358
15359@menu
15360* Assignment:: Assignment to variables
15361* Jumping:: Continuing at a different address
c906108c 15362* Signaling:: Giving your program a signal
c906108c
SS
15363* Returning:: Returning from a function
15364* Calling:: Calling your program's functions
15365* Patching:: Patching your program
15366@end menu
15367
6d2ebf8b 15368@node Assignment
79a6e687 15369@section Assignment to Variables
c906108c
SS
15370
15371@cindex assignment
15372@cindex setting variables
15373To alter the value of a variable, evaluate an assignment expression.
15374@xref{Expressions, ,Expressions}. For example,
15375
474c8240 15376@smallexample
c906108c 15377print x=4
474c8240 15378@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
15379
15380@noindent
15381stores the value 4 into the variable @code{x}, and then prints the
5d161b24 15382value of the assignment expression (which is 4).
c906108c
SS
15383@xref{Languages, ,Using @value{GDBN} with Different Languages}, for more
15384information on operators in supported languages.
c906108c
SS
15385
15386@kindex set variable
15387@cindex variables, setting
15388If you are not interested in seeing the value of the assignment, use the
15389@code{set} command instead of the @code{print} command. @code{set} is
15390really the same as @code{print} except that the expression's value is
15391not printed and is not put in the value history (@pxref{Value History,
79a6e687 15392,Value History}). The expression is evaluated only for its effects.
c906108c 15393
c906108c
SS
15394If the beginning of the argument string of the @code{set} command
15395appears identical to a @code{set} subcommand, use the @code{set
15396variable} command instead of just @code{set}. This command is identical
15397to @code{set} except for its lack of subcommands. For example, if your
15398program has a variable @code{width}, you get an error if you try to set
15399a new value with just @samp{set width=13}, because @value{GDBN} has the
15400command @code{set width}:
15401
474c8240 15402@smallexample
c906108c
SS
15403(@value{GDBP}) whatis width
15404type = double
15405(@value{GDBP}) p width
15406$4 = 13
15407(@value{GDBP}) set width=47
15408Invalid syntax in expression.
474c8240 15409@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
15410
15411@noindent
15412The invalid expression, of course, is @samp{=47}. In
15413order to actually set the program's variable @code{width}, use
15414
474c8240 15415@smallexample
c906108c 15416(@value{GDBP}) set var width=47
474c8240 15417@end smallexample
53a5351d 15418
c906108c
SS
15419Because the @code{set} command has many subcommands that can conflict
15420with the names of program variables, it is a good idea to use the
15421@code{set variable} command instead of just @code{set}. For example, if
15422your program has a variable @code{g}, you run into problems if you try
15423to set a new value with just @samp{set g=4}, because @value{GDBN} has
15424the command @code{set gnutarget}, abbreviated @code{set g}:
15425
474c8240 15426@smallexample
c906108c
SS
15427@group
15428(@value{GDBP}) whatis g
15429type = double
15430(@value{GDBP}) p g
15431$1 = 1
15432(@value{GDBP}) set g=4
2df3850c 15433(@value{GDBP}) p g
c906108c
SS
15434$2 = 1
15435(@value{GDBP}) r
15436The program being debugged has been started already.
15437Start it from the beginning? (y or n) y
15438Starting program: /home/smith/cc_progs/a.out
6d2ebf8b
SS
15439"/home/smith/cc_progs/a.out": can't open to read symbols:
15440 Invalid bfd target.
c906108c
SS
15441(@value{GDBP}) show g
15442The current BFD target is "=4".
15443@end group
474c8240 15444@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
15445
15446@noindent
15447The program variable @code{g} did not change, and you silently set the
15448@code{gnutarget} to an invalid value. In order to set the variable
15449@code{g}, use
15450
474c8240 15451@smallexample
c906108c 15452(@value{GDBP}) set var g=4
474c8240 15453@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
15454
15455@value{GDBN} allows more implicit conversions in assignments than C; you can
15456freely store an integer value into a pointer variable or vice versa,
15457and you can convert any structure to any other structure that is the
15458same length or shorter.
15459@comment FIXME: how do structs align/pad in these conversions?
15460@comment /doc@cygnus.com 18dec1990
15461
15462To store values into arbitrary places in memory, use the @samp{@{@dots{}@}}
15463construct to generate a value of specified type at a specified address
15464(@pxref{Expressions, ,Expressions}). For example, @code{@{int@}0x83040} refers
15465to memory location @code{0x83040} as an integer (which implies a certain size
15466and representation in memory), and
15467
474c8240 15468@smallexample
c906108c 15469set @{int@}0x83040 = 4
474c8240 15470@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
15471
15472@noindent
15473stores the value 4 into that memory location.
15474
6d2ebf8b 15475@node Jumping
79a6e687 15476@section Continuing at a Different Address
c906108c
SS
15477
15478Ordinarily, when you continue your program, you do so at the place where
15479it stopped, with the @code{continue} command. You can instead continue at
15480an address of your own choosing, with the following commands:
15481
15482@table @code
15483@kindex jump
15484@item jump @var{linespec}
2a25a5ba
EZ
15485@itemx jump @var{location}
15486Resume execution at line @var{linespec} or at address given by
15487@var{location}. Execution stops again immediately if there is a
15488breakpoint there. @xref{Specify Location}, for a description of the
15489different forms of @var{linespec} and @var{location}. It is common
15490practice to use the @code{tbreak} command in conjunction with
15491@code{jump}. @xref{Set Breaks, ,Setting Breakpoints}.
c906108c
SS
15492
15493The @code{jump} command does not change the current stack frame, or
15494the stack pointer, or the contents of any memory location or any
15495register other than the program counter. If line @var{linespec} is in
15496a different function from the one currently executing, the results may
15497be bizarre if the two functions expect different patterns of arguments or
15498of local variables. For this reason, the @code{jump} command requests
15499confirmation if the specified line is not in the function currently
15500executing. However, even bizarre results are predictable if you are
15501well acquainted with the machine-language code of your program.
c906108c
SS
15502@end table
15503
c906108c 15504@c Doesn't work on HP-UX; have to set $pcoqh and $pcoqt.
53a5351d
JM
15505On many systems, you can get much the same effect as the @code{jump}
15506command by storing a new value into the register @code{$pc}. The
15507difference is that this does not start your program running; it only
15508changes the address of where it @emph{will} run when you continue. For
15509example,
c906108c 15510
474c8240 15511@smallexample
c906108c 15512set $pc = 0x485
474c8240 15513@end smallexample
c906108c
SS
15514
15515@noindent
15516makes the next @code{continue} command or stepping command execute at
15517address @code{0x485}, rather than at the address where your program stopped.
79a6e687 15518@xref{Continuing and Stepping, ,Continuing and Stepping}.
c906108c
SS
15519
15520The most common occasion to use the @code{jump} command is to back
15521up---perhaps with more breakpoints set---over a portion of a program
15522that has already executed, in order to examine its execution in more
15523detail.
15524
c906108c 15525@c @group
6d2ebf8b 15526@node Signaling
79a6e687 15527@section Giving your Program a Signal
9c16f35a 15528@cindex deliver a signal to a program
c906108c
SS
15529
15530@table @code
15531@kindex signal
15532@item signal @var{signal}
15533Resume execution where your program stopped, but immediately give it the
15534signal @var{signal}. @var{signal} can be the name or the number of a
15535signal. For example, on many systems @code{signal 2} and @code{signal
15536SIGINT} are both ways of sending an interrupt signal.
15537
15538Alternatively, if @var{signal} is zero, continue execution without
15539giving a signal. This is useful when your program stopped on account of
15540a signal and would ordinary see the signal when resumed with the
15541@code{continue} command; @samp{signal 0} causes it to resume without a
15542signal.
15543
15544@code{signal} does not repeat when you press @key{RET} a second time
15545after executing the command.
15546@end table
15547@c @end group
15548
15549Invoking the @code{signal} command is not the same as invoking the
15550@code{kill} utility from the shell. Sending a signal with @code{kill}
15551causes @value{GDBN} to decide what to do with the signal depending on
15552the signal handling tables (@pxref{Signals}). The @code{signal} command
15553passes the signal directly to your program.
15554
c906108c 15555
6d2ebf8b 15556@node Returning
79a6e687 15557@section Returning from a Function
c906108c
SS
15558
15559@table @code
15560@cindex returning from a function
15561@kindex return
15562@item return
15563@itemx return @var{expression}
15564You can cancel execution of a function call with the @code{return}
15565command. If you give an
15566@var{expression} argument, its value is used as the function's return
15567value.
15568@end table
15569
15570When you use @code{return}, @value{GDBN} discards the selected stack frame
15571(and all frames within it). You can think of this as making the
15572discarded frame return prematurely. If you wish to specify a value to
15573be returned, give that value as the argument to @code{return}.
15574
15575This pops the selected stack frame (@pxref{Selection, ,Selecting a
79a6e687 15576Frame}), and any other frames inside of it, leaving its caller as the
c906108c
SS
15577innermost remaining frame. That frame becomes selected. The
15578specified value is stored in the registers used for returning values
15579of functions.
15580
15581The @code{return} command does not resume execution; it leaves the
15582program stopped in the state that would exist if the function had just
15583returned. In contrast, the @code{finish} command (@pxref{Continuing
79a6e687 15584and Stepping, ,Continuing and Stepping}) resumes execution until the
c906108c
SS
15585selected stack frame returns naturally.
15586
61ff14c6
JK
15587@value{GDBN} needs to know how the @var{expression} argument should be set for
15588the inferior. The concrete registers assignment depends on the OS ABI and the
15589type being returned by the selected stack frame. For example it is common for
15590OS ABI to return floating point values in FPU registers while integer values in
15591CPU registers. Still some ABIs return even floating point values in CPU
15592registers. Larger integer widths (such as @code{long long int}) also have
15593specific placement rules. @value{GDBN} already knows the OS ABI from its
15594current target so it needs to find out also the type being returned to make the
15595assignment into the right register(s).
15596
15597Normally, the selected stack frame has debug info. @value{GDBN} will always
15598use the debug info instead of the implicit type of @var{expression} when the
15599debug info is available. For example, if you type @kbd{return -1}, and the
15600function in the current stack frame is declared to return a @code{long long
15601int}, @value{GDBN} transparently converts the implicit @code{int} value of -1
15602into a @code{long long int}:
15603
15604@smallexample
15605Breakpoint 1, func () at gdb.base/return-nodebug.c:29
1560629 return 31;
15607(@value{GDBP}) return -1
15608Make func return now? (y or n) y
15609#0 0x004004f6 in main () at gdb.base/return-nodebug.c:43
1561043 printf ("result=%lld\n", func ());
15611(@value{GDBP})
15612@end smallexample
15613
15614However, if the selected stack frame does not have a debug info, e.g., if the
15615function was compiled without debug info, @value{GDBN} has to find out the type
15616to return from user. Specifying a different type by mistake may set the value
15617in different inferior registers than the caller code expects. For example,
15618typing @kbd{return -1} with its implicit type @code{int} would set only a part
15619of a @code{long long int} result for a debug info less function (on 32-bit
15620architectures). Therefore the user is required to specify the return type by
15621an appropriate cast explicitly:
15622
15623@smallexample
15624Breakpoint 2, 0x0040050b in func ()
15625(@value{GDBP}) return -1
15626Return value type not available for selected stack frame.
15627Please use an explicit cast of the value to return.
15628(@value{GDBP}) return (long long int) -1
15629Make selected stack frame return now? (y or n) y
15630#0 0x00400526 in main ()
15631(@value{GDBP})
15632@end smallexample
15633
6d2ebf8b 15634@node Calling
79a6e687 15635@section Calling Program Functions
c906108c 15636
f8568604 15637@table @code
c906108c 15638@cindex calling functions
f8568604
EZ
15639@cindex inferior functions, calling
15640@item print @var{expr}
d3e8051b 15641Evaluate the expression @var{expr} and display the resulting value.
f8568604
EZ
15642@var{expr} may include calls to functions in the program being
15643debugged.
15644
c906108c 15645@kindex call
c906108c
SS
15646@item call @var{expr}
15647Evaluate the expression @var{expr} without displaying @code{void}
15648returned values.
c906108c
SS
15649
15650You can use this variant of the @code{print} command if you want to
f8568604
EZ
15651execute a function from your program that does not return anything
15652(a.k.a.@: @dfn{a void function}), but without cluttering the output
15653with @code{void} returned values that @value{GDBN} will otherwise
15654print. If the result is not void, it is printed and saved in the
15655value history.
15656@end table
15657
9c16f35a
EZ
15658It is possible for the function you call via the @code{print} or
15659@code{call} command to generate a signal (e.g., if there's a bug in
15660the function, or if you passed it incorrect arguments). What happens
15661in that case is controlled by the @code{set unwindonsignal} command.
15662
7cd1089b
PM
15663Similarly, with a C@t{++} program it is possible for the function you
15664call via the @code{print} or @code{call} command to generate an
15665exception that is not handled due to the constraints of the dummy
15666frame. In this case, any exception that is raised in the frame, but has
15667an out-of-frame exception handler will not be found. GDB builds a
15668dummy-frame for the inferior function call, and the unwinder cannot
15669seek for exception handlers outside of this dummy-frame. What happens
15670in that case is controlled by the
15671@code{set unwind-on-terminating-exception} command.
15672
9c16f35a
EZ
15673@table @code
15674@item set unwindonsignal
15675@kindex set unwindonsignal
15676@cindex unwind stack in called functions
15677@cindex call dummy stack unwinding
15678Set unwinding of the stack if a signal is received while in a function
15679that @value{GDBN} called in the program being debugged. If set to on,
15680@value{GDBN} unwinds the stack it created for the call and restores
15681the context to what it was before the call. If set to off (the
15682default), @value{GDBN} stops in the frame where the signal was
15683received.
15684
15685@item show unwindonsignal
15686@kindex show unwindonsignal
15687Show the current setting of stack unwinding in the functions called by
15688@value{GDBN}.
7cd1089b
PM
15689
15690@item set unwind-on-terminating-exception
15691@kindex set unwind-on-terminating-exception
15692@cindex unwind stack in called functions with unhandled exceptions
15693@cindex call dummy stack unwinding on unhandled exception.
15694Set unwinding of the stack if a C@t{++} exception is raised, but left
15695unhandled while in a function that @value{GDBN} called in the program being
15696debugged. If set to on (the default), @value{GDBN} unwinds the stack
15697it created for the call and restores the context to what it was before
15698the call. If set to off, @value{GDBN} the exception is delivered to
15699the default C@t{++} exception handler and the inferior terminated.
15700
15701@item show unwind-on-terminating-exception
15702@kindex show unwind-on-terminating-exception
15703Show the current setting of stack unwinding in the functions called by
15704@value{GDBN}.
15705
9c16f35a
EZ
15706@end table
15707
f8568604
EZ
15708@cindex weak alias functions
15709Sometimes, a function you wish to call is actually a @dfn{weak alias}
15710for another function. In such case, @value{GDBN} might not pick up
15711the type information, including the types of the function arguments,
15712which causes @value{GDBN} to call the inferior function incorrectly.
15713As a result, the called function will function erroneously and may
15714even crash. A solution to that is to use the name of the aliased
15715function instead.
c906108c 15716
6d2ebf8b 15717@node Patching
79a6e687 15718@section Patching Programs
7a292a7a 15719
c906108c
SS
15720@cindex patching binaries
15721@cindex writing into executables
c906108c 15722@cindex writing into corefiles
c906108c 15723
7a292a7a
SS
15724By default, @value{GDBN} opens the file containing your program's
15725executable code (or the corefile) read-only. This prevents accidental
15726alterations to machine code; but it also prevents you from intentionally
15727patching your program's binary.
c906108c
SS
15728
15729If you'd like to be able to patch the binary, you can specify that
15730explicitly with the @code{set write} command. For example, you might
15731want to turn on internal debugging flags, or even to make emergency
15732repairs.
15733
15734@table @code
15735@kindex set write
15736@item set write on
15737@itemx set write off
7a292a7a 15738If you specify @samp{set write on}, @value{GDBN} opens executable and
20924a55 15739core files for both reading and writing; if you specify @kbd{set write
c906108c
SS
15740off} (the default), @value{GDBN} opens them read-only.
15741
15742If you have already loaded a file, you must load it again (using the
7a292a7a
SS
15743@code{exec-file} or @code{core-file} command) after changing @code{set
15744write}, for your new setting to take effect.
c906108c
SS
15745
15746@item show write
15747@kindex show write
7a292a7a
SS
15748Display whether executable files and core files are opened for writing
15749as well as reading.
c906108c
SS
15750@end table
15751
6d2ebf8b 15752@node GDB Files
c906108c
SS
15753@chapter @value{GDBN} Files
15754
7a292a7a
SS
15755@value{GDBN} needs to know the file name of the program to be debugged,
15756both in order to read its symbol table and in order to start your
15757program. To debug a core dump of a previous run, you must also tell
15758@value{GDBN} the name of the core dump file.
c906108c
SS
15759
15760@menu
15761* Files:: Commands to specify files
5b5d99cf 15762* Separate Debug Files:: Debugging information in separate files
9291a0cd 15763* Index Files:: Index files speed up GDB
c906108c 15764* Symbol Errors:: Errors reading symbol files
b14b1491 15765* Data Files:: GDB data files
c906108c
SS
15766@end menu
15767
6d2ebf8b 15768@node Files
79a6e687 15769@section Commands to Specify Files
c906108c 15770
7a292a7a 15771@cindex symbol table
c906108c 15772@cindex core dump file
7a292a7a
SS
15773
15774You may want to specify executable and core dump file names. The usual
15775way to do this is at start-up time, using the arguments to
15776@value{GDBN}'s start-up commands (@pxref{Invocation, , Getting In and
15777Out of @value{GDBN}}).
c906108c
SS
15778
15779Occasionally it is necessary to change to a different file during a
397ca115
EZ
15780@value{GDBN} session. Or you may run @value{GDBN} and forget to
15781specify a file you want to use. Or you are debugging a remote target
79a6e687
BW
15782via @code{gdbserver} (@pxref{Server, file, Using the @code{gdbserver}
15783Program}). In these situations the @value{GDBN} commands to specify
0869d01b 15784new files are useful.
c906108c
SS
15785
15786@table @code
15787@cindex executable file
15788@kindex file
15789@item file @var{filename}
15790Use @var{filename} as the program to be debugged. It is read for its
15791symbols and for the contents of pure memory. It is also the program
15792executed when you use the @code{run} command. If you do not specify a
5d161b24
DB
15793directory and the file is not found in the @value{GDBN} working directory,
15794@value{GDBN} uses the environment variable @code{PATH} as a list of
15795directories to search, just as the shell does when looking for a program
15796to run. You can change the value of this variable, for both @value{GDBN}
c906108c
SS
15797and your program, using the @code{path} command.
15798
fc8be69e
EZ
15799@cindex unlinked object files
15800@cindex patching object files
15801You can load unlinked object @file{.o} files into @value{GDBN} using
15802the @code{file} command. You will not be able to ``run'' an object
15803file, but you can disassemble functions and inspect variables. Also,
15804if the underlying BFD functionality supports it, you could use
15805@kbd{gdb -write} to patch object files using this technique. Note
15806that @value{GDBN} can neither interpret nor modify relocations in this
15807case, so branches and some initialized variables will appear to go to
15808the wrong place. But this feature is still handy from time to time.
15809
c906108c
SS
15810@item file
15811@code{file} with no argument makes @value{GDBN} discard any information it
15812has on both executable file and the symbol table.
15813
15814@kindex exec-file
15815@item exec-file @r{[} @var{filename} @r{]}
15816Specify that the program to be run (but not the symbol table) is found
15817in @var{filename}. @value{GDBN} searches the environment variable @code{PATH}
15818if necessary to locate your program. Omitting @var{filename} means to
15819discard information on the executable file.
15820
15821@kindex symbol-file
15822@item symbol-file @r{[} @var{filename} @r{]}
15823Read symbol table information from file @var{filename}. @code{PATH} is
15824searched when necessary. Use the @code{file} command to get both symbol
15825table and program to run from the same file.
15826
15827@code{symbol-file} with no argument clears out @value{GDBN} information on your
15828program's symbol table.
15829
ae5a43e0
DJ
15830The @code{symbol-file} command causes @value{GDBN} to forget the contents of
15831some breakpoints and auto-display expressions. This is because they may
15832contain pointers to the internal data recording symbols and data types,
15833which are part of the old symbol table data being discarded inside
15834@value{GDBN}.
c906108c
SS
15835
15836@code{symbol-file} does not repeat if you press @key{RET} again after
15837executing it once.
15838
15839When @value{GDBN} is configured for a particular environment, it
15840understands debugging information in whatever format is the standard
15841generated for that environment; you may use either a @sc{gnu} compiler, or
15842other compilers that adhere to the local conventions.
c906108c 15843Best results are usually obtained from @sc{gnu} compilers; for example,
e22ea452 15844using @code{@value{NGCC}} you can generate debugging information for
c906108c 15845optimized code.
c906108c
SS
15846
15847For most kinds of object files, with the exception of old SVR3 systems
15848using COFF, the @code{symbol-file} command does not normally read the
15849symbol table in full right away. Instead, it scans the symbol table
15850quickly to find which source files and which symbols are present. The
15851details are read later, one source file at a time, as they are needed.
15852
15853The purpose of this two-stage reading strategy is to make @value{GDBN}
15854start up faster. For the most part, it is invisible except for
15855occasional pauses while the symbol table details for a particular source
15856file are being read. (The @code{set verbose} command can turn these
15857pauses into messages if desired. @xref{Messages/Warnings, ,Optional
79a6e687 15858Warnings and Messages}.)
c906108c 15859
c906108c
SS
15860We have not implemented the two-stage strategy for COFF yet. When the
15861symbol table is stored in COFF format, @code{symbol-file} reads the
15862symbol table data in full right away. Note that ``stabs-in-COFF''
15863still does the two-stage strategy, since the debug info is actually
15864in stabs format.
15865
15866@kindex readnow
15867@cindex reading symbols immediately
15868@cindex symbols, reading immediately
6ac33a4e
TT
15869@item symbol-file @r{[} -readnow @r{]} @var{filename}
15870@itemx file @r{[} -readnow @r{]} @var{filename}
c906108c
SS
15871You can override the @value{GDBN} two-stage strategy for reading symbol
15872tables by using the @samp{-readnow} option with any of the commands that
15873load symbol table information, if you want to be sure @value{GDBN} has the
5d161b24 15874entire symbol table available.
c906108c 15875
c906108c
SS
15876@c FIXME: for now no mention of directories, since this seems to be in
15877@c flux. 13mar1992 status is that in theory GDB would look either in
15878@c current dir or in same dir as myprog; but issues like competing
15879@c GDB's, or clutter in system dirs, mean that in practice right now
15880@c only current dir is used. FFish says maybe a special GDB hierarchy
15881@c (eg rooted in val of env var GDBSYMS) could exist for mappable symbol
15882@c files.
15883
c906108c 15884@kindex core-file
09d4efe1 15885@item core-file @r{[}@var{filename}@r{]}
4644b6e3 15886@itemx core
c906108c
SS
15887Specify the whereabouts of a core dump file to be used as the ``contents
15888of memory''. Traditionally, core files contain only some parts of the
15889address space of the process that generated them; @value{GDBN} can access the
15890executable file itself for other parts.
15891
15892@code{core-file} with no argument specifies that no core file is
15893to be used.
15894
15895Note that the core file is ignored when your program is actually running
7a292a7a
SS
15896under @value{GDBN}. So, if you have been running your program and you
15897wish to debug a core file instead, you must kill the subprocess in which
15898the program is running. To do this, use the @code{kill} command
79a6e687 15899(@pxref{Kill Process, ,Killing the Child Process}).
c906108c 15900
c906108c
SS
15901@kindex add-symbol-file
15902@cindex dynamic linking
15903@item add-symbol-file @var{filename} @var{address}
a94ab193 15904@itemx add-symbol-file @var{filename} @var{address} @r{[} -readnow @r{]}
24bdad53 15905@itemx add-symbol-file @var{filename} @var{address} -s @var{section} @var{address} @dots{}
96a2c332
SS
15906The @code{add-symbol-file} command reads additional symbol table
15907information from the file @var{filename}. You would use this command
15908when @var{filename} has been dynamically loaded (by some other means)
15909into the program that is running. @var{address} should be the memory
15910address at which the file has been loaded; @value{GDBN} cannot figure
d167840f 15911this out for itself. You can additionally specify an arbitrary number
24bdad53 15912of @samp{-s @var{section} @var{address}} pairs, to give an explicit
d167840f
EZ
15913section name and base address for that section. You can specify any
15914@var{address} as an expression.
c906108c
SS
15915
15916The symbol table of the file @var{filename} is added to the symbol table
15917originally read with the @code{symbol-file} command. You can use the
96a2c332
SS
15918@code{add-symbol-file} command any number of times; the new symbol data
15919thus read keeps adding to the old. To discard all old symbol data
15920instead, use the @code{symbol-file} command without any arguments.
c906108c 15921
17d9d558
JB
15922@cindex relocatable object files, reading symbols from
15923@cindex object files, relocatable, reading symbols from
15924@cindex reading symbols from relocatable object files
15925@cindex symbols, reading from relocatable object files
15926@cindex @file{.o} files, reading symbols from
15927Although @var{filename} is typically a shared library file, an
15928executable file, or some other object file which has been fully
15929relocated for loading into a process, you can also load symbolic
15930information from relocatable @file{.o} files, as long as:
15931
15932@itemize @bullet
15933@item
15934the file's symbolic information refers only to linker symbols defined in
15935that file, not to symbols defined by other object files,
15936@item
15937every section the file's symbolic information refers to has actually
15938been loaded into the inferior, as it appears in the file, and
15939@item
15940you can determine the address at which every section was loaded, and
15941provide these to the @code{add-symbol-file} command.
15942@end itemize
15943
15944@noindent
15945Some embedded operating systems, like Sun Chorus and VxWorks, can load
15946relocatable files into an already running program; such systems
15947typically make the requirements above easy to meet. However, it's
15948important to recognize that many native systems use complex link
49efadf5 15949procedures (@code{.linkonce} section factoring and C@t{++} constructor table
17d9d558
JB
15950assembly, for example) that make the requirements difficult to meet. In
15951general, one cannot assume that using @code{add-symbol-file} to read a
15952relocatable object file's symbolic information will have the same effect
15953as linking the relocatable object file into the program in the normal
15954way.
15955
c906108c
SS
15956@code{add-symbol-file} does not repeat if you press @key{RET} after using it.
15957
c45da7e6
EZ
15958@kindex add-symbol-file-from-memory
15959@cindex @code{syscall DSO}
15960@cindex load symbols from memory
15961@item add-symbol-file-from-memory @var{address}
15962Load symbols from the given @var{address} in a dynamically loaded
15963object file whose image is mapped directly into the inferior's memory.
15964For example, the Linux kernel maps a @code{syscall DSO} into each
15965process's address space; this DSO provides kernel-specific code for
15966some system calls. The argument can be any expression whose
15967evaluation yields the address of the file's shared object file header.
15968For this command to work, you must have used @code{symbol-file} or
15969@code{exec-file} commands in advance.
15970
09d4efe1
EZ
15971@kindex add-shared-symbol-files
15972@kindex assf
15973@item add-shared-symbol-files @var{library-file}
15974@itemx assf @var{library-file}
15975The @code{add-shared-symbol-files} command can currently be used only
15976in the Cygwin build of @value{GDBN} on MS-Windows OS, where it is an
15977alias for the @code{dll-symbols} command (@pxref{Cygwin Native}).
15978@value{GDBN} automatically looks for shared libraries, however if
15979@value{GDBN} does not find yours, you can invoke
15980@code{add-shared-symbol-files}. It takes one argument: the shared
15981library's file name. @code{assf} is a shorthand alias for
15982@code{add-shared-symbol-files}.
c906108c 15983
c906108c 15984@kindex section
09d4efe1
EZ
15985@item section @var{section} @var{addr}
15986The @code{section} command changes the base address of the named
15987@var{section} of the exec file to @var{addr}. This can be used if the
15988exec file does not contain section addresses, (such as in the
15989@code{a.out} format), or when the addresses specified in the file
15990itself are wrong. Each section must be changed separately. The
15991@code{info files} command, described below, lists all the sections and
15992their addresses.
c906108c
SS
15993
15994@kindex info files
15995@kindex info target
15996@item info files
15997@itemx info target
7a292a7a
SS
15998@code{info files} and @code{info target} are synonymous; both print the
15999current target (@pxref{Targets, ,Specifying a Debugging Target}),
16000including the names of the executable and core dump files currently in
16001use by @value{GDBN}, and the files from which symbols were loaded. The
16002command @code{help target} lists all possible targets rather than
16003current ones.
16004
fe95c787
MS
16005@kindex maint info sections
16006@item maint info sections
16007Another command that can give you extra information about program sections
16008is @code{maint info sections}. In addition to the section information
16009displayed by @code{info files}, this command displays the flags and file
16010offset of each section in the executable and core dump files. In addition,
16011@code{maint info sections} provides the following command options (which
16012may be arbitrarily combined):
16013
16014@table @code
16015@item ALLOBJ
16016Display sections for all loaded object files, including shared libraries.
16017@item @var{sections}
6600abed 16018Display info only for named @var{sections}.
fe95c787
MS
16019@item @var{section-flags}
16020Display info only for sections for which @var{section-flags} are true.
16021The section flags that @value{GDBN} currently knows about are:
16022@table @code
16023@item ALLOC
16024Section will have space allocated in the process when loaded.
16025Set for all sections except those containing debug information.
16026@item LOAD
16027Section will be loaded from the file into the child process memory.
16028Set for pre-initialized code and data, clear for @code{.bss} sections.
16029@item RELOC
16030Section needs to be relocated before loading.
16031@item READONLY
16032Section cannot be modified by the child process.
16033@item CODE
16034Section contains executable code only.
6600abed 16035@item DATA
fe95c787
MS
16036Section contains data only (no executable code).
16037@item ROM
16038Section will reside in ROM.
16039@item CONSTRUCTOR
16040Section contains data for constructor/destructor lists.
16041@item HAS_CONTENTS
16042Section is not empty.
16043@item NEVER_LOAD
16044An instruction to the linker to not output the section.
16045@item COFF_SHARED_LIBRARY
16046A notification to the linker that the section contains
16047COFF shared library information.
16048@item IS_COMMON
16049Section contains common symbols.
16050@end table
16051@end table
6763aef9 16052@kindex set trust-readonly-sections
9c16f35a 16053@cindex read-only sections
6763aef9
MS
16054@item set trust-readonly-sections on
16055Tell @value{GDBN} that readonly sections in your object file
6ca652b0 16056really are read-only (i.e.@: that their contents will not change).
6763aef9
MS
16057In that case, @value{GDBN} can fetch values from these sections
16058out of the object file, rather than from the target program.
16059For some targets (notably embedded ones), this can be a significant
16060enhancement to debugging performance.
16061
16062The default is off.
16063
16064@item set trust-readonly-sections off
15110bc3 16065Tell @value{GDBN} not to trust readonly sections. This means that
6763aef9
MS
16066the contents of the section might change while the program is running,
16067and must therefore be fetched from the target when needed.
9c16f35a
EZ
16068
16069@item show trust-readonly-sections
16070Show the current setting of trusting readonly sections.
c906108c
SS
16071@end table
16072
16073All file-specifying commands allow both absolute and relative file names
16074as arguments. @value{GDBN} always converts the file name to an absolute file
16075name and remembers it that way.
16076
c906108c 16077@cindex shared libraries
9cceb671
DJ
16078@anchor{Shared Libraries}
16079@value{GDBN} supports @sc{gnu}/Linux, MS-Windows, HP-UX, SunOS, SVr4, Irix,
9c16f35a 16080and IBM RS/6000 AIX shared libraries.
53a5351d 16081
9cceb671
DJ
16082On MS-Windows @value{GDBN} must be linked with the Expat library to support
16083shared libraries. @xref{Expat}.
16084
c906108c
SS
16085@value{GDBN} automatically loads symbol definitions from shared libraries
16086when you use the @code{run} command, or when you examine a core file.
16087(Before you issue the @code{run} command, @value{GDBN} does not understand
16088references to a function in a shared library, however---unless you are
16089debugging a core file).
53a5351d
JM
16090
16091On HP-UX, if the program loads a library explicitly, @value{GDBN}
16092automatically loads the symbols at the time of the @code{shl_load} call.
16093
c906108c
SS
16094@c FIXME: some @value{GDBN} release may permit some refs to undef
16095@c FIXME...symbols---eg in a break cmd---assuming they are from a shared
16096@c FIXME...lib; check this from time to time when updating manual
16097
b7209cb4
FF
16098There are times, however, when you may wish to not automatically load
16099symbol definitions from shared libraries, such as when they are
16100particularly large or there are many of them.
16101
16102To control the automatic loading of shared library symbols, use the
16103commands:
16104
16105@table @code
16106@kindex set auto-solib-add
16107@item set auto-solib-add @var{mode}
16108If @var{mode} is @code{on}, symbols from all shared object libraries
16109will be loaded automatically when the inferior begins execution, you
16110attach to an independently started inferior, or when the dynamic linker
16111informs @value{GDBN} that a new library has been loaded. If @var{mode}
16112is @code{off}, symbols must be loaded manually, using the
16113@code{sharedlibrary} command. The default value is @code{on}.
16114
dcaf7c2c
EZ
16115@cindex memory used for symbol tables
16116If your program uses lots of shared libraries with debug info that
16117takes large amounts of memory, you can decrease the @value{GDBN}
16118memory footprint by preventing it from automatically loading the
16119symbols from shared libraries. To that end, type @kbd{set
16120auto-solib-add off} before running the inferior, then load each
16121library whose debug symbols you do need with @kbd{sharedlibrary
d3e8051b 16122@var{regexp}}, where @var{regexp} is a regular expression that matches
dcaf7c2c
EZ
16123the libraries whose symbols you want to be loaded.
16124
b7209cb4
FF
16125@kindex show auto-solib-add
16126@item show auto-solib-add
16127Display the current autoloading mode.
16128@end table
16129
c45da7e6 16130@cindex load shared library
b7209cb4
FF
16131To explicitly load shared library symbols, use the @code{sharedlibrary}
16132command:
16133
c906108c
SS
16134@table @code
16135@kindex info sharedlibrary
16136@kindex info share
55333a84
DE
16137@item info share @var{regex}
16138@itemx info sharedlibrary @var{regex}
16139Print the names of the shared libraries which are currently loaded
16140that match @var{regex}. If @var{regex} is omitted then print
16141all shared libraries that are loaded.
c906108c
SS
16142
16143@kindex sharedlibrary
16144@kindex share
16145@item sharedlibrary @var{regex}
16146@itemx share @var{regex}
c906108c
SS
16147Load shared object library symbols for files matching a
16148Unix regular expression.
16149As with files loaded automatically, it only loads shared libraries
16150required by your program for a core file or after typing @code{run}. If
16151@var{regex} is omitted all shared libraries required by your program are
16152loaded.
c45da7e6
EZ
16153
16154@item nosharedlibrary
16155@kindex nosharedlibrary
16156@cindex unload symbols from shared libraries
16157Unload all shared object library symbols. This discards all symbols
16158that have been loaded from all shared libraries. Symbols from shared
16159libraries that were loaded by explicit user requests are not
16160discarded.
c906108c
SS
16161@end table
16162
721c2651 16163Sometimes you may wish that @value{GDBN} stops and gives you control
edcc5120
TT
16164when any of shared library events happen. The best way to do this is
16165to use @code{catch load} and @code{catch unload} (@pxref{Set
16166Catchpoints}).
16167
16168@value{GDBN} also supports the the @code{set stop-on-solib-events}
16169command for this. This command exists for historical reasons. It is
16170less useful than setting a catchpoint, because it does not allow for
16171conditions or commands as a catchpoint does.
721c2651
EZ
16172
16173@table @code
16174@item set stop-on-solib-events
16175@kindex set stop-on-solib-events
16176This command controls whether @value{GDBN} should give you control
16177when the dynamic linker notifies it about some shared library event.
16178The most common event of interest is loading or unloading of a new
16179shared library.
16180
16181@item show stop-on-solib-events
16182@kindex show stop-on-solib-events
16183Show whether @value{GDBN} stops and gives you control when shared
16184library events happen.
16185@end table
16186
f5ebfba0 16187Shared libraries are also supported in many cross or remote debugging
f1838a98
UW
16188configurations. @value{GDBN} needs to have access to the target's libraries;
16189this can be accomplished either by providing copies of the libraries
16190on the host system, or by asking @value{GDBN} to automatically retrieve the
16191libraries from the target. If copies of the target libraries are
16192provided, they need to be the same as the target libraries, although the
f5ebfba0
DJ
16193copies on the target can be stripped as long as the copies on the host are
16194not.
16195
59b7b46f
EZ
16196@cindex where to look for shared libraries
16197For remote debugging, you need to tell @value{GDBN} where the target
16198libraries are, so that it can load the correct copies---otherwise, it
16199may try to load the host's libraries. @value{GDBN} has two variables
16200to specify the search directories for target libraries.
f5ebfba0
DJ
16201
16202@table @code
59b7b46f 16203@cindex prefix for shared library file names
f822c95b 16204@cindex system root, alternate
f5ebfba0 16205@kindex set solib-absolute-prefix
f822c95b
DJ
16206@kindex set sysroot
16207@item set sysroot @var{path}
16208Use @var{path} as the system root for the program being debugged. Any
16209absolute shared library paths will be prefixed with @var{path}; many
16210runtime loaders store the absolute paths to the shared library in the
16211target program's memory. If you use @code{set sysroot} to find shared
16212libraries, they need to be laid out in the same way that they are on
16213the target, with e.g.@: a @file{/lib} and @file{/usr/lib} hierarchy
16214under @var{path}.
16215
f1838a98
UW
16216If @var{path} starts with the sequence @file{remote:}, @value{GDBN} will
16217retrieve the target libraries from the remote system. This is only
16218supported when using a remote target that supports the @code{remote get}
16219command (@pxref{File Transfer,,Sending files to a remote system}).
16220The part of @var{path} following the initial @file{remote:}
16221(if present) is used as system root prefix on the remote file system.
16222@footnote{If you want to specify a local system root using a directory
16223that happens to be named @file{remote:}, you need to use some equivalent
16224variant of the name like @file{./remote:}.}
16225
ab38a727
PA
16226For targets with an MS-DOS based filesystem, such as MS-Windows and
16227SymbianOS, @value{GDBN} tries prefixing a few variants of the target
16228absolute file name with @var{path}. But first, on Unix hosts,
16229@value{GDBN} converts all backslash directory separators into forward
16230slashes, because the backslash is not a directory separator on Unix:
16231
16232@smallexample
16233 c:\foo\bar.dll @result{} c:/foo/bar.dll
16234@end smallexample
16235
16236Then, @value{GDBN} attempts prefixing the target file name with
16237@var{path}, and looks for the resulting file name in the host file
16238system:
16239
16240@smallexample
16241 c:/foo/bar.dll @result{} /path/to/sysroot/c:/foo/bar.dll
16242@end smallexample
16243
16244If that does not find the shared library, @value{GDBN} tries removing
16245the @samp{:} character from the drive spec, both for convenience, and,
16246for the case of the host file system not supporting file names with
16247colons:
16248
16249@smallexample
16250 c:/foo/bar.dll @result{} /path/to/sysroot/c/foo/bar.dll
16251@end smallexample
16252
16253This makes it possible to have a system root that mirrors a target
16254with more than one drive. E.g., you may want to setup your local
16255copies of the target system shared libraries like so (note @samp{c} vs
16256@samp{z}):
16257
16258@smallexample
16259 @file{/path/to/sysroot/c/sys/bin/foo.dll}
16260 @file{/path/to/sysroot/c/sys/bin/bar.dll}
16261 @file{/path/to/sysroot/z/sys/bin/bar.dll}
16262@end smallexample
16263
16264@noindent
16265and point the system root at @file{/path/to/sysroot}, so that
16266@value{GDBN} can find the correct copies of both
16267@file{c:\sys\bin\foo.dll}, and @file{z:\sys\bin\bar.dll}.
16268
16269If that still does not find the shared library, @value{GDBN} tries
16270removing the whole drive spec from the target file name:
16271
16272@smallexample
16273 c:/foo/bar.dll @result{} /path/to/sysroot/foo/bar.dll
16274@end smallexample
16275
16276This last lookup makes it possible to not care about the drive name,
16277if you don't want or need to.
16278
f822c95b
DJ
16279The @code{set solib-absolute-prefix} command is an alias for @code{set
16280sysroot}.
16281
16282@cindex default system root
59b7b46f 16283@cindex @samp{--with-sysroot}
f822c95b
DJ
16284You can set the default system root by using the configure-time
16285@samp{--with-sysroot} option. If the system root is inside
16286@value{GDBN}'s configured binary prefix (set with @samp{--prefix} or
16287@samp{--exec-prefix}), then the default system root will be updated
16288automatically if the installed @value{GDBN} is moved to a new
16289location.
16290
16291@kindex show sysroot
16292@item show sysroot
f5ebfba0
DJ
16293Display the current shared library prefix.
16294
16295@kindex set solib-search-path
16296@item set solib-search-path @var{path}
f822c95b
DJ
16297If this variable is set, @var{path} is a colon-separated list of
16298directories to search for shared libraries. @samp{solib-search-path}
16299is used after @samp{sysroot} fails to locate the library, or if the
16300path to the library is relative instead of absolute. If you want to
16301use @samp{solib-search-path} instead of @samp{sysroot}, be sure to set
d3e8051b 16302@samp{sysroot} to a nonexistent directory to prevent @value{GDBN} from
f822c95b 16303finding your host's libraries. @samp{sysroot} is preferred; setting
d3e8051b 16304it to a nonexistent directory may interfere with automatic loading
f822c95b 16305of shared library symbols.
f5ebfba0
DJ
16306
16307@kindex show solib-search-path
16308@item show solib-search-path
16309Display the current shared library search path.
ab38a727
PA
16310
16311@cindex DOS file-name semantics of file names.
16312@kindex set target-file-system-kind (unix|dos-based|auto)
16313@kindex show target-file-system-kind
16314@item set target-file-system-kind @var{kind}
16315Set assumed file system kind for target reported file names.
16316
16317Shared library file names as reported by the target system may not
16318make sense as is on the system @value{GDBN} is running on. For
16319example, when remote debugging a target that has MS-DOS based file
16320system semantics, from a Unix host, the target may be reporting to
16321@value{GDBN} a list of loaded shared libraries with file names such as
16322@file{c:\Windows\kernel32.dll}. On Unix hosts, there's no concept of
16323drive letters, so the @samp{c:\} prefix is not normally understood as
16324indicating an absolute file name, and neither is the backslash
16325normally considered a directory separator character. In that case,
16326the native file system would interpret this whole absolute file name
16327as a relative file name with no directory components. This would make
16328it impossible to point @value{GDBN} at a copy of the remote target's
16329shared libraries on the host using @code{set sysroot}, and impractical
16330with @code{set solib-search-path}. Setting
16331@code{target-file-system-kind} to @code{dos-based} tells @value{GDBN}
16332to interpret such file names similarly to how the target would, and to
16333map them to file names valid on @value{GDBN}'s native file system
16334semantics. The value of @var{kind} can be @code{"auto"}, in addition
16335to one of the supported file system kinds. In that case, @value{GDBN}
16336tries to determine the appropriate file system variant based on the
16337current target's operating system (@pxref{ABI, ,Configuring the
16338Current ABI}). The supported file system settings are:
16339
16340@table @code
16341@item unix
16342Instruct @value{GDBN} to assume the target file system is of Unix
16343kind. Only file names starting the forward slash (@samp{/}) character
16344are considered absolute, and the directory separator character is also
16345the forward slash.
16346
16347@item dos-based
16348Instruct @value{GDBN} to assume the target file system is DOS based.
16349File names starting with either a forward slash, or a drive letter
16350followed by a colon (e.g., @samp{c:}), are considered absolute, and
16351both the slash (@samp{/}) and the backslash (@samp{\\}) characters are
16352considered directory separators.
16353
16354@item auto
16355Instruct @value{GDBN} to use the file system kind associated with the
16356target operating system (@pxref{ABI, ,Configuring the Current ABI}).
16357This is the default.
16358@end table
f5ebfba0
DJ
16359@end table
16360
c011a4f4
DE
16361@cindex file name canonicalization
16362@cindex base name differences
16363When processing file names provided by the user, @value{GDBN}
16364frequently needs to compare them to the file names recorded in the
16365program's debug info. Normally, @value{GDBN} compares just the
16366@dfn{base names} of the files as strings, which is reasonably fast
16367even for very large programs. (The base name of a file is the last
16368portion of its name, after stripping all the leading directories.)
16369This shortcut in comparison is based upon the assumption that files
16370cannot have more than one base name. This is usually true, but
16371references to files that use symlinks or similar filesystem
16372facilities violate that assumption. If your program records files
16373using such facilities, or if you provide file names to @value{GDBN}
16374using symlinks etc., you can set @code{basenames-may-differ} to
16375@code{true} to instruct @value{GDBN} to completely canonicalize each
16376pair of file names it needs to compare. This will make file-name
16377comparisons accurate, but at a price of a significant slowdown.
16378
16379@table @code
16380@item set basenames-may-differ
16381@kindex set basenames-may-differ
16382Set whether a source file may have multiple base names.
16383
16384@item show basenames-may-differ
16385@kindex show basenames-may-differ
16386Show whether a source file may have multiple base names.
16387@end table
5b5d99cf
JB
16388
16389@node Separate Debug Files
16390@section Debugging Information in Separate Files
16391@cindex separate debugging information files
16392@cindex debugging information in separate files
16393@cindex @file{.debug} subdirectories
16394@cindex debugging information directory, global
f307c045 16395@cindex global debugging information directories
c7e83d54
EZ
16396@cindex build ID, and separate debugging files
16397@cindex @file{.build-id} directory
5b5d99cf
JB
16398
16399@value{GDBN} allows you to put a program's debugging information in a
16400file separate from the executable itself, in a way that allows
16401@value{GDBN} to find and load the debugging information automatically.
c7e83d54
EZ
16402Since debugging information can be very large---sometimes larger
16403than the executable code itself---some systems distribute debugging
5b5d99cf
JB
16404information for their executables in separate files, which users can
16405install only when they need to debug a problem.
16406
c7e83d54
EZ
16407@value{GDBN} supports two ways of specifying the separate debug info
16408file:
5b5d99cf
JB
16409
16410@itemize @bullet
16411@item
c7e83d54
EZ
16412The executable contains a @dfn{debug link} that specifies the name of
16413the separate debug info file. The separate debug file's name is
16414usually @file{@var{executable}.debug}, where @var{executable} is the
16415name of the corresponding executable file without leading directories
16416(e.g., @file{ls.debug} for @file{/usr/bin/ls}). In addition, the
99e008fe
EZ
16417debug link specifies a 32-bit @dfn{Cyclic Redundancy Check} (CRC)
16418checksum for the debug file, which @value{GDBN} uses to validate that
16419the executable and the debug file came from the same build.
c7e83d54
EZ
16420
16421@item
7e27a47a 16422The executable contains a @dfn{build ID}, a unique bit string that is
c7e83d54 16423also present in the corresponding debug info file. (This is supported
7e27a47a
EZ
16424only on some operating systems, notably those which use the ELF format
16425for binary files and the @sc{gnu} Binutils.) For more details about
16426this feature, see the description of the @option{--build-id}
16427command-line option in @ref{Options, , Command Line Options, ld.info,
16428The GNU Linker}. The debug info file's name is not specified
16429explicitly by the build ID, but can be computed from the build ID, see
16430below.
d3750b24
JK
16431@end itemize
16432
c7e83d54
EZ
16433Depending on the way the debug info file is specified, @value{GDBN}
16434uses two different methods of looking for the debug file:
d3750b24
JK
16435
16436@itemize @bullet
16437@item
c7e83d54
EZ
16438For the ``debug link'' method, @value{GDBN} looks up the named file in
16439the directory of the executable file, then in a subdirectory of that
f307c045
JK
16440directory named @file{.debug}, and finally under each one of the global debug
16441directories, in a subdirectory whose name is identical to the leading
c7e83d54
EZ
16442directories of the executable's absolute file name.
16443
16444@item
83f83d7f 16445For the ``build ID'' method, @value{GDBN} looks in the
f307c045
JK
16446@file{.build-id} subdirectory of each one of the global debug directories for
16447a file named @file{@var{nn}/@var{nnnnnnnn}.debug}, where @var{nn} are the
7e27a47a
EZ
16448first 2 hex characters of the build ID bit string, and @var{nnnnnnnn}
16449are the rest of the bit string. (Real build ID strings are 32 or more
16450hex characters, not 10.)
c7e83d54
EZ
16451@end itemize
16452
16453So, for example, suppose you ask @value{GDBN} to debug
7e27a47a
EZ
16454@file{/usr/bin/ls}, which has a debug link that specifies the
16455file @file{ls.debug}, and a build ID whose value in hex is
f307c045 16456@code{abcdef1234}. If the list of the global debug directories includes
c7e83d54
EZ
16457@file{/usr/lib/debug}, then @value{GDBN} will look for the following
16458debug information files, in the indicated order:
16459
16460@itemize @minus
16461@item
16462@file{/usr/lib/debug/.build-id/ab/cdef1234.debug}
d3750b24 16463@item
c7e83d54 16464@file{/usr/bin/ls.debug}
5b5d99cf 16465@item
c7e83d54 16466@file{/usr/bin/.debug/ls.debug}
5b5d99cf 16467@item
c7e83d54 16468@file{/usr/lib/debug/usr/bin/ls.debug}.
5b5d99cf 16469@end itemize
5b5d99cf 16470
1564a261
JK
16471@anchor{debug-file-directory}
16472Global debugging info directories default to what is set by @value{GDBN}
16473configure option @option{--with-separate-debug-dir}. During @value{GDBN} run
16474you can also set the global debugging info directories, and view the list
16475@value{GDBN} is currently using.
5b5d99cf
JB
16476
16477@table @code
16478
16479@kindex set debug-file-directory
24ddea62
JK
16480@item set debug-file-directory @var{directories}
16481Set the directories which @value{GDBN} searches for separate debugging
d9242c17
JK
16482information files to @var{directory}. Multiple path components can be set
16483concatenating them by a path separator.
5b5d99cf
JB
16484
16485@kindex show debug-file-directory
16486@item show debug-file-directory
24ddea62 16487Show the directories @value{GDBN} searches for separate debugging
5b5d99cf
JB
16488information files.
16489
16490@end table
16491
16492@cindex @code{.gnu_debuglink} sections
c7e83d54 16493@cindex debug link sections
5b5d99cf
JB
16494A debug link is a special section of the executable file named
16495@code{.gnu_debuglink}. The section must contain:
16496
16497@itemize
16498@item
16499A filename, with any leading directory components removed, followed by
16500a zero byte,
16501@item
16502zero to three bytes of padding, as needed to reach the next four-byte
16503boundary within the section, and
16504@item
16505a four-byte CRC checksum, stored in the same endianness used for the
16506executable file itself. The checksum is computed on the debugging
16507information file's full contents by the function given below, passing
16508zero as the @var{crc} argument.
16509@end itemize
16510
16511Any executable file format can carry a debug link, as long as it can
16512contain a section named @code{.gnu_debuglink} with the contents
16513described above.
16514
d3750b24 16515@cindex @code{.note.gnu.build-id} sections
c7e83d54 16516@cindex build ID sections
7e27a47a
EZ
16517The build ID is a special section in the executable file (and in other
16518ELF binary files that @value{GDBN} may consider). This section is
16519often named @code{.note.gnu.build-id}, but that name is not mandatory.
16520It contains unique identification for the built files---the ID remains
16521the same across multiple builds of the same build tree. The default
16522algorithm SHA1 produces 160 bits (40 hexadecimal characters) of the
16523content for the build ID string. The same section with an identical
16524value is present in the original built binary with symbols, in its
16525stripped variant, and in the separate debugging information file.
d3750b24 16526
5b5d99cf
JB
16527The debugging information file itself should be an ordinary
16528executable, containing a full set of linker symbols, sections, and
16529debugging information. The sections of the debugging information file
c7e83d54
EZ
16530should have the same names, addresses, and sizes as the original file,
16531but they need not contain any data---much like a @code{.bss} section
5b5d99cf
JB
16532in an ordinary executable.
16533
7e27a47a 16534The @sc{gnu} binary utilities (Binutils) package includes the
c7e83d54
EZ
16535@samp{objcopy} utility that can produce
16536the separated executable / debugging information file pairs using the
16537following commands:
16538
16539@smallexample
16540@kbd{objcopy --only-keep-debug foo foo.debug}
16541@kbd{strip -g foo}
c7e83d54
EZ
16542@end smallexample
16543
16544@noindent
16545These commands remove the debugging
83f83d7f
JK
16546information from the executable file @file{foo} and place it in the file
16547@file{foo.debug}. You can use the first, second or both methods to link the
16548two files:
16549
16550@itemize @bullet
16551@item
16552The debug link method needs the following additional command to also leave
16553behind a debug link in @file{foo}:
16554
16555@smallexample
16556@kbd{objcopy --add-gnu-debuglink=foo.debug foo}
16557@end smallexample
16558
16559Ulrich Drepper's @file{elfutils} package, starting with version 0.53, contains
d3750b24 16560a version of the @code{strip} command such that the command @kbd{strip foo -f
83f83d7f
JK
16561foo.debug} has the same functionality as the two @code{objcopy} commands and
16562the @code{ln -s} command above, together.
16563
16564@item
16565Build ID gets embedded into the main executable using @code{ld --build-id} or
16566the @value{NGCC} counterpart @code{gcc -Wl,--build-id}. Build ID support plus
16567compatibility fixes for debug files separation are present in @sc{gnu} binary
7e27a47a 16568utilities (Binutils) package since version 2.18.
83f83d7f
JK
16569@end itemize
16570
16571@noindent
d3750b24 16572
99e008fe
EZ
16573@cindex CRC algorithm definition
16574The CRC used in @code{.gnu_debuglink} is the CRC-32 defined in
16575IEEE 802.3 using the polynomial:
16576
16577@c TexInfo requires naked braces for multi-digit exponents for Tex
16578@c output, but this causes HTML output to barf. HTML has to be set using
16579@c raw commands. So we end up having to specify this equation in 2
16580@c different ways!
16581@ifhtml
16582@display
16583@html
16584 <em>x</em><sup>32</sup> + <em>x</em><sup>26</sup> + <em>x</em><sup>23</sup> + <em>x</em><sup>22</sup> + <em>x</em><sup>16</sup> + <em>x</em><sup>12</sup> + <em>x</em><sup>11</sup>
16585 + <em>x</em><sup>10</sup> + <em>x</em><sup>8</sup> + <em>x</em><sup>7</sup> + <em>x</em><sup>5</sup> + <em>x</em><sup>4</sup> + <em>x</em><sup>2</sup> + <em>x</em> + 1
16586@end html
16587@end display
16588@end ifhtml
16589@ifnothtml
16590@display
16591 @math{x^{32} + x^{26} + x^{23} + x^{22} + x^{16} + x^{12} + x^{11}}
16592 @math{+ x^{10} + x^8 + x^7 + x^5 + x^4 + x^2 + x + 1}
16593@end display
16594@end ifnothtml
16595
16596The function is computed byte at a time, taking the least
16597significant bit of each byte first. The initial pattern
16598@code{0xffffffff} is used, to ensure leading zeros affect the CRC and
16599the final result is inverted to ensure trailing zeros also affect the
16600CRC.
16601
16602@emph{Note:} This is the same CRC polynomial as used in handling the
16603@dfn{Remote Serial Protocol} @code{qCRC} packet (@pxref{Remote Protocol,
16604, @value{GDBN} Remote Serial Protocol}). However in the
16605case of the Remote Serial Protocol, the CRC is computed @emph{most}
16606significant bit first, and the result is not inverted, so trailing
16607zeros have no effect on the CRC value.
16608
16609To complete the description, we show below the code of the function
16610which produces the CRC used in @code{.gnu_debuglink}. Inverting the
16611initially supplied @code{crc} argument means that an initial call to
16612this function passing in zero will start computing the CRC using
16613@code{0xffffffff}.
5b5d99cf 16614
4644b6e3 16615@kindex gnu_debuglink_crc32
5b5d99cf
JB
16616@smallexample
16617unsigned long
16618gnu_debuglink_crc32 (unsigned long crc,
16619 unsigned char *buf, size_t len)
16620@{
16621 static const unsigned long crc32_table[256] =
16622 @{
16623 0x00000000, 0x77073096, 0xee0e612c, 0x990951ba, 0x076dc419,
16624 0x706af48f, 0xe963a535, 0x9e6495a3, 0x0edb8832, 0x79dcb8a4,
16625 0xe0d5e91e, 0x97d2d988, 0x09b64c2b, 0x7eb17cbd, 0xe7b82d07,
16626 0x90bf1d91, 0x1db71064, 0x6ab020f2, 0xf3b97148, 0x84be41de,
16627 0x1adad47d, 0x6ddde4eb, 0xf4d4b551, 0x83d385c7, 0x136c9856,
16628 0x646ba8c0, 0xfd62f97a, 0x8a65c9ec, 0x14015c4f, 0x63066cd9,
16629 0xfa0f3d63, 0x8d080df5, 0x3b6e20c8, 0x4c69105e, 0xd56041e4,
16630 0xa2677172, 0x3c03e4d1, 0x4b04d447, 0xd20d85fd, 0xa50ab56b,
16631 0x35b5a8fa, 0x42b2986c, 0xdbbbc9d6, 0xacbcf940, 0x32d86ce3,
16632 0x45df5c75, 0xdcd60dcf, 0xabd13d59, 0x26d930ac, 0x51de003a,
16633 0xc8d75180, 0xbfd06116, 0x21b4f4b5, 0x56b3c423, 0xcfba9599,
16634 0xb8bda50f, 0x2802b89e, 0x5f058808, 0xc60cd9b2, 0xb10be924,
16635 0x2f6f7c87, 0x58684c11, 0xc1611dab, 0xb6662d3d, 0x76dc4190,
16636 0x01db7106, 0x98d220bc, 0xefd5102a, 0x71b18589, 0x06b6b51f,
16637 0x9fbfe4a5, 0xe8b8d433, 0x7807c9a2, 0x0f00f934, 0x9609a88e,
16638 0xe10e9818, 0x7f6a0dbb, 0x086d3d2d, 0x91646c97, 0xe6635c01,
16639 0x6b6b51f4, 0x1c6c6162, 0x856530d8, 0xf262004e, 0x6c0695ed,
16640 0x1b01a57b, 0x8208f4c1, 0xf50fc457, 0x65b0d9c6, 0x12b7e950,
16641 0x8bbeb8ea, 0xfcb9887c, 0x62dd1ddf, 0x15da2d49, 0x8cd37cf3,
16642 0xfbd44c65, 0x4db26158, 0x3ab551ce, 0xa3bc0074, 0xd4bb30e2,
16643 0x4adfa541, 0x3dd895d7, 0xa4d1c46d, 0xd3d6f4fb, 0x4369e96a,
16644 0x346ed9fc, 0xad678846, 0xda60b8d0, 0x44042d73, 0x33031de5,
16645 0xaa0a4c5f, 0xdd0d7cc9, 0x5005713c, 0x270241aa, 0xbe0b1010,
16646 0xc90c2086, 0x5768b525, 0x206f85b3, 0xb966d409, 0xce61e49f,
16647 0x5edef90e, 0x29d9c998, 0xb0d09822, 0xc7d7a8b4, 0x59b33d17,
16648 0x2eb40d81, 0xb7bd5c3b, 0xc0ba6cad, 0xedb88320, 0x9abfb3b6,
16649 0x03b6e20c, 0x74b1d29a, 0xead54739, 0x9dd277af, 0x04db2615,
16650 0x73dc1683, 0xe3630b12, 0x94643b84, 0x0d6d6a3e, 0x7a6a5aa8,
16651 0xe40ecf0b, 0x9309ff9d, 0x0a00ae27, 0x7d079eb1, 0xf00f9344,
16652 0x8708a3d2, 0x1e01f268, 0x6906c2fe, 0xf762575d, 0x806567cb,
16653 0x196c3671, 0x6e6b06e7, 0xfed41b76, 0x89d32be0, 0x10da7a5a,
16654 0x67dd4acc, 0xf9b9df6f, 0x8ebeeff9, 0x17b7be43, 0x60b08ed5,
16655 0xd6d6a3e8, 0xa1d1937e, 0x38d8c2c4, 0x4fdff252, 0xd1bb67f1,
16656 0xa6bc5767, 0x3fb506dd, 0x48b2364b, 0xd80d2bda, 0xaf0a1b4c,
16657 0x36034af6, 0x41047a60, 0xdf60efc3, 0xa867df55, 0x316e8eef,
16658 0x4669be79, 0xcb61b38c, 0xbc66831a, 0x256fd2a0, 0x5268e236,
16659 0xcc0c7795, 0xbb0b4703, 0x220216b9, 0x5505262f, 0xc5ba3bbe,
16660 0xb2bd0b28, 0x2bb45a92, 0x5cb36a04, 0xc2d7ffa7, 0xb5d0cf31,
16661 0x2cd99e8b, 0x5bdeae1d, 0x9b64c2b0, 0xec63f226, 0x756aa39c,
16662 0x026d930a, 0x9c0906a9, 0xeb0e363f, 0x72076785, 0x05005713,
16663 0x95bf4a82, 0xe2b87a14, 0x7bb12bae, 0x0cb61b38, 0x92d28e9b,
16664 0xe5d5be0d, 0x7cdcefb7, 0x0bdbdf21, 0x86d3d2d4, 0xf1d4e242,
16665 0x68ddb3f8, 0x1fda836e, 0x81be16cd, 0xf6b9265b, 0x6fb077e1,
16666 0x18b74777, 0x88085ae6, 0xff0f6a70, 0x66063bca, 0x11010b5c,
16667 0x8f659eff, 0xf862ae69, 0x616bffd3, 0x166ccf45, 0xa00ae278,
16668 0xd70dd2ee, 0x4e048354, 0x3903b3c2, 0xa7672661, 0xd06016f7,
16669 0x4969474d, 0x3e6e77db, 0xaed16a4a, 0xd9d65adc, 0x40df0b66,
16670 0x37d83bf0, 0xa9bcae53, 0xdebb9ec5, 0x47b2cf7f, 0x30b5ffe9,
16671 0xbdbdf21c, 0xcabac28a, 0x53b39330, 0x24b4a3a6, 0xbad03605,
16672 0xcdd70693, 0x54de5729, 0x23d967bf, 0xb3667a2e, 0xc4614ab8,
16673 0x5d681b02, 0x2a6f2b94, 0xb40bbe37, 0xc30c8ea1, 0x5a05df1b,
16674 0x2d02ef8d
16675 @};
16676 unsigned char *end;
16677
16678 crc = ~crc & 0xffffffff;
16679 for (end = buf + len; buf < end; ++buf)
16680 crc = crc32_table[(crc ^ *buf) & 0xff] ^ (crc >> 8);
e7a3abfc 16681 return ~crc & 0xffffffff;
5b5d99cf
JB
16682@}
16683@end smallexample
16684
c7e83d54
EZ
16685@noindent
16686This computation does not apply to the ``build ID'' method.
16687
5b5d99cf 16688
9291a0cd
TT
16689@node Index Files
16690@section Index Files Speed Up @value{GDBN}
16691@cindex index files
16692@cindex @samp{.gdb_index} section
16693
16694When @value{GDBN} finds a symbol file, it scans the symbols in the
16695file in order to construct an internal symbol table. This lets most
16696@value{GDBN} operations work quickly---at the cost of a delay early
16697on. For large programs, this delay can be quite lengthy, so
16698@value{GDBN} provides a way to build an index, which speeds up
16699startup.
16700
16701The index is stored as a section in the symbol file. @value{GDBN} can
16702write the index to a file, then you can put it into the symbol file
16703using @command{objcopy}.
16704
16705To create an index file, use the @code{save gdb-index} command:
16706
16707@table @code
16708@item save gdb-index @var{directory}
16709@kindex save gdb-index
16710Create an index file for each symbol file currently known by
16711@value{GDBN}. Each file is named after its corresponding symbol file,
16712with @samp{.gdb-index} appended, and is written into the given
16713@var{directory}.
16714@end table
16715
16716Once you have created an index file you can merge it into your symbol
16717file, here named @file{symfile}, using @command{objcopy}:
16718
16719@smallexample
16720$ objcopy --add-section .gdb_index=symfile.gdb-index \
16721 --set-section-flags .gdb_index=readonly symfile symfile
16722@end smallexample
16723
16724There are currently some limitation on indices. They only work when
16725for DWARF debugging information, not stabs. And, they do not
16726currently work for programs using Ada.
16727
6d2ebf8b 16728@node Symbol Errors
79a6e687 16729@section Errors Reading Symbol Files
c906108c
SS
16730
16731While reading a symbol file, @value{GDBN} occasionally encounters problems,
16732such as symbol types it does not recognize, or known bugs in compiler
16733output. By default, @value{GDBN} does not notify you of such problems, since
16734they are relatively common and primarily of interest to people
16735debugging compilers. If you are interested in seeing information
16736about ill-constructed symbol tables, you can either ask @value{GDBN} to print
16737only one message about each such type of problem, no matter how many
16738times the problem occurs; or you can ask @value{GDBN} to print more messages,
16739to see how many times the problems occur, with the @code{set
79a6e687
BW
16740complaints} command (@pxref{Messages/Warnings, ,Optional Warnings and
16741Messages}).
c906108c
SS
16742
16743The messages currently printed, and their meanings, include:
16744
16745@table @code
16746@item inner block not inside outer block in @var{symbol}
16747
16748The symbol information shows where symbol scopes begin and end
16749(such as at the start of a function or a block of statements). This
16750error indicates that an inner scope block is not fully contained
16751in its outer scope blocks.
16752
16753@value{GDBN} circumvents the problem by treating the inner block as if it had
16754the same scope as the outer block. In the error message, @var{symbol}
16755may be shown as ``@code{(don't know)}'' if the outer block is not a
16756function.
16757
16758@item block at @var{address} out of order
16759
16760The symbol information for symbol scope blocks should occur in
16761order of increasing addresses. This error indicates that it does not
16762do so.
16763
16764@value{GDBN} does not circumvent this problem, and has trouble
16765locating symbols in the source file whose symbols it is reading. (You
16766can often determine what source file is affected by specifying
79a6e687
BW
16767@code{set verbose on}. @xref{Messages/Warnings, ,Optional Warnings and
16768Messages}.)
c906108c
SS
16769
16770@item bad block start address patched
16771
16772The symbol information for a symbol scope block has a start address
16773smaller than the address of the preceding source line. This is known
16774to occur in the SunOS 4.1.1 (and earlier) C compiler.
16775
16776@value{GDBN} circumvents the problem by treating the symbol scope block as
16777starting on the previous source line.
16778
16779@item bad string table offset in symbol @var{n}
16780
16781@cindex foo
16782Symbol number @var{n} contains a pointer into the string table which is
16783larger than the size of the string table.
16784
16785@value{GDBN} circumvents the problem by considering the symbol to have the
16786name @code{foo}, which may cause other problems if many symbols end up
16787with this name.
16788
16789@item unknown symbol type @code{0x@var{nn}}
16790
7a292a7a
SS
16791The symbol information contains new data types that @value{GDBN} does
16792not yet know how to read. @code{0x@var{nn}} is the symbol type of the
d4f3574e 16793uncomprehended information, in hexadecimal.
c906108c 16794
7a292a7a
SS
16795@value{GDBN} circumvents the error by ignoring this symbol information.
16796This usually allows you to debug your program, though certain symbols
c906108c 16797are not accessible. If you encounter such a problem and feel like
7a292a7a
SS
16798debugging it, you can debug @code{@value{GDBP}} with itself, breakpoint
16799on @code{complain}, then go up to the function @code{read_dbx_symtab}
16800and examine @code{*bufp} to see the symbol.
c906108c
SS
16801
16802@item stub type has NULL name
c906108c 16803
7a292a7a 16804@value{GDBN} could not find the full definition for a struct or class.
c906108c 16805
7a292a7a 16806@item const/volatile indicator missing (ok if using g++ v1.x), got@dots{}
b37052ae 16807The symbol information for a C@t{++} member function is missing some
7a292a7a
SS
16808information that recent versions of the compiler should have output for
16809it.
c906108c
SS
16810
16811@item info mismatch between compiler and debugger
16812
16813@value{GDBN} could not parse a type specification output by the compiler.
7a292a7a 16814
c906108c
SS
16815@end table
16816
b14b1491
TT
16817@node Data Files
16818@section GDB Data Files
16819
16820@cindex prefix for data files
16821@value{GDBN} will sometimes read an auxiliary data file. These files
16822are kept in a directory known as the @dfn{data directory}.
16823
16824You can set the data directory's name, and view the name @value{GDBN}
16825is currently using.
16826
16827@table @code
16828@kindex set data-directory
16829@item set data-directory @var{directory}
16830Set the directory which @value{GDBN} searches for auxiliary data files
16831to @var{directory}.
16832
16833@kindex show data-directory
16834@item show data-directory
16835Show the directory @value{GDBN} searches for auxiliary data files.
16836@end table
16837
16838@cindex default data directory
16839@cindex @samp{--with-gdb-datadir}
16840You can set the default data directory by using the configure-time
16841@samp{--with-gdb-datadir} option. If the data directory is inside
16842@value{GDBN}'s configured binary prefix (set with @samp{--prefix} or
16843@samp{--exec-prefix}), then the default data directory will be updated
16844automatically if the installed @value{GDBN} is moved to a new
16845location.
16846
aae1c79a
DE
16847The data directory may also be specified with the
16848@code{--data-directory} command line option.
16849@xref{Mode Options}.
16850
6d2ebf8b 16851@node Targets
c906108c 16852@chapter Specifying a Debugging Target
7a292a7a 16853
c906108c 16854@cindex debugging target
c906108c 16855A @dfn{target} is the execution environment occupied by your program.
53a5351d
JM
16856
16857Often, @value{GDBN} runs in the same host environment as your program;
16858in that case, the debugging target is specified as a side effect when
16859you use the @code{file} or @code{core} commands. When you need more
c906108c
SS
16860flexibility---for example, running @value{GDBN} on a physically separate
16861host, or controlling a standalone system over a serial port or a
53a5351d
JM
16862realtime system over a TCP/IP connection---you can use the @code{target}
16863command to specify one of the target types configured for @value{GDBN}
79a6e687 16864(@pxref{Target Commands, ,Commands for Managing Targets}).
c906108c 16865
a8f24a35
EZ
16866@cindex target architecture
16867It is possible to build @value{GDBN} for several different @dfn{target
16868architectures}. When @value{GDBN} is built like that, you can choose
16869one of the available architectures with the @kbd{set architecture}
16870command.
16871
16872@table @code
16873@kindex set architecture
16874@kindex show architecture
16875@item set architecture @var{arch}
16876This command sets the current target architecture to @var{arch}. The
16877value of @var{arch} can be @code{"auto"}, in addition to one of the
16878supported architectures.
16879
16880@item show architecture
16881Show the current target architecture.
9c16f35a
EZ
16882
16883@item set processor
16884@itemx processor
16885@kindex set processor
16886@kindex show processor
16887These are alias commands for, respectively, @code{set architecture}
16888and @code{show architecture}.
a8f24a35
EZ
16889@end table
16890
c906108c
SS
16891@menu
16892* Active Targets:: Active targets
16893* Target Commands:: Commands for managing targets
c906108c 16894* Byte Order:: Choosing target byte order
c906108c
SS
16895@end menu
16896
6d2ebf8b 16897@node Active Targets
79a6e687 16898@section Active Targets
7a292a7a 16899
c906108c
SS
16900@cindex stacking targets
16901@cindex active targets
16902@cindex multiple targets
16903
8ea5bce5 16904There are multiple classes of targets such as: processes, executable files or
c0edd9ed
JK
16905recording sessions. Core files belong to the process class, making core file
16906and process mutually exclusive. Otherwise, @value{GDBN} can work concurrently
16907on multiple active targets, one in each class. This allows you to (for
16908example) start a process and inspect its activity, while still having access to
16909the executable file after the process finishes. Or if you start process
16910recording (@pxref{Reverse Execution}) and @code{reverse-step} there, you are
16911presented a virtual layer of the recording target, while the process target
16912remains stopped at the chronologically last point of the process execution.
16913
16914Use the @code{core-file} and @code{exec-file} commands to select a new core
16915file or executable target (@pxref{Files, ,Commands to Specify Files}). To
16916specify as a target a process that is already running, use the @code{attach}
16917command (@pxref{Attach, ,Debugging an Already-running Process}).
c906108c 16918
6d2ebf8b 16919@node Target Commands
79a6e687 16920@section Commands for Managing Targets
c906108c
SS
16921
16922@table @code
16923@item target @var{type} @var{parameters}
7a292a7a
SS
16924Connects the @value{GDBN} host environment to a target machine or
16925process. A target is typically a protocol for talking to debugging
16926facilities. You use the argument @var{type} to specify the type or
16927protocol of the target machine.
c906108c
SS
16928
16929Further @var{parameters} are interpreted by the target protocol, but
16930typically include things like device names or host names to connect
16931with, process numbers, and baud rates.
c906108c
SS
16932
16933The @code{target} command does not repeat if you press @key{RET} again
16934after executing the command.
16935
16936@kindex help target
16937@item help target
16938Displays the names of all targets available. To display targets
16939currently selected, use either @code{info target} or @code{info files}
79a6e687 16940(@pxref{Files, ,Commands to Specify Files}).
c906108c
SS
16941
16942@item help target @var{name}
16943Describe a particular target, including any parameters necessary to
16944select it.
16945
16946@kindex set gnutarget
16947@item set gnutarget @var{args}
5d161b24 16948@value{GDBN} uses its own library BFD to read your files. @value{GDBN}
c906108c 16949knows whether it is reading an @dfn{executable},
5d161b24
DB
16950a @dfn{core}, or a @dfn{.o} file; however, you can specify the file format
16951with the @code{set gnutarget} command. Unlike most @code{target} commands,
c906108c
SS
16952with @code{gnutarget} the @code{target} refers to a program, not a machine.
16953
d4f3574e 16954@quotation
c906108c
SS
16955@emph{Warning:} To specify a file format with @code{set gnutarget},
16956you must know the actual BFD name.
d4f3574e 16957@end quotation
c906108c 16958
d4f3574e 16959@noindent
79a6e687 16960@xref{Files, , Commands to Specify Files}.
c906108c 16961
5d161b24 16962@kindex show gnutarget
c906108c
SS
16963@item show gnutarget
16964Use the @code{show gnutarget} command to display what file format
16965@code{gnutarget} is set to read. If you have not set @code{gnutarget},
16966@value{GDBN} will determine the file format for each file automatically,
16967and @code{show gnutarget} displays @samp{The current BDF target is "auto"}.
16968@end table
16969
4644b6e3 16970@cindex common targets
c906108c
SS
16971Here are some common targets (available, or not, depending on the GDB
16972configuration):
c906108c
SS
16973
16974@table @code
4644b6e3 16975@kindex target
c906108c 16976@item target exec @var{program}
4644b6e3 16977@cindex executable file target
c906108c
SS
16978An executable file. @samp{target exec @var{program}} is the same as
16979@samp{exec-file @var{program}}.
16980
c906108c 16981@item target core @var{filename}
4644b6e3 16982@cindex core dump file target
c906108c
SS
16983A core dump file. @samp{target core @var{filename}} is the same as
16984@samp{core-file @var{filename}}.
c906108c 16985
1a10341b 16986@item target remote @var{medium}
4644b6e3 16987@cindex remote target
1a10341b
JB
16988A remote system connected to @value{GDBN} via a serial line or network
16989connection. This command tells @value{GDBN} to use its own remote
16990protocol over @var{medium} for debugging. @xref{Remote Debugging}.
16991
16992For example, if you have a board connected to @file{/dev/ttya} on the
16993machine running @value{GDBN}, you could say:
16994
16995@smallexample
16996target remote /dev/ttya
16997@end smallexample
16998
16999@code{target remote} supports the @code{load} command. This is only
17000useful if you have some other way of getting the stub to the target
17001system, and you can put it somewhere in memory where it won't get
17002clobbered by the download.
c906108c 17003
ee8e71d4 17004@item target sim @r{[}@var{simargs}@r{]} @dots{}
4644b6e3 17005@cindex built-in simulator target
2df3850c 17006Builtin CPU simulator. @value{GDBN} includes simulators for most architectures.
104c1213 17007In general,
474c8240 17008@smallexample
104c1213
JM
17009 target sim
17010 load
17011 run
474c8240 17012@end smallexample
d4f3574e 17013@noindent
104c1213 17014works; however, you cannot assume that a specific memory map, device
d4f3574e 17015drivers, or even basic I/O is available, although some simulators do
104c1213
JM
17016provide these. For info about any processor-specific simulator details,
17017see the appropriate section in @ref{Embedded Processors, ,Embedded
17018Processors}.
17019
c906108c
SS
17020@end table
17021
104c1213 17022Some configurations may include these targets as well:
c906108c
SS
17023
17024@table @code
17025
c906108c 17026@item target nrom @var{dev}
4644b6e3 17027@cindex NetROM ROM emulator target
c906108c
SS
17028NetROM ROM emulator. This target only supports downloading.
17029
c906108c
SS
17030@end table
17031
5d161b24 17032Different targets are available on different configurations of @value{GDBN};
c906108c 17033your configuration may have more or fewer targets.
c906108c 17034
721c2651
EZ
17035Many remote targets require you to download the executable's code once
17036you've successfully established a connection. You may wish to control
3d00d119
DJ
17037various aspects of this process.
17038
17039@table @code
721c2651
EZ
17040
17041@item set hash
17042@kindex set hash@r{, for remote monitors}
17043@cindex hash mark while downloading
17044This command controls whether a hash mark @samp{#} is displayed while
17045downloading a file to the remote monitor. If on, a hash mark is
17046displayed after each S-record is successfully downloaded to the
17047monitor.
17048
17049@item show hash
17050@kindex show hash@r{, for remote monitors}
17051Show the current status of displaying the hash mark.
17052
17053@item set debug monitor
17054@kindex set debug monitor
17055@cindex display remote monitor communications
17056Enable or disable display of communications messages between
17057@value{GDBN} and the remote monitor.
17058
17059@item show debug monitor
17060@kindex show debug monitor
17061Show the current status of displaying communications between
17062@value{GDBN} and the remote monitor.
a8f24a35 17063@end table
c906108c
SS
17064
17065@table @code
17066
17067@kindex load @var{filename}
17068@item load @var{filename}
8edfe269 17069@anchor{load}
c906108c
SS
17070Depending on what remote debugging facilities are configured into
17071@value{GDBN}, the @code{load} command may be available. Where it exists, it
17072is meant to make @var{filename} (an executable) available for debugging
17073on the remote system---by downloading, or dynamic linking, for example.
17074@code{load} also records the @var{filename} symbol table in @value{GDBN}, like
17075the @code{add-symbol-file} command.
17076
17077If your @value{GDBN} does not have a @code{load} command, attempting to
17078execute it gets the error message ``@code{You can't do that when your
17079target is @dots{}}''
c906108c
SS
17080
17081The file is loaded at whatever address is specified in the executable.
17082For some object file formats, you can specify the load address when you
17083link the program; for other formats, like a.out, the object file format
17084specifies a fixed address.
17085@c FIXME! This would be a good place for an xref to the GNU linker doc.
17086
68437a39
DJ
17087Depending on the remote side capabilities, @value{GDBN} may be able to
17088load programs into flash memory.
17089
c906108c
SS
17090@code{load} does not repeat if you press @key{RET} again after using it.
17091@end table
17092
6d2ebf8b 17093@node Byte Order
79a6e687 17094@section Choosing Target Byte Order
7a292a7a 17095
c906108c
SS
17096@cindex choosing target byte order
17097@cindex target byte order
c906108c 17098
eb17f351 17099Some types of processors, such as the @acronym{MIPS}, PowerPC, and Renesas SH,
c906108c
SS
17100offer the ability to run either big-endian or little-endian byte
17101orders. Usually the executable or symbol will include a bit to
17102designate the endian-ness, and you will not need to worry about
17103which to use. However, you may still find it useful to adjust
d4f3574e 17104@value{GDBN}'s idea of processor endian-ness manually.
c906108c
SS
17105
17106@table @code
4644b6e3 17107@kindex set endian
c906108c
SS
17108@item set endian big
17109Instruct @value{GDBN} to assume the target is big-endian.
17110
c906108c
SS
17111@item set endian little
17112Instruct @value{GDBN} to assume the target is little-endian.
17113
c906108c
SS
17114@item set endian auto
17115Instruct @value{GDBN} to use the byte order associated with the
17116executable.
17117
17118@item show endian
17119Display @value{GDBN}'s current idea of the target byte order.
17120
17121@end table
17122
17123Note that these commands merely adjust interpretation of symbolic
17124data on the host, and that they have absolutely no effect on the
17125target system.
17126
ea35711c
DJ
17127
17128@node Remote Debugging
17129@chapter Debugging Remote Programs
c906108c
SS
17130@cindex remote debugging
17131
17132If you are trying to debug a program running on a machine that cannot run
5d161b24
DB
17133@value{GDBN} in the usual way, it is often useful to use remote debugging.
17134For example, you might use remote debugging on an operating system kernel,
c906108c
SS
17135or on a small system which does not have a general purpose operating system
17136powerful enough to run a full-featured debugger.
17137
17138Some configurations of @value{GDBN} have special serial or TCP/IP interfaces
17139to make this work with particular debugging targets. In addition,
5d161b24 17140@value{GDBN} comes with a generic serial protocol (specific to @value{GDBN},
c906108c
SS
17141but not specific to any particular target system) which you can use if you
17142write the remote stubs---the code that runs on the remote system to
17143communicate with @value{GDBN}.
17144
17145Other remote targets may be available in your
17146configuration of @value{GDBN}; use @code{help target} to list them.
c906108c 17147
6b2f586d 17148@menu
07f31aa6 17149* Connecting:: Connecting to a remote target
a6b151f1 17150* File Transfer:: Sending files to a remote system
6b2f586d 17151* Server:: Using the gdbserver program
79a6e687
BW
17152* Remote Configuration:: Remote configuration
17153* Remote Stub:: Implementing a remote stub
6b2f586d
AC
17154@end menu
17155
07f31aa6 17156@node Connecting
79a6e687 17157@section Connecting to a Remote Target
07f31aa6
DJ
17158
17159On the @value{GDBN} host machine, you will need an unstripped copy of
d3e8051b 17160your program, since @value{GDBN} needs symbol and debugging information.
07f31aa6
DJ
17161Start up @value{GDBN} as usual, using the name of the local copy of your
17162program as the first argument.
17163
86941c27
JB
17164@cindex @code{target remote}
17165@value{GDBN} can communicate with the target over a serial line, or
17166over an @acronym{IP} network using @acronym{TCP} or @acronym{UDP}. In
17167each case, @value{GDBN} uses the same protocol for debugging your
17168program; only the medium carrying the debugging packets varies. The
17169@code{target remote} command establishes a connection to the target.
17170Its arguments indicate which medium to use:
17171
17172@table @code
17173
17174@item target remote @var{serial-device}
07f31aa6 17175@cindex serial line, @code{target remote}
86941c27
JB
17176Use @var{serial-device} to communicate with the target. For example,
17177to use a serial line connected to the device named @file{/dev/ttyb}:
17178
17179@smallexample
17180target remote /dev/ttyb
17181@end smallexample
17182
07f31aa6
DJ
17183If you're using a serial line, you may want to give @value{GDBN} the
17184@w{@samp{--baud}} option, or use the @code{set remotebaud} command
79a6e687 17185(@pxref{Remote Configuration, set remotebaud}) before the
9c16f35a 17186@code{target} command.
07f31aa6 17187
86941c27
JB
17188@item target remote @code{@var{host}:@var{port}}
17189@itemx target remote @code{tcp:@var{host}:@var{port}}
17190@cindex @acronym{TCP} port, @code{target remote}
17191Debug using a @acronym{TCP} connection to @var{port} on @var{host}.
17192The @var{host} may be either a host name or a numeric @acronym{IP}
17193address; @var{port} must be a decimal number. The @var{host} could be
17194the target machine itself, if it is directly connected to the net, or
17195it might be a terminal server which in turn has a serial line to the
17196target.
07f31aa6 17197
86941c27
JB
17198For example, to connect to port 2828 on a terminal server named
17199@code{manyfarms}:
07f31aa6
DJ
17200
17201@smallexample
17202target remote manyfarms:2828
17203@end smallexample
17204
86941c27
JB
17205If your remote target is actually running on the same machine as your
17206debugger session (e.g.@: a simulator for your target running on the
17207same host), you can omit the hostname. For example, to connect to
17208port 1234 on your local machine:
07f31aa6
DJ
17209
17210@smallexample
17211target remote :1234
17212@end smallexample
17213@noindent
17214
17215Note that the colon is still required here.
17216
86941c27
JB
17217@item target remote @code{udp:@var{host}:@var{port}}
17218@cindex @acronym{UDP} port, @code{target remote}
17219Debug using @acronym{UDP} packets to @var{port} on @var{host}. For example, to
17220connect to @acronym{UDP} port 2828 on a terminal server named @code{manyfarms}:
07f31aa6
DJ
17221
17222@smallexample
17223target remote udp:manyfarms:2828
17224@end smallexample
17225
86941c27
JB
17226When using a @acronym{UDP} connection for remote debugging, you should
17227keep in mind that the `U' stands for ``Unreliable''. @acronym{UDP}
17228can silently drop packets on busy or unreliable networks, which will
17229cause havoc with your debugging session.
17230
66b8c7f6
JB
17231@item target remote | @var{command}
17232@cindex pipe, @code{target remote} to
17233Run @var{command} in the background and communicate with it using a
17234pipe. The @var{command} is a shell command, to be parsed and expanded
17235by the system's command shell, @code{/bin/sh}; it should expect remote
17236protocol packets on its standard input, and send replies on its
17237standard output. You could use this to run a stand-alone simulator
17238that speaks the remote debugging protocol, to make net connections
17239using programs like @code{ssh}, or for other similar tricks.
17240
17241If @var{command} closes its standard output (perhaps by exiting),
17242@value{GDBN} will try to send it a @code{SIGTERM} signal. (If the
17243program has already exited, this will have no effect.)
17244
86941c27 17245@end table
07f31aa6 17246
86941c27 17247Once the connection has been established, you can use all the usual
8edfe269
DJ
17248commands to examine and change data. The remote program is already
17249running; you can use @kbd{step} and @kbd{continue}, and you do not
17250need to use @kbd{run}.
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DJ
17251
17252@cindex interrupting remote programs
17253@cindex remote programs, interrupting
17254Whenever @value{GDBN} is waiting for the remote program, if you type the
c8aa23ab 17255interrupt character (often @kbd{Ctrl-c}), @value{GDBN} attempts to stop the
07f31aa6
DJ
17256program. This may or may not succeed, depending in part on the hardware
17257and the serial drivers the remote system uses. If you type the
17258interrupt character once again, @value{GDBN} displays this prompt:
17259
17260@smallexample
17261Interrupted while waiting for the program.
17262Give up (and stop debugging it)? (y or n)
17263@end smallexample
17264
17265If you type @kbd{y}, @value{GDBN} abandons the remote debugging session.
17266(If you decide you want to try again later, you can use @samp{target
17267remote} again to connect once more.) If you type @kbd{n}, @value{GDBN}
17268goes back to waiting.
17269
17270@table @code
17271@kindex detach (remote)
17272@item detach
17273When you have finished debugging the remote program, you can use the
17274@code{detach} command to release it from @value{GDBN} control.
17275Detaching from the target normally resumes its execution, but the results
17276will depend on your particular remote stub. After the @code{detach}
17277command, @value{GDBN} is free to connect to another target.
17278
17279@kindex disconnect
17280@item disconnect
17281The @code{disconnect} command behaves like @code{detach}, except that
17282the target is generally not resumed. It will wait for @value{GDBN}
17283(this instance or another one) to connect and continue debugging. After
17284the @code{disconnect} command, @value{GDBN} is again free to connect to
17285another target.
09d4efe1
EZ
17286
17287@cindex send command to remote monitor
fad38dfa
EZ
17288@cindex extend @value{GDBN} for remote targets
17289@cindex add new commands for external monitor
09d4efe1
EZ
17290@kindex monitor
17291@item monitor @var{cmd}
fad38dfa
EZ
17292This command allows you to send arbitrary commands directly to the
17293remote monitor. Since @value{GDBN} doesn't care about the commands it
17294sends like this, this command is the way to extend @value{GDBN}---you
17295can add new commands that only the external monitor will understand
17296and implement.
07f31aa6
DJ
17297@end table
17298
a6b151f1
DJ
17299@node File Transfer
17300@section Sending files to a remote system
17301@cindex remote target, file transfer
17302@cindex file transfer
17303@cindex sending files to remote systems
17304
17305Some remote targets offer the ability to transfer files over the same
17306connection used to communicate with @value{GDBN}. This is convenient
17307for targets accessible through other means, e.g.@: @sc{gnu}/Linux systems
17308running @code{gdbserver} over a network interface. For other targets,
17309e.g.@: embedded devices with only a single serial port, this may be
17310the only way to upload or download files.
17311
17312Not all remote targets support these commands.
17313
17314@table @code
17315@kindex remote put
17316@item remote put @var{hostfile} @var{targetfile}
17317Copy file @var{hostfile} from the host system (the machine running
17318@value{GDBN}) to @var{targetfile} on the target system.
17319
17320@kindex remote get
17321@item remote get @var{targetfile} @var{hostfile}
17322Copy file @var{targetfile} from the target system to @var{hostfile}
17323on the host system.
17324
17325@kindex remote delete
17326@item remote delete @var{targetfile}
17327Delete @var{targetfile} from the target system.
17328
17329@end table
17330
6f05cf9f 17331@node Server
79a6e687 17332@section Using the @code{gdbserver} Program
6f05cf9f
AC
17333
17334@kindex gdbserver
17335@cindex remote connection without stubs
17336@code{gdbserver} is a control program for Unix-like systems, which
17337allows you to connect your program with a remote @value{GDBN} via
17338@code{target remote}---but without linking in the usual debugging stub.
17339
17340@code{gdbserver} is not a complete replacement for the debugging stubs,
17341because it requires essentially the same operating-system facilities
17342that @value{GDBN} itself does. In fact, a system that can run
17343@code{gdbserver} to connect to a remote @value{GDBN} could also run
17344@value{GDBN} locally! @code{gdbserver} is sometimes useful nevertheless,
17345because it is a much smaller program than @value{GDBN} itself. It is
17346also easier to port than all of @value{GDBN}, so you may be able to get
17347started more quickly on a new system by using @code{gdbserver}.
17348Finally, if you develop code for real-time systems, you may find that
17349the tradeoffs involved in real-time operation make it more convenient to
17350do as much development work as possible on another system, for example
17351by cross-compiling. You can use @code{gdbserver} to make a similar
17352choice for debugging.
17353
17354@value{GDBN} and @code{gdbserver} communicate via either a serial line
17355or a TCP connection, using the standard @value{GDBN} remote serial
17356protocol.
17357
2d717e4f
DJ
17358@quotation
17359@emph{Warning:} @code{gdbserver} does not have any built-in security.
17360Do not run @code{gdbserver} connected to any public network; a
17361@value{GDBN} connection to @code{gdbserver} provides access to the
17362target system with the same privileges as the user running
17363@code{gdbserver}.
17364@end quotation
17365
17366@subsection Running @code{gdbserver}
17367@cindex arguments, to @code{gdbserver}
d9b1a651 17368@cindex @code{gdbserver}, command-line arguments
2d717e4f
DJ
17369
17370Run @code{gdbserver} on the target system. You need a copy of the
17371program you want to debug, including any libraries it requires.
6f05cf9f
AC
17372@code{gdbserver} does not need your program's symbol table, so you can
17373strip the program if necessary to save space. @value{GDBN} on the host
17374system does all the symbol handling.
17375
17376To use the server, you must tell it how to communicate with @value{GDBN};
56460a61 17377the name of your program; and the arguments for your program. The usual
6f05cf9f
AC
17378syntax is:
17379
17380@smallexample
17381target> gdbserver @var{comm} @var{program} [ @var{args} @dots{} ]
17382@end smallexample
17383
e0f9f062
DE
17384@var{comm} is either a device name (to use a serial line), or a TCP
17385hostname and portnumber, or @code{-} or @code{stdio} to use
17386stdin/stdout of @code{gdbserver}.
17387For example, to debug Emacs with the argument
6f05cf9f
AC
17388@samp{foo.txt} and communicate with @value{GDBN} over the serial port
17389@file{/dev/com1}:
17390
17391@smallexample
17392target> gdbserver /dev/com1 emacs foo.txt
17393@end smallexample
17394
17395@code{gdbserver} waits passively for the host @value{GDBN} to communicate
17396with it.
17397
17398To use a TCP connection instead of a serial line:
17399
17400@smallexample
17401target> gdbserver host:2345 emacs foo.txt
17402@end smallexample
17403
17404The only difference from the previous example is the first argument,
17405specifying that you are communicating with the host @value{GDBN} via
17406TCP. The @samp{host:2345} argument means that @code{gdbserver} is to
17407expect a TCP connection from machine @samp{host} to local TCP port 2345.
17408(Currently, the @samp{host} part is ignored.) You can choose any number
17409you want for the port number as long as it does not conflict with any
17410TCP ports already in use on the target system (for example, @code{23} is
17411reserved for @code{telnet}).@footnote{If you choose a port number that
17412conflicts with another service, @code{gdbserver} prints an error message
17413and exits.} You must use the same port number with the host @value{GDBN}
17414@code{target remote} command.
17415
e0f9f062
DE
17416The @code{stdio} connection is useful when starting @code{gdbserver}
17417with ssh:
17418
17419@smallexample
17420(gdb) target remote | ssh -T hostname gdbserver - hello
17421@end smallexample
17422
17423The @samp{-T} option to ssh is provided because we don't need a remote pty,
17424and we don't want escape-character handling. Ssh does this by default when
17425a command is provided, the flag is provided to make it explicit.
17426You could elide it if you want to.
17427
17428Programs started with stdio-connected gdbserver have @file{/dev/null} for
17429@code{stdin}, and @code{stdout},@code{stderr} are sent back to gdb for
17430display through a pipe connected to gdbserver.
17431Both @code{stdout} and @code{stderr} use the same pipe.
17432
2d717e4f 17433@subsubsection Attaching to a Running Program
d9b1a651
EZ
17434@cindex attach to a program, @code{gdbserver}
17435@cindex @option{--attach}, @code{gdbserver} option
2d717e4f 17436
56460a61
DJ
17437On some targets, @code{gdbserver} can also attach to running programs.
17438This is accomplished via the @code{--attach} argument. The syntax is:
17439
17440@smallexample
2d717e4f 17441target> gdbserver --attach @var{comm} @var{pid}
56460a61
DJ
17442@end smallexample
17443
17444@var{pid} is the process ID of a currently running process. It isn't necessary
17445to point @code{gdbserver} at a binary for the running process.
17446
b1fe9455 17447@pindex pidof
b1fe9455
DJ
17448You can debug processes by name instead of process ID if your target has the
17449@code{pidof} utility:
17450
17451@smallexample
2d717e4f 17452target> gdbserver --attach @var{comm} `pidof @var{program}`
b1fe9455
DJ
17453@end smallexample
17454
f822c95b 17455In case more than one copy of @var{program} is running, or @var{program}
b1fe9455
DJ
17456has multiple threads, most versions of @code{pidof} support the
17457@code{-s} option to only return the first process ID.
17458
2d717e4f 17459@subsubsection Multi-Process Mode for @code{gdbserver}
d9b1a651
EZ
17460@cindex @code{gdbserver}, multiple processes
17461@cindex multiple processes with @code{gdbserver}
2d717e4f
DJ
17462
17463When you connect to @code{gdbserver} using @code{target remote},
17464@code{gdbserver} debugs the specified program only once. When the
17465program exits, or you detach from it, @value{GDBN} closes the connection
17466and @code{gdbserver} exits.
17467
6e6c6f50 17468If you connect using @kbd{target extended-remote}, @code{gdbserver}
2d717e4f
DJ
17469enters multi-process mode. When the debugged program exits, or you
17470detach from it, @value{GDBN} stays connected to @code{gdbserver} even
17471though no program is running. The @code{run} and @code{attach}
17472commands instruct @code{gdbserver} to run or attach to a new program.
17473The @code{run} command uses @code{set remote exec-file} (@pxref{set
17474remote exec-file}) to select the program to run. Command line
17475arguments are supported, except for wildcard expansion and I/O
17476redirection (@pxref{Arguments}).
17477
d9b1a651 17478@cindex @option{--multi}, @code{gdbserver} option
2d717e4f
DJ
17479To start @code{gdbserver} without supplying an initial command to run
17480or process ID to attach, use the @option{--multi} command line option.
6e6c6f50 17481Then you can connect using @kbd{target extended-remote} and start
2d717e4f
DJ
17482the program you want to debug.
17483
03f2bd59
JK
17484In multi-process mode @code{gdbserver} does not automatically exit unless you
17485use the option @option{--once}. You can terminate it by using
17486@code{monitor exit} (@pxref{Monitor Commands for gdbserver}). Note that the
17487conditions under which @code{gdbserver} terminates depend on how @value{GDBN}
17488connects to it (@kbd{target remote} or @kbd{target extended-remote}). The
17489@option{--multi} option to @code{gdbserver} has no influence on that.
17490
17491@subsubsection TCP port allocation lifecycle of @code{gdbserver}
17492
17493This section applies only when @code{gdbserver} is run to listen on a TCP port.
17494
17495@code{gdbserver} normally terminates after all of its debugged processes have
17496terminated in @kbd{target remote} mode. On the other hand, for @kbd{target
17497extended-remote}, @code{gdbserver} stays running even with no processes left.
17498@value{GDBN} normally terminates the spawned debugged process on its exit,
17499which normally also terminates @code{gdbserver} in the @kbd{target remote}
17500mode. Therefore, when the connection drops unexpectedly, and @value{GDBN}
17501cannot ask @code{gdbserver} to kill its debugged processes, @code{gdbserver}
17502stays running even in the @kbd{target remote} mode.
17503
17504When @code{gdbserver} stays running, @value{GDBN} can connect to it again later.
17505Such reconnecting is useful for features like @ref{disconnected tracing}. For
17506completeness, at most one @value{GDBN} can be connected at a time.
17507
17508@cindex @option{--once}, @code{gdbserver} option
17509By default, @code{gdbserver} keeps the listening TCP port open, so that
17510additional connections are possible. However, if you start @code{gdbserver}
17511with the @option{--once} option, it will stop listening for any further
17512connection attempts after connecting to the first @value{GDBN} session. This
17513means no further connections to @code{gdbserver} will be possible after the
17514first one. It also means @code{gdbserver} will terminate after the first
17515connection with remote @value{GDBN} has closed, even for unexpectedly closed
17516connections and even in the @kbd{target extended-remote} mode. The
17517@option{--once} option allows reusing the same port number for connecting to
17518multiple instances of @code{gdbserver} running on the same host, since each
17519instance closes its port after the first connection.
2d717e4f
DJ
17520
17521@subsubsection Other Command-Line Arguments for @code{gdbserver}
17522
d9b1a651 17523@cindex @option{--debug}, @code{gdbserver} option
62709adf 17524The @option{--debug} option tells @code{gdbserver} to display extra
d9b1a651
EZ
17525status information about the debugging process.
17526@cindex @option{--remote-debug}, @code{gdbserver} option
17527The @option{--remote-debug} option tells @code{gdbserver} to display
62709adf
PA
17528remote protocol debug output. These options are intended for
17529@code{gdbserver} development and for bug reports to the developers.
2d717e4f 17530
d9b1a651 17531@cindex @option{--wrapper}, @code{gdbserver} option
ccd213ac
DJ
17532The @option{--wrapper} option specifies a wrapper to launch programs
17533for debugging. The option should be followed by the name of the
17534wrapper, then any command-line arguments to pass to the wrapper, then
17535@kbd{--} indicating the end of the wrapper arguments.
17536
17537@code{gdbserver} runs the specified wrapper program with a combined
17538command line including the wrapper arguments, then the name of the
17539program to debug, then any arguments to the program. The wrapper
17540runs until it executes your program, and then @value{GDBN} gains control.
17541
17542You can use any program that eventually calls @code{execve} with
17543its arguments as a wrapper. Several standard Unix utilities do
17544this, e.g.@: @code{env} and @code{nohup}. Any Unix shell script ending
17545with @code{exec "$@@"} will also work.
17546
17547For example, you can use @code{env} to pass an environment variable to
17548the debugged program, without setting the variable in @code{gdbserver}'s
17549environment:
17550
17551@smallexample
17552$ gdbserver --wrapper env LD_PRELOAD=libtest.so -- :2222 ./testprog
17553@end smallexample
17554
2d717e4f
DJ
17555@subsection Connecting to @code{gdbserver}
17556
17557Run @value{GDBN} on the host system.
17558
17559First make sure you have the necessary symbol files. Load symbols for
f822c95b
DJ
17560your application using the @code{file} command before you connect. Use
17561@code{set sysroot} to locate target libraries (unless your @value{GDBN}
2d717e4f 17562was compiled with the correct sysroot using @code{--with-sysroot}).
f822c95b
DJ
17563
17564The symbol file and target libraries must exactly match the executable
17565and libraries on the target, with one exception: the files on the host
17566system should not be stripped, even if the files on the target system
17567are. Mismatched or missing files will lead to confusing results
17568during debugging. On @sc{gnu}/Linux targets, mismatched or missing
17569files may also prevent @code{gdbserver} from debugging multi-threaded
17570programs.
17571
79a6e687 17572Connect to your target (@pxref{Connecting,,Connecting to a Remote Target}).
6f05cf9f
AC
17573For TCP connections, you must start up @code{gdbserver} prior to using
17574the @code{target remote} command. Otherwise you may get an error whose
17575text depends on the host system, but which usually looks something like
2d717e4f 17576@samp{Connection refused}. Don't use the @code{load}
397ca115 17577command in @value{GDBN} when using @code{gdbserver}, since the program is
f822c95b 17578already on the target.
07f31aa6 17579
79a6e687 17580@subsection Monitor Commands for @code{gdbserver}
c74d0ad8 17581@cindex monitor commands, for @code{gdbserver}
2d717e4f 17582@anchor{Monitor Commands for gdbserver}
c74d0ad8
DJ
17583
17584During a @value{GDBN} session using @code{gdbserver}, you can use the
17585@code{monitor} command to send special requests to @code{gdbserver}.
2d717e4f 17586Here are the available commands.
c74d0ad8
DJ
17587
17588@table @code
17589@item monitor help
17590List the available monitor commands.
17591
17592@item monitor set debug 0
17593@itemx monitor set debug 1
17594Disable or enable general debugging messages.
17595
17596@item monitor set remote-debug 0
17597@itemx monitor set remote-debug 1
17598Disable or enable specific debugging messages associated with the remote
17599protocol (@pxref{Remote Protocol}).
17600
cdbfd419
PP
17601@item monitor set libthread-db-search-path [PATH]
17602@cindex gdbserver, search path for @code{libthread_db}
17603When this command is issued, @var{path} is a colon-separated list of
17604directories to search for @code{libthread_db} (@pxref{Threads,,set
17605libthread-db-search-path}). If you omit @var{path},
84e578fb 17606@samp{libthread-db-search-path} will be reset to its default value.
cdbfd419 17607
98a5dd13
DE
17608The special entry @samp{$pdir} for @samp{libthread-db-search-path} is
17609not supported in @code{gdbserver}.
17610
2d717e4f
DJ
17611@item monitor exit
17612Tell gdbserver to exit immediately. This command should be followed by
17613@code{disconnect} to close the debugging session. @code{gdbserver} will
17614detach from any attached processes and kill any processes it created.
17615Use @code{monitor exit} to terminate @code{gdbserver} at the end
17616of a multi-process mode debug session.
17617
c74d0ad8
DJ
17618@end table
17619
fa593d66
PA
17620@subsection Tracepoints support in @code{gdbserver}
17621@cindex tracepoints support in @code{gdbserver}
17622
0fb4aa4b
PA
17623On some targets, @code{gdbserver} supports tracepoints, fast
17624tracepoints and static tracepoints.
fa593d66 17625
0fb4aa4b 17626For fast or static tracepoints to work, a special library called the
fa593d66
PA
17627@dfn{in-process agent} (IPA), must be loaded in the inferior process.
17628This library is built and distributed as an integral part of
0fb4aa4b
PA
17629@code{gdbserver}. In addition, support for static tracepoints
17630requires building the in-process agent library with static tracepoints
17631support. At present, the UST (LTTng Userspace Tracer,
17632@url{http://lttng.org/ust}) tracing engine is supported. This support
17633is automatically available if UST development headers are found in the
17634standard include path when @code{gdbserver} is built, or if
17635@code{gdbserver} was explicitly configured using @option{--with-ust}
17636to point at such headers. You can explicitly disable the support
17637using @option{--with-ust=no}.
fa593d66
PA
17638
17639There are several ways to load the in-process agent in your program:
17640
17641@table @code
17642@item Specifying it as dependency at link time
17643
17644You can link your program dynamically with the in-process agent
17645library. On most systems, this is accomplished by adding
17646@code{-linproctrace} to the link command.
17647
17648@item Using the system's preloading mechanisms
17649
17650You can force loading the in-process agent at startup time by using
17651your system's support for preloading shared libraries. Many Unixes
17652support the concept of preloading user defined libraries. In most
17653cases, you do that by specifying @code{LD_PRELOAD=libinproctrace.so}
17654in the environment. See also the description of @code{gdbserver}'s
17655@option{--wrapper} command line option.
17656
17657@item Using @value{GDBN} to force loading the agent at run time
17658
17659On some systems, you can force the inferior to load a shared library,
17660by calling a dynamic loader function in the inferior that takes care
17661of dynamically looking up and loading a shared library. On most Unix
17662systems, the function is @code{dlopen}. You'll use the @code{call}
17663command for that. For example:
17664
17665@smallexample
17666(@value{GDBP}) call dlopen ("libinproctrace.so", ...)
17667@end smallexample
17668
17669Note that on most Unix systems, for the @code{dlopen} function to be
17670available, the program needs to be linked with @code{-ldl}.
17671@end table
17672
17673On systems that have a userspace dynamic loader, like most Unix
17674systems, when you connect to @code{gdbserver} using @code{target
17675remote}, you'll find that the program is stopped at the dynamic
17676loader's entry point, and no shared library has been loaded in the
17677program's address space yet, including the in-process agent. In that
0fb4aa4b
PA
17678case, before being able to use any of the fast or static tracepoints
17679features, you need to let the loader run and load the shared
17680libraries. The simplest way to do that is to run the program to the
17681main procedure. E.g., if debugging a C or C@t{++} program, start
fa593d66
PA
17682@code{gdbserver} like so:
17683
17684@smallexample
17685$ gdbserver :9999 myprogram
17686@end smallexample
17687
17688Start GDB and connect to @code{gdbserver} like so, and run to main:
17689
17690@smallexample
17691$ gdb myprogram
17692(@value{GDBP}) target remote myhost:9999
176930x00007f215893ba60 in ?? () from /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2
17694(@value{GDBP}) b main
17695(@value{GDBP}) continue
17696@end smallexample
17697
17698The in-process tracing agent library should now be loaded into the
17699process; you can confirm it with the @code{info sharedlibrary}
17700command, which will list @file{libinproctrace.so} as loaded in the
0fb4aa4b
PA
17701process. You are now ready to install fast tracepoints, list static
17702tracepoint markers, probe static tracepoints markers, and start
fa593d66
PA
17703tracing.
17704
79a6e687
BW
17705@node Remote Configuration
17706@section Remote Configuration
501eef12 17707
9c16f35a
EZ
17708@kindex set remote
17709@kindex show remote
17710This section documents the configuration options available when
17711debugging remote programs. For the options related to the File I/O
fc320d37 17712extensions of the remote protocol, see @ref{system,
9c16f35a 17713system-call-allowed}.
501eef12
AC
17714
17715@table @code
9c16f35a 17716@item set remoteaddresssize @var{bits}
d3e8051b 17717@cindex address size for remote targets
9c16f35a
EZ
17718@cindex bits in remote address
17719Set the maximum size of address in a memory packet to the specified
17720number of bits. @value{GDBN} will mask off the address bits above
17721that number, when it passes addresses to the remote target. The
17722default value is the number of bits in the target's address.
17723
17724@item show remoteaddresssize
17725Show the current value of remote address size in bits.
17726
17727@item set remotebaud @var{n}
17728@cindex baud rate for remote targets
17729Set the baud rate for the remote serial I/O to @var{n} baud. The
17730value is used to set the speed of the serial port used for debugging
17731remote targets.
17732
17733@item show remotebaud
17734Show the current speed of the remote connection.
17735
17736@item set remotebreak
17737@cindex interrupt remote programs
17738@cindex BREAK signal instead of Ctrl-C
9a6253be 17739@anchor{set remotebreak}
9c16f35a 17740If set to on, @value{GDBN} sends a @code{BREAK} signal to the remote
c8aa23ab 17741when you type @kbd{Ctrl-c} to interrupt the program running
9a7a1b36 17742on the remote. If set to off, @value{GDBN} sends the @samp{Ctrl-C}
9c16f35a
EZ
17743character instead. The default is off, since most remote systems
17744expect to see @samp{Ctrl-C} as the interrupt signal.
17745
17746@item show remotebreak
17747Show whether @value{GDBN} sends @code{BREAK} or @samp{Ctrl-C} to
17748interrupt the remote program.
17749
23776285
MR
17750@item set remoteflow on
17751@itemx set remoteflow off
17752@kindex set remoteflow
17753Enable or disable hardware flow control (@code{RTS}/@code{CTS})
17754on the serial port used to communicate to the remote target.
17755
17756@item show remoteflow
17757@kindex show remoteflow
17758Show the current setting of hardware flow control.
17759
9c16f35a
EZ
17760@item set remotelogbase @var{base}
17761Set the base (a.k.a.@: radix) of logging serial protocol
17762communications to @var{base}. Supported values of @var{base} are:
17763@code{ascii}, @code{octal}, and @code{hex}. The default is
17764@code{ascii}.
17765
17766@item show remotelogbase
17767Show the current setting of the radix for logging remote serial
17768protocol.
17769
17770@item set remotelogfile @var{file}
17771@cindex record serial communications on file
17772Record remote serial communications on the named @var{file}. The
17773default is not to record at all.
17774
17775@item show remotelogfile.
17776Show the current setting of the file name on which to record the
17777serial communications.
17778
17779@item set remotetimeout @var{num}
17780@cindex timeout for serial communications
17781@cindex remote timeout
17782Set the timeout limit to wait for the remote target to respond to
17783@var{num} seconds. The default is 2 seconds.
17784
17785@item show remotetimeout
17786Show the current number of seconds to wait for the remote target
17787responses.
17788
17789@cindex limit hardware breakpoints and watchpoints
17790@cindex remote target, limit break- and watchpoints
501eef12
AC
17791@anchor{set remote hardware-watchpoint-limit}
17792@anchor{set remote hardware-breakpoint-limit}
17793@item set remote hardware-watchpoint-limit @var{limit}
17794@itemx set remote hardware-breakpoint-limit @var{limit}
17795Restrict @value{GDBN} to using @var{limit} remote hardware breakpoint or
17796watchpoints. A limit of -1, the default, is treated as unlimited.
2d717e4f 17797
480a3f21
PW
17798@cindex limit hardware watchpoints length
17799@cindex remote target, limit watchpoints length
17800@anchor{set remote hardware-watchpoint-length-limit}
17801@item set remote hardware-watchpoint-length-limit @var{limit}
17802Restrict @value{GDBN} to using @var{limit} bytes for the maximum length of
17803a remote hardware watchpoint. A limit of -1, the default, is treated
17804as unlimited.
17805
17806@item show remote hardware-watchpoint-length-limit
17807Show the current limit (in bytes) of the maximum length of
17808a remote hardware watchpoint.
17809
2d717e4f
DJ
17810@item set remote exec-file @var{filename}
17811@itemx show remote exec-file
17812@anchor{set remote exec-file}
17813@cindex executable file, for remote target
17814Select the file used for @code{run} with @code{target
17815extended-remote}. This should be set to a filename valid on the
17816target system. If it is not set, the target will use a default
17817filename (e.g.@: the last program run).
84603566 17818
9a7071a8
JB
17819@item set remote interrupt-sequence
17820@cindex interrupt remote programs
17821@cindex select Ctrl-C, BREAK or BREAK-g
17822Allow the user to select one of @samp{Ctrl-C}, a @code{BREAK} or
17823@samp{BREAK-g} as the
17824sequence to the remote target in order to interrupt the execution.
17825@samp{Ctrl-C} is a default. Some system prefers @code{BREAK} which
17826is high level of serial line for some certain time.
17827Linux kernel prefers @samp{BREAK-g}, a.k.a Magic SysRq g.
17828It is @code{BREAK} signal followed by character @code{g}.
17829
17830@item show interrupt-sequence
17831Show which of @samp{Ctrl-C}, @code{BREAK} or @code{BREAK-g}
17832is sent by @value{GDBN} to interrupt the remote program.
17833@code{BREAK-g} is BREAK signal followed by @code{g} and
17834also known as Magic SysRq g.
17835
17836@item set remote interrupt-on-connect
17837@cindex send interrupt-sequence on start
17838Specify whether interrupt-sequence is sent to remote target when
17839@value{GDBN} connects to it. This is mostly needed when you debug
17840Linux kernel. Linux kernel expects @code{BREAK} followed by @code{g}
17841which is known as Magic SysRq g in order to connect @value{GDBN}.
17842
17843@item show interrupt-on-connect
17844Show whether interrupt-sequence is sent
17845to remote target when @value{GDBN} connects to it.
17846
84603566
SL
17847@kindex set tcp
17848@kindex show tcp
17849@item set tcp auto-retry on
17850@cindex auto-retry, for remote TCP target
17851Enable auto-retry for remote TCP connections. This is useful if the remote
17852debugging agent is launched in parallel with @value{GDBN}; there is a race
17853condition because the agent may not become ready to accept the connection
17854before @value{GDBN} attempts to connect. When auto-retry is
17855enabled, if the initial attempt to connect fails, @value{GDBN} reattempts
17856to establish the connection using the timeout specified by
17857@code{set tcp connect-timeout}.
17858
17859@item set tcp auto-retry off
17860Do not auto-retry failed TCP connections.
17861
17862@item show tcp auto-retry
17863Show the current auto-retry setting.
17864
17865@item set tcp connect-timeout @var{seconds}
17866@cindex connection timeout, for remote TCP target
17867@cindex timeout, for remote target connection
17868Set the timeout for establishing a TCP connection to the remote target to
17869@var{seconds}. The timeout affects both polling to retry failed connections
17870(enabled by @code{set tcp auto-retry on}) and waiting for connections
17871that are merely slow to complete, and represents an approximate cumulative
17872value.
17873
17874@item show tcp connect-timeout
17875Show the current connection timeout setting.
501eef12
AC
17876@end table
17877
427c3a89
DJ
17878@cindex remote packets, enabling and disabling
17879The @value{GDBN} remote protocol autodetects the packets supported by
17880your debugging stub. If you need to override the autodetection, you
17881can use these commands to enable or disable individual packets. Each
17882packet can be set to @samp{on} (the remote target supports this
17883packet), @samp{off} (the remote target does not support this packet),
17884or @samp{auto} (detect remote target support for this packet). They
17885all default to @samp{auto}. For more information about each packet,
17886see @ref{Remote Protocol}.
17887
17888During normal use, you should not have to use any of these commands.
17889If you do, that may be a bug in your remote debugging stub, or a bug
17890in @value{GDBN}. You may want to report the problem to the
17891@value{GDBN} developers.
17892
cfa9d6d9
DJ
17893For each packet @var{name}, the command to enable or disable the
17894packet is @code{set remote @var{name}-packet}. The available settings
17895are:
427c3a89 17896
cfa9d6d9 17897@multitable @columnfractions 0.28 0.32 0.25
427c3a89
DJ
17898@item Command Name
17899@tab Remote Packet
17900@tab Related Features
17901
cfa9d6d9 17902@item @code{fetch-register}
427c3a89
DJ
17903@tab @code{p}
17904@tab @code{info registers}
17905
cfa9d6d9 17906@item @code{set-register}
427c3a89
DJ
17907@tab @code{P}
17908@tab @code{set}
17909
cfa9d6d9 17910@item @code{binary-download}
427c3a89
DJ
17911@tab @code{X}
17912@tab @code{load}, @code{set}
17913
cfa9d6d9 17914@item @code{read-aux-vector}
427c3a89
DJ
17915@tab @code{qXfer:auxv:read}
17916@tab @code{info auxv}
17917
cfa9d6d9 17918@item @code{symbol-lookup}
427c3a89
DJ
17919@tab @code{qSymbol}
17920@tab Detecting multiple threads
17921
2d717e4f
DJ
17922@item @code{attach}
17923@tab @code{vAttach}
17924@tab @code{attach}
17925
cfa9d6d9 17926@item @code{verbose-resume}
427c3a89
DJ
17927@tab @code{vCont}
17928@tab Stepping or resuming multiple threads
17929
2d717e4f
DJ
17930@item @code{run}
17931@tab @code{vRun}
17932@tab @code{run}
17933
cfa9d6d9 17934@item @code{software-breakpoint}
427c3a89
DJ
17935@tab @code{Z0}
17936@tab @code{break}
17937
cfa9d6d9 17938@item @code{hardware-breakpoint}
427c3a89
DJ
17939@tab @code{Z1}
17940@tab @code{hbreak}
17941
cfa9d6d9 17942@item @code{write-watchpoint}
427c3a89
DJ
17943@tab @code{Z2}
17944@tab @code{watch}
17945
cfa9d6d9 17946@item @code{read-watchpoint}
427c3a89
DJ
17947@tab @code{Z3}
17948@tab @code{rwatch}
17949
cfa9d6d9 17950@item @code{access-watchpoint}
427c3a89
DJ
17951@tab @code{Z4}
17952@tab @code{awatch}
17953
cfa9d6d9
DJ
17954@item @code{target-features}
17955@tab @code{qXfer:features:read}
17956@tab @code{set architecture}
17957
17958@item @code{library-info}
17959@tab @code{qXfer:libraries:read}
17960@tab @code{info sharedlibrary}
17961
17962@item @code{memory-map}
17963@tab @code{qXfer:memory-map:read}
17964@tab @code{info mem}
17965
0fb4aa4b
PA
17966@item @code{read-sdata-object}
17967@tab @code{qXfer:sdata:read}
17968@tab @code{print $_sdata}
17969
cfa9d6d9
DJ
17970@item @code{read-spu-object}
17971@tab @code{qXfer:spu:read}
17972@tab @code{info spu}
17973
17974@item @code{write-spu-object}
17975@tab @code{qXfer:spu:write}
17976@tab @code{info spu}
17977
4aa995e1
PA
17978@item @code{read-siginfo-object}
17979@tab @code{qXfer:siginfo:read}
17980@tab @code{print $_siginfo}
17981
17982@item @code{write-siginfo-object}
17983@tab @code{qXfer:siginfo:write}
17984@tab @code{set $_siginfo}
17985
dc146f7c
VP
17986@item @code{threads}
17987@tab @code{qXfer:threads:read}
17988@tab @code{info threads}
17989
cfa9d6d9 17990@item @code{get-thread-local-@*storage-address}
427c3a89
DJ
17991@tab @code{qGetTLSAddr}
17992@tab Displaying @code{__thread} variables
17993
711e434b
PM
17994@item @code{get-thread-information-block-address}
17995@tab @code{qGetTIBAddr}
17996@tab Display MS-Windows Thread Information Block.
17997
08388c79
DE
17998@item @code{search-memory}
17999@tab @code{qSearch:memory}
18000@tab @code{find}
18001
427c3a89
DJ
18002@item @code{supported-packets}
18003@tab @code{qSupported}
18004@tab Remote communications parameters
18005
cfa9d6d9 18006@item @code{pass-signals}
89be2091
DJ
18007@tab @code{QPassSignals}
18008@tab @code{handle @var{signal}}
18009
9b224c5e
PA
18010@item @code{program-signals}
18011@tab @code{QProgramSignals}
18012@tab @code{handle @var{signal}}
18013
a6b151f1
DJ
18014@item @code{hostio-close-packet}
18015@tab @code{vFile:close}
18016@tab @code{remote get}, @code{remote put}
18017
18018@item @code{hostio-open-packet}
18019@tab @code{vFile:open}
18020@tab @code{remote get}, @code{remote put}
18021
18022@item @code{hostio-pread-packet}
18023@tab @code{vFile:pread}
18024@tab @code{remote get}, @code{remote put}
18025
18026@item @code{hostio-pwrite-packet}
18027@tab @code{vFile:pwrite}
18028@tab @code{remote get}, @code{remote put}
18029
18030@item @code{hostio-unlink-packet}
18031@tab @code{vFile:unlink}
18032@tab @code{remote delete}
a6f3e723 18033
b9e7b9c3
UW
18034@item @code{hostio-readlink-packet}
18035@tab @code{vFile:readlink}
18036@tab Host I/O
18037
a6f3e723
SL
18038@item @code{noack-packet}
18039@tab @code{QStartNoAckMode}
18040@tab Packet acknowledgment
07e059b5
VP
18041
18042@item @code{osdata}
18043@tab @code{qXfer:osdata:read}
18044@tab @code{info os}
0b16c5cf
PA
18045
18046@item @code{query-attached}
18047@tab @code{qAttached}
18048@tab Querying remote process attach state.
b3b9301e
PA
18049
18050@item @code{traceframe-info}
18051@tab @code{qXfer:traceframe-info:read}
18052@tab Traceframe info
03583c20 18053
1e4d1764
YQ
18054@item @code{install-in-trace}
18055@tab @code{InstallInTrace}
18056@tab Install tracepoint in tracing
18057
03583c20
UW
18058@item @code{disable-randomization}
18059@tab @code{QDisableRandomization}
18060@tab @code{set disable-randomization}
83364271
LM
18061
18062@item @code{conditional-breakpoints-packet}
18063@tab @code{Z0 and Z1}
18064@tab @code{Support for target-side breakpoint condition evaluation}
427c3a89
DJ
18065@end multitable
18066
79a6e687
BW
18067@node Remote Stub
18068@section Implementing a Remote Stub
7a292a7a 18069
8e04817f
AC
18070@cindex debugging stub, example
18071@cindex remote stub, example
18072@cindex stub example, remote debugging
18073The stub files provided with @value{GDBN} implement the target side of the
18074communication protocol, and the @value{GDBN} side is implemented in the
18075@value{GDBN} source file @file{remote.c}. Normally, you can simply allow
18076these subroutines to communicate, and ignore the details. (If you're
18077implementing your own stub file, you can still ignore the details: start
18078with one of the existing stub files. @file{sparc-stub.c} is the best
18079organized, and therefore the easiest to read.)
18080
104c1213
JM
18081@cindex remote serial debugging, overview
18082To debug a program running on another machine (the debugging
18083@dfn{target} machine), you must first arrange for all the usual
18084prerequisites for the program to run by itself. For example, for a C
18085program, you need:
c906108c 18086
104c1213
JM
18087@enumerate
18088@item
18089A startup routine to set up the C runtime environment; these usually
18090have a name like @file{crt0}. The startup routine may be supplied by
18091your hardware supplier, or you may have to write your own.
96baa820 18092
5d161b24 18093@item
d4f3574e 18094A C subroutine library to support your program's
104c1213 18095subroutine calls, notably managing input and output.
96baa820 18096
104c1213
JM
18097@item
18098A way of getting your program to the other machine---for example, a
18099download program. These are often supplied by the hardware
18100manufacturer, but you may have to write your own from hardware
18101documentation.
18102@end enumerate
96baa820 18103
104c1213
JM
18104The next step is to arrange for your program to use a serial port to
18105communicate with the machine where @value{GDBN} is running (the @dfn{host}
18106machine). In general terms, the scheme looks like this:
96baa820 18107
104c1213
JM
18108@table @emph
18109@item On the host,
18110@value{GDBN} already understands how to use this protocol; when everything
18111else is set up, you can simply use the @samp{target remote} command
18112(@pxref{Targets,,Specifying a Debugging Target}).
18113
18114@item On the target,
18115you must link with your program a few special-purpose subroutines that
18116implement the @value{GDBN} remote serial protocol. The file containing these
18117subroutines is called a @dfn{debugging stub}.
18118
18119On certain remote targets, you can use an auxiliary program
18120@code{gdbserver} instead of linking a stub into your program.
79a6e687 18121@xref{Server,,Using the @code{gdbserver} Program}, for details.
104c1213 18122@end table
96baa820 18123
104c1213
JM
18124The debugging stub is specific to the architecture of the remote
18125machine; for example, use @file{sparc-stub.c} to debug programs on
18126@sc{sparc} boards.
96baa820 18127
104c1213
JM
18128@cindex remote serial stub list
18129These working remote stubs are distributed with @value{GDBN}:
96baa820 18130
104c1213
JM
18131@table @code
18132
18133@item i386-stub.c
41afff9a 18134@cindex @file{i386-stub.c}
104c1213
JM
18135@cindex Intel
18136@cindex i386
18137For Intel 386 and compatible architectures.
18138
18139@item m68k-stub.c
41afff9a 18140@cindex @file{m68k-stub.c}
104c1213
JM
18141@cindex Motorola 680x0
18142@cindex m680x0
18143For Motorola 680x0 architectures.
18144
18145@item sh-stub.c
41afff9a 18146@cindex @file{sh-stub.c}
172c2a43 18147@cindex Renesas
104c1213 18148@cindex SH
172c2a43 18149For Renesas SH architectures.
104c1213
JM
18150
18151@item sparc-stub.c
41afff9a 18152@cindex @file{sparc-stub.c}
104c1213
JM
18153@cindex Sparc
18154For @sc{sparc} architectures.
18155
18156@item sparcl-stub.c
41afff9a 18157@cindex @file{sparcl-stub.c}
104c1213
JM
18158@cindex Fujitsu
18159@cindex SparcLite
18160For Fujitsu @sc{sparclite} architectures.
18161
18162@end table
18163
18164The @file{README} file in the @value{GDBN} distribution may list other
18165recently added stubs.
18166
18167@menu
18168* Stub Contents:: What the stub can do for you
18169* Bootstrapping:: What you must do for the stub
18170* Debug Session:: Putting it all together
104c1213
JM
18171@end menu
18172
6d2ebf8b 18173@node Stub Contents
79a6e687 18174@subsection What the Stub Can Do for You
104c1213
JM
18175
18176@cindex remote serial stub
18177The debugging stub for your architecture supplies these three
18178subroutines:
18179
18180@table @code
18181@item set_debug_traps
4644b6e3 18182@findex set_debug_traps
104c1213
JM
18183@cindex remote serial stub, initialization
18184This routine arranges for @code{handle_exception} to run when your
2fb860fc
PA
18185program stops. You must call this subroutine explicitly in your
18186program's startup code.
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JM
18187
18188@item handle_exception
4644b6e3 18189@findex handle_exception
104c1213
JM
18190@cindex remote serial stub, main routine
18191This is the central workhorse, but your program never calls it
18192explicitly---the setup code arranges for @code{handle_exception} to
18193run when a trap is triggered.
18194
18195@code{handle_exception} takes control when your program stops during
18196execution (for example, on a breakpoint), and mediates communications
18197with @value{GDBN} on the host machine. This is where the communications
18198protocol is implemented; @code{handle_exception} acts as the @value{GDBN}
d4f3574e 18199representative on the target machine. It begins by sending summary
104c1213
JM
18200information on the state of your program, then continues to execute,
18201retrieving and transmitting any information @value{GDBN} needs, until you
18202execute a @value{GDBN} command that makes your program resume; at that point,
18203@code{handle_exception} returns control to your own code on the target
5d161b24 18204machine.
104c1213
JM
18205
18206@item breakpoint
18207@cindex @code{breakpoint} subroutine, remote
18208Use this auxiliary subroutine to make your program contain a
18209breakpoint. Depending on the particular situation, this may be the only
18210way for @value{GDBN} to get control. For instance, if your target
18211machine has some sort of interrupt button, you won't need to call this;
18212pressing the interrupt button transfers control to
18213@code{handle_exception}---in effect, to @value{GDBN}. On some machines,
18214simply receiving characters on the serial port may also trigger a trap;
18215again, in that situation, you don't need to call @code{breakpoint} from
18216your own program---simply running @samp{target remote} from the host
5d161b24 18217@value{GDBN} session gets control.
104c1213
JM
18218
18219Call @code{breakpoint} if none of these is true, or if you simply want
18220to make certain your program stops at a predetermined point for the
18221start of your debugging session.
18222@end table
18223
6d2ebf8b 18224@node Bootstrapping
79a6e687 18225@subsection What You Must Do for the Stub
104c1213
JM
18226
18227@cindex remote stub, support routines
18228The debugging stubs that come with @value{GDBN} are set up for a particular
18229chip architecture, but they have no information about the rest of your
18230debugging target machine.
18231
18232First of all you need to tell the stub how to communicate with the
18233serial port.
18234
18235@table @code
18236@item int getDebugChar()
4644b6e3 18237@findex getDebugChar
104c1213
JM
18238Write this subroutine to read a single character from the serial port.
18239It may be identical to @code{getchar} for your target system; a
18240different name is used to allow you to distinguish the two if you wish.
18241
18242@item void putDebugChar(int)
4644b6e3 18243@findex putDebugChar
104c1213 18244Write this subroutine to write a single character to the serial port.
5d161b24 18245It may be identical to @code{putchar} for your target system; a
104c1213
JM
18246different name is used to allow you to distinguish the two if you wish.
18247@end table
18248
18249@cindex control C, and remote debugging
18250@cindex interrupting remote targets
18251If you want @value{GDBN} to be able to stop your program while it is
18252running, you need to use an interrupt-driven serial driver, and arrange
18253for it to stop when it receives a @code{^C} (@samp{\003}, the control-C
18254character). That is the character which @value{GDBN} uses to tell the
18255remote system to stop.
18256
18257Getting the debugging target to return the proper status to @value{GDBN}
18258probably requires changes to the standard stub; one quick and dirty way
18259is to just execute a breakpoint instruction (the ``dirty'' part is that
18260@value{GDBN} reports a @code{SIGTRAP} instead of a @code{SIGINT}).
18261
18262Other routines you need to supply are:
18263
18264@table @code
18265@item void exceptionHandler (int @var{exception_number}, void *@var{exception_address})
4644b6e3 18266@findex exceptionHandler
104c1213
JM
18267Write this function to install @var{exception_address} in the exception
18268handling tables. You need to do this because the stub does not have any
18269way of knowing what the exception handling tables on your target system
18270are like (for example, the processor's table might be in @sc{rom},
18271containing entries which point to a table in @sc{ram}).
18272@var{exception_number} is the exception number which should be changed;
18273its meaning is architecture-dependent (for example, different numbers
18274might represent divide by zero, misaligned access, etc). When this
18275exception occurs, control should be transferred directly to
18276@var{exception_address}, and the processor state (stack, registers,
18277and so on) should be just as it is when a processor exception occurs. So if
18278you want to use a jump instruction to reach @var{exception_address}, it
18279should be a simple jump, not a jump to subroutine.
18280
18281For the 386, @var{exception_address} should be installed as an interrupt
18282gate so that interrupts are masked while the handler runs. The gate
18283should be at privilege level 0 (the most privileged level). The
18284@sc{sparc} and 68k stubs are able to mask interrupts themselves without
18285help from @code{exceptionHandler}.
18286
18287@item void flush_i_cache()
4644b6e3 18288@findex flush_i_cache
d4f3574e 18289On @sc{sparc} and @sc{sparclite} only, write this subroutine to flush the
104c1213
JM
18290instruction cache, if any, on your target machine. If there is no
18291instruction cache, this subroutine may be a no-op.
18292
18293On target machines that have instruction caches, @value{GDBN} requires this
18294function to make certain that the state of your program is stable.
18295@end table
18296
18297@noindent
18298You must also make sure this library routine is available:
18299
18300@table @code
18301@item void *memset(void *, int, int)
4644b6e3 18302@findex memset
104c1213
JM
18303This is the standard library function @code{memset} that sets an area of
18304memory to a known value. If you have one of the free versions of
18305@code{libc.a}, @code{memset} can be found there; otherwise, you must
18306either obtain it from your hardware manufacturer, or write your own.
18307@end table
18308
18309If you do not use the GNU C compiler, you may need other standard
18310library subroutines as well; this varies from one stub to another,
18311but in general the stubs are likely to use any of the common library
e22ea452 18312subroutines which @code{@value{NGCC}} generates as inline code.
104c1213
JM
18313
18314
6d2ebf8b 18315@node Debug Session
79a6e687 18316@subsection Putting it All Together
104c1213
JM
18317
18318@cindex remote serial debugging summary
18319In summary, when your program is ready to debug, you must follow these
18320steps.
18321
18322@enumerate
18323@item
6d2ebf8b 18324Make sure you have defined the supporting low-level routines
79a6e687 18325(@pxref{Bootstrapping,,What You Must Do for the Stub}):
104c1213
JM
18326@display
18327@code{getDebugChar}, @code{putDebugChar},
18328@code{flush_i_cache}, @code{memset}, @code{exceptionHandler}.
18329@end display
18330
18331@item
2fb860fc
PA
18332Insert these lines in your program's startup code, before the main
18333procedure is called:
104c1213 18334
474c8240 18335@smallexample
104c1213
JM
18336set_debug_traps();
18337breakpoint();
474c8240 18338@end smallexample
104c1213 18339
2fb860fc
PA
18340On some machines, when a breakpoint trap is raised, the hardware
18341automatically makes the PC point to the instruction after the
18342breakpoint. If your machine doesn't do that, you may need to adjust
18343@code{handle_exception} to arrange for it to return to the instruction
18344after the breakpoint on this first invocation, so that your program
18345doesn't keep hitting the initial breakpoint instead of making
18346progress.
18347
104c1213
JM
18348@item
18349For the 680x0 stub only, you need to provide a variable called
18350@code{exceptionHook}. Normally you just use:
18351
474c8240 18352@smallexample
104c1213 18353void (*exceptionHook)() = 0;
474c8240 18354@end smallexample
104c1213 18355
d4f3574e 18356@noindent
104c1213 18357but if before calling @code{set_debug_traps}, you set it to point to a
598ca718 18358function in your program, that function is called when
104c1213
JM
18359@code{@value{GDBN}} continues after stopping on a trap (for example, bus
18360error). The function indicated by @code{exceptionHook} is called with
18361one parameter: an @code{int} which is the exception number.
18362
18363@item
18364Compile and link together: your program, the @value{GDBN} debugging stub for
18365your target architecture, and the supporting subroutines.
18366
18367@item
18368Make sure you have a serial connection between your target machine and
18369the @value{GDBN} host, and identify the serial port on the host.
18370
18371@item
18372@c The "remote" target now provides a `load' command, so we should
18373@c document that. FIXME.
18374Download your program to your target machine (or get it there by
18375whatever means the manufacturer provides), and start it.
18376
18377@item
07f31aa6 18378Start @value{GDBN} on the host, and connect to the target
79a6e687 18379(@pxref{Connecting,,Connecting to a Remote Target}).
9db8d71f 18380
104c1213
JM
18381@end enumerate
18382
8e04817f
AC
18383@node Configurations
18384@chapter Configuration-Specific Information
104c1213 18385
8e04817f
AC
18386While nearly all @value{GDBN} commands are available for all native and
18387cross versions of the debugger, there are some exceptions. This chapter
18388describes things that are only available in certain configurations.
104c1213 18389
8e04817f
AC
18390There are three major categories of configurations: native
18391configurations, where the host and target are the same, embedded
18392operating system configurations, which are usually the same for several
18393different processor architectures, and bare embedded processors, which
18394are quite different from each other.
104c1213 18395
8e04817f
AC
18396@menu
18397* Native::
18398* Embedded OS::
18399* Embedded Processors::
18400* Architectures::
18401@end menu
104c1213 18402
8e04817f
AC
18403@node Native
18404@section Native
104c1213 18405
8e04817f
AC
18406This section describes details specific to particular native
18407configurations.
6cf7e474 18408
8e04817f
AC
18409@menu
18410* HP-UX:: HP-UX
7561d450 18411* BSD libkvm Interface:: Debugging BSD kernel memory images
8e04817f
AC
18412* SVR4 Process Information:: SVR4 process information
18413* DJGPP Native:: Features specific to the DJGPP port
78c47bea 18414* Cygwin Native:: Features specific to the Cygwin port
14d6dd68 18415* Hurd Native:: Features specific to @sc{gnu} Hurd
a64548ea 18416* Neutrino:: Features specific to QNX Neutrino
a80b95ba 18417* Darwin:: Features specific to Darwin
8e04817f 18418@end menu
6cf7e474 18419
8e04817f
AC
18420@node HP-UX
18421@subsection HP-UX
104c1213 18422
8e04817f
AC
18423On HP-UX systems, if you refer to a function or variable name that
18424begins with a dollar sign, @value{GDBN} searches for a user or system
18425name first, before it searches for a convenience variable.
104c1213 18426
9c16f35a 18427
7561d450
MK
18428@node BSD libkvm Interface
18429@subsection BSD libkvm Interface
18430
18431@cindex libkvm
18432@cindex kernel memory image
18433@cindex kernel crash dump
18434
18435BSD-derived systems (FreeBSD/NetBSD/OpenBSD) have a kernel memory
18436interface that provides a uniform interface for accessing kernel virtual
18437memory images, including live systems and crash dumps. @value{GDBN}
18438uses this interface to allow you to debug live kernels and kernel crash
18439dumps on many native BSD configurations. This is implemented as a
18440special @code{kvm} debugging target. For debugging a live system, load
18441the currently running kernel into @value{GDBN} and connect to the
18442@code{kvm} target:
18443
18444@smallexample
18445(@value{GDBP}) @b{target kvm}
18446@end smallexample
18447
18448For debugging crash dumps, provide the file name of the crash dump as an
18449argument:
18450
18451@smallexample
18452(@value{GDBP}) @b{target kvm /var/crash/bsd.0}
18453@end smallexample
18454
18455Once connected to the @code{kvm} target, the following commands are
18456available:
18457
18458@table @code
18459@kindex kvm
18460@item kvm pcb
721c2651 18461Set current context from the @dfn{Process Control Block} (PCB) address.
7561d450
MK
18462
18463@item kvm proc
18464Set current context from proc address. This command isn't available on
18465modern FreeBSD systems.
18466@end table
18467
8e04817f 18468@node SVR4 Process Information
79a6e687 18469@subsection SVR4 Process Information
60bf7e09
EZ
18470@cindex /proc
18471@cindex examine process image
18472@cindex process info via @file{/proc}
104c1213 18473
60bf7e09
EZ
18474Many versions of SVR4 and compatible systems provide a facility called
18475@samp{/proc} that can be used to examine the image of a running
18476process using file-system subroutines. If @value{GDBN} is configured
18477for an operating system with this facility, the command @code{info
18478proc} is available to report information about the process running
18479your program, or about any process running on your system. @code{info
18480proc} works only on SVR4 systems that include the @code{procfs} code.
18481This includes, as of this writing, @sc{gnu}/Linux, OSF/1 (Digital
18482Unix), Solaris, Irix, and Unixware, but not HP-UX, for example.
104c1213 18483
8e04817f
AC
18484@table @code
18485@kindex info proc
60bf7e09 18486@cindex process ID
8e04817f 18487@item info proc
60bf7e09
EZ
18488@itemx info proc @var{process-id}
18489Summarize available information about any running process. If a
18490process ID is specified by @var{process-id}, display information about
18491that process; otherwise display information about the program being
18492debugged. The summary includes the debugged process ID, the command
18493line used to invoke it, its current working directory, and its
18494executable file's absolute file name.
18495
18496On some systems, @var{process-id} can be of the form
18497@samp{[@var{pid}]/@var{tid}} which specifies a certain thread ID
18498within a process. If the optional @var{pid} part is missing, it means
18499a thread from the process being debugged (the leading @samp{/} still
18500needs to be present, or else @value{GDBN} will interpret the number as
18501a process ID rather than a thread ID).
6cf7e474 18502
8e04817f 18503@item info proc mappings
60bf7e09
EZ
18504@cindex memory address space mappings
18505Report the memory address space ranges accessible in the program, with
18506information on whether the process has read, write, or execute access
18507rights to each range. On @sc{gnu}/Linux systems, each memory range
18508includes the object file which is mapped to that range, instead of the
18509memory access rights to that range.
18510
18511@item info proc stat
18512@itemx info proc status
18513@cindex process detailed status information
18514These subcommands are specific to @sc{gnu}/Linux systems. They show
18515the process-related information, including the user ID and group ID;
18516how many threads are there in the process; its virtual memory usage;
18517the signals that are pending, blocked, and ignored; its TTY; its
18518consumption of system and user time; its stack size; its @samp{nice}
2eecc4ab 18519value; etc. For more information, see the @samp{proc} man page
60bf7e09
EZ
18520(type @kbd{man 5 proc} from your shell prompt).
18521
18522@item info proc all
18523Show all the information about the process described under all of the
18524above @code{info proc} subcommands.
18525
8e04817f
AC
18526@ignore
18527@comment These sub-options of 'info proc' were not included when
18528@comment procfs.c was re-written. Keep their descriptions around
18529@comment against the day when someone finds the time to put them back in.
18530@kindex info proc times
18531@item info proc times
18532Starting time, user CPU time, and system CPU time for your program and
18533its children.
6cf7e474 18534
8e04817f
AC
18535@kindex info proc id
18536@item info proc id
18537Report on the process IDs related to your program: its own process ID,
18538the ID of its parent, the process group ID, and the session ID.
8e04817f 18539@end ignore
721c2651
EZ
18540
18541@item set procfs-trace
18542@kindex set procfs-trace
18543@cindex @code{procfs} API calls
18544This command enables and disables tracing of @code{procfs} API calls.
18545
18546@item show procfs-trace
18547@kindex show procfs-trace
18548Show the current state of @code{procfs} API call tracing.
18549
18550@item set procfs-file @var{file}
18551@kindex set procfs-file
18552Tell @value{GDBN} to write @code{procfs} API trace to the named
18553@var{file}. @value{GDBN} appends the trace info to the previous
18554contents of the file. The default is to display the trace on the
18555standard output.
18556
18557@item show procfs-file
18558@kindex show procfs-file
18559Show the file to which @code{procfs} API trace is written.
18560
18561@item proc-trace-entry
18562@itemx proc-trace-exit
18563@itemx proc-untrace-entry
18564@itemx proc-untrace-exit
18565@kindex proc-trace-entry
18566@kindex proc-trace-exit
18567@kindex proc-untrace-entry
18568@kindex proc-untrace-exit
18569These commands enable and disable tracing of entries into and exits
18570from the @code{syscall} interface.
18571
18572@item info pidlist
18573@kindex info pidlist
18574@cindex process list, QNX Neutrino
18575For QNX Neutrino only, this command displays the list of all the
18576processes and all the threads within each process.
18577
18578@item info meminfo
18579@kindex info meminfo
18580@cindex mapinfo list, QNX Neutrino
18581For QNX Neutrino only, this command displays the list of all mapinfos.
8e04817f 18582@end table
104c1213 18583
8e04817f
AC
18584@node DJGPP Native
18585@subsection Features for Debugging @sc{djgpp} Programs
18586@cindex @sc{djgpp} debugging
18587@cindex native @sc{djgpp} debugging
18588@cindex MS-DOS-specific commands
104c1213 18589
514c4d71
EZ
18590@cindex DPMI
18591@sc{djgpp} is a port of the @sc{gnu} development tools to MS-DOS and
8e04817f
AC
18592MS-Windows. @sc{djgpp} programs are 32-bit protected-mode programs
18593that use the @dfn{DPMI} (DOS Protected-Mode Interface) API to run on
18594top of real-mode DOS systems and their emulations.
104c1213 18595
8e04817f
AC
18596@value{GDBN} supports native debugging of @sc{djgpp} programs, and
18597defines a few commands specific to the @sc{djgpp} port. This
18598subsection describes those commands.
104c1213 18599
8e04817f
AC
18600@table @code
18601@kindex info dos
18602@item info dos
18603This is a prefix of @sc{djgpp}-specific commands which print
18604information about the target system and important OS structures.
f1251bdd 18605
8e04817f
AC
18606@kindex sysinfo
18607@cindex MS-DOS system info
18608@cindex free memory information (MS-DOS)
18609@item info dos sysinfo
18610This command displays assorted information about the underlying
18611platform: the CPU type and features, the OS version and flavor, the
18612DPMI version, and the available conventional and DPMI memory.
104c1213 18613
8e04817f
AC
18614@cindex GDT
18615@cindex LDT
18616@cindex IDT
18617@cindex segment descriptor tables
18618@cindex descriptor tables display
18619@item info dos gdt
18620@itemx info dos ldt
18621@itemx info dos idt
18622These 3 commands display entries from, respectively, Global, Local,
18623and Interrupt Descriptor Tables (GDT, LDT, and IDT). The descriptor
18624tables are data structures which store a descriptor for each segment
18625that is currently in use. The segment's selector is an index into a
18626descriptor table; the table entry for that index holds the
18627descriptor's base address and limit, and its attributes and access
18628rights.
104c1213 18629
8e04817f
AC
18630A typical @sc{djgpp} program uses 3 segments: a code segment, a data
18631segment (used for both data and the stack), and a DOS segment (which
18632allows access to DOS/BIOS data structures and absolute addresses in
18633conventional memory). However, the DPMI host will usually define
18634additional segments in order to support the DPMI environment.
d4f3574e 18635
8e04817f
AC
18636@cindex garbled pointers
18637These commands allow to display entries from the descriptor tables.
18638Without an argument, all entries from the specified table are
18639displayed. An argument, which should be an integer expression, means
18640display a single entry whose index is given by the argument. For
18641example, here's a convenient way to display information about the
18642debugged program's data segment:
104c1213 18643
8e04817f
AC
18644@smallexample
18645@exdent @code{(@value{GDBP}) info dos ldt $ds}
18646@exdent @code{0x13f: base=0x11970000 limit=0x0009ffff 32-Bit Data (Read/Write, Exp-up)}
18647@end smallexample
104c1213 18648
8e04817f
AC
18649@noindent
18650This comes in handy when you want to see whether a pointer is outside
18651the data segment's limit (i.e.@: @dfn{garbled}).
104c1213 18652
8e04817f
AC
18653@cindex page tables display (MS-DOS)
18654@item info dos pde
18655@itemx info dos pte
18656These two commands display entries from, respectively, the Page
18657Directory and the Page Tables. Page Directories and Page Tables are
18658data structures which control how virtual memory addresses are mapped
18659into physical addresses. A Page Table includes an entry for every
18660page of memory that is mapped into the program's address space; there
18661may be several Page Tables, each one holding up to 4096 entries. A
18662Page Directory has up to 4096 entries, one each for every Page Table
18663that is currently in use.
104c1213 18664
8e04817f
AC
18665Without an argument, @kbd{info dos pde} displays the entire Page
18666Directory, and @kbd{info dos pte} displays all the entries in all of
18667the Page Tables. An argument, an integer expression, given to the
18668@kbd{info dos pde} command means display only that entry from the Page
18669Directory table. An argument given to the @kbd{info dos pte} command
18670means display entries from a single Page Table, the one pointed to by
18671the specified entry in the Page Directory.
104c1213 18672
8e04817f
AC
18673@cindex direct memory access (DMA) on MS-DOS
18674These commands are useful when your program uses @dfn{DMA} (Direct
18675Memory Access), which needs physical addresses to program the DMA
18676controller.
104c1213 18677
8e04817f 18678These commands are supported only with some DPMI servers.
104c1213 18679
8e04817f
AC
18680@cindex physical address from linear address
18681@item info dos address-pte @var{addr}
18682This command displays the Page Table entry for a specified linear
514c4d71
EZ
18683address. The argument @var{addr} is a linear address which should
18684already have the appropriate segment's base address added to it,
18685because this command accepts addresses which may belong to @emph{any}
18686segment. For example, here's how to display the Page Table entry for
18687the page where a variable @code{i} is stored:
104c1213 18688
b383017d 18689@smallexample
8e04817f
AC
18690@exdent @code{(@value{GDBP}) info dos address-pte __djgpp_base_address + (char *)&i}
18691@exdent @code{Page Table entry for address 0x11a00d30:}
b383017d 18692@exdent @code{Base=0x02698000 Dirty Acc. Not-Cached Write-Back Usr Read-Write +0xd30}
8e04817f 18693@end smallexample
104c1213 18694
8e04817f
AC
18695@noindent
18696This says that @code{i} is stored at offset @code{0xd30} from the page
514c4d71 18697whose physical base address is @code{0x02698000}, and shows all the
8e04817f 18698attributes of that page.
104c1213 18699
8e04817f
AC
18700Note that you must cast the addresses of variables to a @code{char *},
18701since otherwise the value of @code{__djgpp_base_address}, the base
18702address of all variables and functions in a @sc{djgpp} program, will
18703be added using the rules of C pointer arithmetics: if @code{i} is
18704declared an @code{int}, @value{GDBN} will add 4 times the value of
18705@code{__djgpp_base_address} to the address of @code{i}.
104c1213 18706
8e04817f
AC
18707Here's another example, it displays the Page Table entry for the
18708transfer buffer:
104c1213 18709
8e04817f
AC
18710@smallexample
18711@exdent @code{(@value{GDBP}) info dos address-pte *((unsigned *)&_go32_info_block + 3)}
18712@exdent @code{Page Table entry for address 0x29110:}
18713@exdent @code{Base=0x00029000 Dirty Acc. Not-Cached Write-Back Usr Read-Write +0x110}
18714@end smallexample
104c1213 18715
8e04817f
AC
18716@noindent
18717(The @code{+ 3} offset is because the transfer buffer's address is the
514c4d71
EZ
187183rd member of the @code{_go32_info_block} structure.) The output
18719clearly shows that this DPMI server maps the addresses in conventional
18720memory 1:1, i.e.@: the physical (@code{0x00029000} + @code{0x110}) and
18721linear (@code{0x29110}) addresses are identical.
104c1213 18722
8e04817f
AC
18723This command is supported only with some DPMI servers.
18724@end table
104c1213 18725
c45da7e6 18726@cindex DOS serial data link, remote debugging
a8f24a35
EZ
18727In addition to native debugging, the DJGPP port supports remote
18728debugging via a serial data link. The following commands are specific
18729to remote serial debugging in the DJGPP port of @value{GDBN}.
18730
18731@table @code
18732@kindex set com1base
18733@kindex set com1irq
18734@kindex set com2base
18735@kindex set com2irq
18736@kindex set com3base
18737@kindex set com3irq
18738@kindex set com4base
18739@kindex set com4irq
18740@item set com1base @var{addr}
18741This command sets the base I/O port address of the @file{COM1} serial
18742port.
18743
18744@item set com1irq @var{irq}
18745This command sets the @dfn{Interrupt Request} (@code{IRQ}) line to use
18746for the @file{COM1} serial port.
18747
18748There are similar commands @samp{set com2base}, @samp{set com3irq},
18749etc.@: for setting the port address and the @code{IRQ} lines for the
18750other 3 COM ports.
18751
18752@kindex show com1base
18753@kindex show com1irq
18754@kindex show com2base
18755@kindex show com2irq
18756@kindex show com3base
18757@kindex show com3irq
18758@kindex show com4base
18759@kindex show com4irq
18760The related commands @samp{show com1base}, @samp{show com1irq} etc.@:
18761display the current settings of the base address and the @code{IRQ}
18762lines used by the COM ports.
c45da7e6
EZ
18763
18764@item info serial
18765@kindex info serial
18766@cindex DOS serial port status
18767This command prints the status of the 4 DOS serial ports. For each
18768port, it prints whether it's active or not, its I/O base address and
18769IRQ number, whether it uses a 16550-style FIFO, its baudrate, and the
18770counts of various errors encountered so far.
a8f24a35
EZ
18771@end table
18772
18773
78c47bea 18774@node Cygwin Native
79a6e687 18775@subsection Features for Debugging MS Windows PE Executables
78c47bea
PM
18776@cindex MS Windows debugging
18777@cindex native Cygwin debugging
18778@cindex Cygwin-specific commands
18779
be448670 18780@value{GDBN} supports native debugging of MS Windows programs, including
cbb8f428
EZ
18781DLLs with and without symbolic debugging information.
18782
18783@cindex Ctrl-BREAK, MS-Windows
18784@cindex interrupt debuggee on MS-Windows
18785MS-Windows programs that call @code{SetConsoleMode} to switch off the
18786special meaning of the @samp{Ctrl-C} keystroke cannot be interrupted
18787by typing @kbd{C-c}. For this reason, @value{GDBN} on MS-Windows
18788supports @kbd{C-@key{BREAK}} as an alternative interrupt key
18789sequence, which can be used to interrupt the debuggee even if it
18790ignores @kbd{C-c}.
18791
18792There are various additional Cygwin-specific commands, described in
18793this section. Working with DLLs that have no debugging symbols is
18794described in @ref{Non-debug DLL Symbols}.
78c47bea
PM
18795
18796@table @code
18797@kindex info w32
18798@item info w32
db2e3e2e 18799This is a prefix of MS Windows-specific commands which print
78c47bea
PM
18800information about the target system and important OS structures.
18801
18802@item info w32 selector
18803This command displays information returned by
18804the Win32 API @code{GetThreadSelectorEntry} function.
18805It takes an optional argument that is evaluated to
18806a long value to give the information about this given selector.
18807Without argument, this command displays information
d3e8051b 18808about the six segment registers.
78c47bea 18809
711e434b
PM
18810@item info w32 thread-information-block
18811This command displays thread specific information stored in the
18812Thread Information Block (readable on the X86 CPU family using @code{$fs}
18813selector for 32-bit programs and @code{$gs} for 64-bit programs).
18814
78c47bea
PM
18815@kindex info dll
18816@item info dll
db2e3e2e 18817This is a Cygwin-specific alias of @code{info shared}.
78c47bea
PM
18818
18819@kindex dll-symbols
18820@item dll-symbols
18821This command loads symbols from a dll similarly to
18822add-sym command but without the need to specify a base address.
18823
be90c084 18824@kindex set cygwin-exceptions
e16b02ee
EZ
18825@cindex debugging the Cygwin DLL
18826@cindex Cygwin DLL, debugging
be90c084 18827@item set cygwin-exceptions @var{mode}
e16b02ee
EZ
18828If @var{mode} is @code{on}, @value{GDBN} will break on exceptions that
18829happen inside the Cygwin DLL. If @var{mode} is @code{off},
18830@value{GDBN} will delay recognition of exceptions, and may ignore some
18831exceptions which seem to be caused by internal Cygwin DLL
18832``bookkeeping''. This option is meant primarily for debugging the
18833Cygwin DLL itself; the default value is @code{off} to avoid annoying
18834@value{GDBN} users with false @code{SIGSEGV} signals.
be90c084
CF
18835
18836@kindex show cygwin-exceptions
18837@item show cygwin-exceptions
e16b02ee
EZ
18838Displays whether @value{GDBN} will break on exceptions that happen
18839inside the Cygwin DLL itself.
be90c084 18840
b383017d 18841@kindex set new-console
78c47bea 18842@item set new-console @var{mode}
b383017d 18843If @var{mode} is @code{on} the debuggee will
78c47bea 18844be started in a new console on next start.
e03e5e7b 18845If @var{mode} is @code{off}, the debuggee will
78c47bea
PM
18846be started in the same console as the debugger.
18847
18848@kindex show new-console
18849@item show new-console
18850Displays whether a new console is used
18851when the debuggee is started.
18852
18853@kindex set new-group
18854@item set new-group @var{mode}
18855This boolean value controls whether the debuggee should
18856start a new group or stay in the same group as the debugger.
18857This affects the way the Windows OS handles
c8aa23ab 18858@samp{Ctrl-C}.
78c47bea
PM
18859
18860@kindex show new-group
18861@item show new-group
18862Displays current value of new-group boolean.
18863
18864@kindex set debugevents
18865@item set debugevents
219eec71
EZ
18866This boolean value adds debug output concerning kernel events related
18867to the debuggee seen by the debugger. This includes events that
18868signal thread and process creation and exit, DLL loading and
18869unloading, console interrupts, and debugging messages produced by the
18870Windows @code{OutputDebugString} API call.
78c47bea
PM
18871
18872@kindex set debugexec
18873@item set debugexec
b383017d 18874This boolean value adds debug output concerning execute events
219eec71 18875(such as resume thread) seen by the debugger.
78c47bea
PM
18876
18877@kindex set debugexceptions
18878@item set debugexceptions
219eec71
EZ
18879This boolean value adds debug output concerning exceptions in the
18880debuggee seen by the debugger.
78c47bea
PM
18881
18882@kindex set debugmemory
18883@item set debugmemory
219eec71
EZ
18884This boolean value adds debug output concerning debuggee memory reads
18885and writes by the debugger.
78c47bea
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18886
18887@kindex set shell
18888@item set shell
18889This boolean values specifies whether the debuggee is called
18890via a shell or directly (default value is on).
18891
18892@kindex show shell
18893@item show shell
18894Displays if the debuggee will be started with a shell.
18895
18896@end table
18897
be448670 18898@menu
79a6e687 18899* Non-debug DLL Symbols:: Support for DLLs without debugging symbols
be448670
CF
18900@end menu
18901
79a6e687
BW
18902@node Non-debug DLL Symbols
18903@subsubsection Support for DLLs without Debugging Symbols
be448670
CF
18904@cindex DLLs with no debugging symbols
18905@cindex Minimal symbols and DLLs
18906
18907Very often on windows, some of the DLLs that your program relies on do
18908not include symbolic debugging information (for example,
db2e3e2e 18909@file{kernel32.dll}). When @value{GDBN} doesn't recognize any debugging
be448670 18910symbols in a DLL, it relies on the minimal amount of symbolic
db2e3e2e 18911information contained in the DLL's export table. This section
be448670
CF
18912describes working with such symbols, known internally to @value{GDBN} as
18913``minimal symbols''.
18914
18915Note that before the debugged program has started execution, no DLLs
db2e3e2e 18916will have been loaded. The easiest way around this problem is simply to
be448670 18917start the program --- either by setting a breakpoint or letting the
db2e3e2e 18918program run once to completion. It is also possible to force
be448670 18919@value{GDBN} to load a particular DLL before starting the executable ---
12c27660 18920see the shared library information in @ref{Files}, or the
db2e3e2e 18921@code{dll-symbols} command in @ref{Cygwin Native}. Currently,
be448670
CF
18922explicitly loading symbols from a DLL with no debugging information will
18923cause the symbol names to be duplicated in @value{GDBN}'s lookup table,
18924which may adversely affect symbol lookup performance.
18925
79a6e687 18926@subsubsection DLL Name Prefixes
be448670
CF
18927
18928In keeping with the naming conventions used by the Microsoft debugging
18929tools, DLL export symbols are made available with a prefix based on the
18930DLL name, for instance @code{KERNEL32!CreateFileA}. The plain name is
18931also entered into the symbol table, so @code{CreateFileA} is often
99e008fe 18932sufficient. In some cases there will be name clashes within a program
be448670
CF
18933(particularly if the executable itself includes full debugging symbols)
18934necessitating the use of the fully qualified name when referring to the
99e008fe 18935contents of the DLL. Use single-quotes around the name to avoid the
be448670
CF
18936exclamation mark (``!'') being interpreted as a language operator.
18937
18938Note that the internal name of the DLL may be all upper-case, even
99e008fe 18939though the file name of the DLL is lower-case, or vice-versa. Since
be448670
CF
18940symbols within @value{GDBN} are @emph{case-sensitive} this may cause
18941some confusion. If in doubt, try the @code{info functions} and
0869d01b
NR
18942@code{info variables} commands or even @code{maint print msymbols}
18943(@pxref{Symbols}). Here's an example:
be448670
CF
18944
18945@smallexample
f7dc1244 18946(@value{GDBP}) info function CreateFileA
be448670
CF
18947All functions matching regular expression "CreateFileA":
18948
18949Non-debugging symbols:
189500x77e885f4 CreateFileA
189510x77e885f4 KERNEL32!CreateFileA
18952@end smallexample
18953
18954@smallexample
f7dc1244 18955(@value{GDBP}) info function !
be448670
CF
18956All functions matching regular expression "!":
18957
18958Non-debugging symbols:
189590x6100114c cygwin1!__assert
189600x61004034 cygwin1!_dll_crt0@@0
189610x61004240 cygwin1!dll_crt0(per_process *)
18962[etc...]
18963@end smallexample
18964
79a6e687 18965@subsubsection Working with Minimal Symbols
be448670
CF
18966
18967Symbols extracted from a DLL's export table do not contain very much
18968type information. All that @value{GDBN} can do is guess whether a symbol
18969refers to a function or variable depending on the linker section that
18970contains the symbol. Also note that the actual contents of the memory
18971contained in a DLL are not available unless the program is running. This
18972means that you cannot examine the contents of a variable or disassemble
18973a function within a DLL without a running program.
18974
18975Variables are generally treated as pointers and dereferenced
18976automatically. For this reason, it is often necessary to prefix a
18977variable name with the address-of operator (``&'') and provide explicit
18978type information in the command. Here's an example of the type of
18979problem:
18980
18981@smallexample
f7dc1244 18982(@value{GDBP}) print 'cygwin1!__argv'
be448670
CF
18983$1 = 268572168
18984@end smallexample
18985
18986@smallexample
f7dc1244 18987(@value{GDBP}) x 'cygwin1!__argv'
be448670
CF
189880x10021610: "\230y\""
18989@end smallexample
18990
18991And two possible solutions:
18992
18993@smallexample
f7dc1244 18994(@value{GDBP}) print ((char **)'cygwin1!__argv')[0]
be448670
CF
18995$2 = 0x22fd98 "/cygdrive/c/mydirectory/myprogram"
18996@end smallexample
18997
18998@smallexample
f7dc1244 18999(@value{GDBP}) x/2x &'cygwin1!__argv'
be448670 190000x610c0aa8 <cygwin1!__argv>: 0x10021608 0x00000000
f7dc1244 19001(@value{GDBP}) x/x 0x10021608
be448670 190020x10021608: 0x0022fd98
f7dc1244 19003(@value{GDBP}) x/s 0x0022fd98
be448670
CF
190040x22fd98: "/cygdrive/c/mydirectory/myprogram"
19005@end smallexample
19006
19007Setting a break point within a DLL is possible even before the program
19008starts execution. However, under these circumstances, @value{GDBN} can't
19009examine the initial instructions of the function in order to skip the
19010function's frame set-up code. You can work around this by using ``*&''
19011to set the breakpoint at a raw memory address:
19012
19013@smallexample
f7dc1244 19014(@value{GDBP}) break *&'python22!PyOS_Readline'
be448670
CF
19015Breakpoint 1 at 0x1e04eff0
19016@end smallexample
19017
19018The author of these extensions is not entirely convinced that setting a
19019break point within a shared DLL like @file{kernel32.dll} is completely
19020safe.
19021
14d6dd68 19022@node Hurd Native
79a6e687 19023@subsection Commands Specific to @sc{gnu} Hurd Systems
14d6dd68
EZ
19024@cindex @sc{gnu} Hurd debugging
19025
19026This subsection describes @value{GDBN} commands specific to the
19027@sc{gnu} Hurd native debugging.
19028
19029@table @code
19030@item set signals
19031@itemx set sigs
19032@kindex set signals@r{, Hurd command}
19033@kindex set sigs@r{, Hurd command}
19034This command toggles the state of inferior signal interception by
19035@value{GDBN}. Mach exceptions, such as breakpoint traps, are not
19036affected by this command. @code{sigs} is a shorthand alias for
19037@code{signals}.
19038
19039@item show signals
19040@itemx show sigs
19041@kindex show signals@r{, Hurd command}
19042@kindex show sigs@r{, Hurd command}
19043Show the current state of intercepting inferior's signals.
19044
19045@item set signal-thread
19046@itemx set sigthread
19047@kindex set signal-thread
19048@kindex set sigthread
19049This command tells @value{GDBN} which thread is the @code{libc} signal
19050thread. That thread is run when a signal is delivered to a running
19051process. @code{set sigthread} is the shorthand alias of @code{set
19052signal-thread}.
19053
19054@item show signal-thread
19055@itemx show sigthread
19056@kindex show signal-thread
19057@kindex show sigthread
19058These two commands show which thread will run when the inferior is
19059delivered a signal.
19060
19061@item set stopped
19062@kindex set stopped@r{, Hurd command}
19063This commands tells @value{GDBN} that the inferior process is stopped,
19064as with the @code{SIGSTOP} signal. The stopped process can be
19065continued by delivering a signal to it.
19066
19067@item show stopped
19068@kindex show stopped@r{, Hurd command}
19069This command shows whether @value{GDBN} thinks the debuggee is
19070stopped.
19071
19072@item set exceptions
19073@kindex set exceptions@r{, Hurd command}
19074Use this command to turn off trapping of exceptions in the inferior.
19075When exception trapping is off, neither breakpoints nor
19076single-stepping will work. To restore the default, set exception
19077trapping on.
19078
19079@item show exceptions
19080@kindex show exceptions@r{, Hurd command}
19081Show the current state of trapping exceptions in the inferior.
19082
19083@item set task pause
19084@kindex set task@r{, Hurd commands}
19085@cindex task attributes (@sc{gnu} Hurd)
19086@cindex pause current task (@sc{gnu} Hurd)
19087This command toggles task suspension when @value{GDBN} has control.
19088Setting it to on takes effect immediately, and the task is suspended
19089whenever @value{GDBN} gets control. Setting it to off will take
19090effect the next time the inferior is continued. If this option is set
19091to off, you can use @code{set thread default pause on} or @code{set
19092thread pause on} (see below) to pause individual threads.
19093
19094@item show task pause
19095@kindex show task@r{, Hurd commands}
19096Show the current state of task suspension.
19097
19098@item set task detach-suspend-count
19099@cindex task suspend count
19100@cindex detach from task, @sc{gnu} Hurd
19101This command sets the suspend count the task will be left with when
19102@value{GDBN} detaches from it.
19103
19104@item show task detach-suspend-count
19105Show the suspend count the task will be left with when detaching.
19106
19107@item set task exception-port
19108@itemx set task excp
19109@cindex task exception port, @sc{gnu} Hurd
19110This command sets the task exception port to which @value{GDBN} will
19111forward exceptions. The argument should be the value of the @dfn{send
19112rights} of the task. @code{set task excp} is a shorthand alias.
19113
19114@item set noninvasive
19115@cindex noninvasive task options
19116This command switches @value{GDBN} to a mode that is the least
19117invasive as far as interfering with the inferior is concerned. This
19118is the same as using @code{set task pause}, @code{set exceptions}, and
19119@code{set signals} to values opposite to the defaults.
19120
19121@item info send-rights
19122@itemx info receive-rights
19123@itemx info port-rights
19124@itemx info port-sets
19125@itemx info dead-names
19126@itemx info ports
19127@itemx info psets
19128@cindex send rights, @sc{gnu} Hurd
19129@cindex receive rights, @sc{gnu} Hurd
19130@cindex port rights, @sc{gnu} Hurd
19131@cindex port sets, @sc{gnu} Hurd
19132@cindex dead names, @sc{gnu} Hurd
19133These commands display information about, respectively, send rights,
19134receive rights, port rights, port sets, and dead names of a task.
19135There are also shorthand aliases: @code{info ports} for @code{info
19136port-rights} and @code{info psets} for @code{info port-sets}.
19137
19138@item set thread pause
19139@kindex set thread@r{, Hurd command}
19140@cindex thread properties, @sc{gnu} Hurd
19141@cindex pause current thread (@sc{gnu} Hurd)
19142This command toggles current thread suspension when @value{GDBN} has
19143control. Setting it to on takes effect immediately, and the current
19144thread is suspended whenever @value{GDBN} gets control. Setting it to
19145off will take effect the next time the inferior is continued.
19146Normally, this command has no effect, since when @value{GDBN} has
19147control, the whole task is suspended. However, if you used @code{set
19148task pause off} (see above), this command comes in handy to suspend
19149only the current thread.
19150
19151@item show thread pause
19152@kindex show thread@r{, Hurd command}
19153This command shows the state of current thread suspension.
19154
19155@item set thread run
d3e8051b 19156This command sets whether the current thread is allowed to run.
14d6dd68
EZ
19157
19158@item show thread run
19159Show whether the current thread is allowed to run.
19160
19161@item set thread detach-suspend-count
19162@cindex thread suspend count, @sc{gnu} Hurd
19163@cindex detach from thread, @sc{gnu} Hurd
19164This command sets the suspend count @value{GDBN} will leave on a
19165thread when detaching. This number is relative to the suspend count
19166found by @value{GDBN} when it notices the thread; use @code{set thread
19167takeover-suspend-count} to force it to an absolute value.
19168
19169@item show thread detach-suspend-count
19170Show the suspend count @value{GDBN} will leave on the thread when
19171detaching.
19172
19173@item set thread exception-port
19174@itemx set thread excp
19175Set the thread exception port to which to forward exceptions. This
19176overrides the port set by @code{set task exception-port} (see above).
19177@code{set thread excp} is the shorthand alias.
19178
19179@item set thread takeover-suspend-count
19180Normally, @value{GDBN}'s thread suspend counts are relative to the
19181value @value{GDBN} finds when it notices each thread. This command
19182changes the suspend counts to be absolute instead.
19183
19184@item set thread default
19185@itemx show thread default
19186@cindex thread default settings, @sc{gnu} Hurd
19187Each of the above @code{set thread} commands has a @code{set thread
19188default} counterpart (e.g., @code{set thread default pause}, @code{set
19189thread default exception-port}, etc.). The @code{thread default}
19190variety of commands sets the default thread properties for all
19191threads; you can then change the properties of individual threads with
19192the non-default commands.
19193@end table
19194
19195
a64548ea
EZ
19196@node Neutrino
19197@subsection QNX Neutrino
19198@cindex QNX Neutrino
19199
19200@value{GDBN} provides the following commands specific to the QNX
19201Neutrino target:
19202
19203@table @code
19204@item set debug nto-debug
19205@kindex set debug nto-debug
19206When set to on, enables debugging messages specific to the QNX
19207Neutrino support.
19208
19209@item show debug nto-debug
19210@kindex show debug nto-debug
19211Show the current state of QNX Neutrino messages.
19212@end table
19213
a80b95ba
TG
19214@node Darwin
19215@subsection Darwin
19216@cindex Darwin
19217
19218@value{GDBN} provides the following commands specific to the Darwin target:
19219
19220@table @code
19221@item set debug darwin @var{num}
19222@kindex set debug darwin
19223When set to a non zero value, enables debugging messages specific to
19224the Darwin support. Higher values produce more verbose output.
19225
19226@item show debug darwin
19227@kindex show debug darwin
19228Show the current state of Darwin messages.
19229
19230@item set debug mach-o @var{num}
19231@kindex set debug mach-o
19232When set to a non zero value, enables debugging messages while
19233@value{GDBN} is reading Darwin object files. (@dfn{Mach-O} is the
19234file format used on Darwin for object and executable files.) Higher
19235values produce more verbose output. This is a command to diagnose
19236problems internal to @value{GDBN} and should not be needed in normal
19237usage.
19238
19239@item show debug mach-o
19240@kindex show debug mach-o
19241Show the current state of Mach-O file messages.
19242
19243@item set mach-exceptions on
19244@itemx set mach-exceptions off
19245@kindex set mach-exceptions
19246On Darwin, faults are first reported as a Mach exception and are then
19247mapped to a Posix signal. Use this command to turn on trapping of
19248Mach exceptions in the inferior. This might be sometimes useful to
19249better understand the cause of a fault. The default is off.
19250
19251@item show mach-exceptions
19252@kindex show mach-exceptions
19253Show the current state of exceptions trapping.
19254@end table
19255
a64548ea 19256
8e04817f
AC
19257@node Embedded OS
19258@section Embedded Operating Systems
104c1213 19259
8e04817f
AC
19260This section describes configurations involving the debugging of
19261embedded operating systems that are available for several different
19262architectures.
d4f3574e 19263
8e04817f
AC
19264@menu
19265* VxWorks:: Using @value{GDBN} with VxWorks
19266@end menu
104c1213 19267
8e04817f
AC
19268@value{GDBN} includes the ability to debug programs running on
19269various real-time operating systems.
104c1213 19270
8e04817f
AC
19271@node VxWorks
19272@subsection Using @value{GDBN} with VxWorks
104c1213 19273
8e04817f 19274@cindex VxWorks
104c1213 19275
8e04817f 19276@table @code
104c1213 19277
8e04817f
AC
19278@kindex target vxworks
19279@item target vxworks @var{machinename}
19280A VxWorks system, attached via TCP/IP. The argument @var{machinename}
19281is the target system's machine name or IP address.
104c1213 19282
8e04817f 19283@end table
104c1213 19284
8e04817f
AC
19285On VxWorks, @code{load} links @var{filename} dynamically on the
19286current target system as well as adding its symbols in @value{GDBN}.
104c1213 19287
8e04817f
AC
19288@value{GDBN} enables developers to spawn and debug tasks running on networked
19289VxWorks targets from a Unix host. Already-running tasks spawned from
19290the VxWorks shell can also be debugged. @value{GDBN} uses code that runs on
19291both the Unix host and on the VxWorks target. The program
19292@code{@value{GDBP}} is installed and executed on the Unix host. (It may be
19293installed with the name @code{vxgdb}, to distinguish it from a
19294@value{GDBN} for debugging programs on the host itself.)
104c1213 19295
8e04817f
AC
19296@table @code
19297@item VxWorks-timeout @var{args}
19298@kindex vxworks-timeout
19299All VxWorks-based targets now support the option @code{vxworks-timeout}.
19300This option is set by the user, and @var{args} represents the number of
19301seconds @value{GDBN} waits for responses to rpc's. You might use this if
19302your VxWorks target is a slow software simulator or is on the far side
19303of a thin network line.
19304@end table
104c1213 19305
8e04817f
AC
19306The following information on connecting to VxWorks was current when
19307this manual was produced; newer releases of VxWorks may use revised
19308procedures.
104c1213 19309
4644b6e3 19310@findex INCLUDE_RDB
8e04817f
AC
19311To use @value{GDBN} with VxWorks, you must rebuild your VxWorks kernel
19312to include the remote debugging interface routines in the VxWorks
19313library @file{rdb.a}. To do this, define @code{INCLUDE_RDB} in the
19314VxWorks configuration file @file{configAll.h} and rebuild your VxWorks
19315kernel. The resulting kernel contains @file{rdb.a}, and spawns the
19316source debugging task @code{tRdbTask} when VxWorks is booted. For more
19317information on configuring and remaking VxWorks, see the manufacturer's
19318manual.
19319@c VxWorks, see the @cite{VxWorks Programmer's Guide}.
104c1213 19320
8e04817f
AC
19321Once you have included @file{rdb.a} in your VxWorks system image and set
19322your Unix execution search path to find @value{GDBN}, you are ready to
19323run @value{GDBN}. From your Unix host, run @code{@value{GDBP}} (or
19324@code{vxgdb}, depending on your installation).
104c1213 19325
8e04817f 19326@value{GDBN} comes up showing the prompt:
104c1213 19327
474c8240 19328@smallexample
8e04817f 19329(vxgdb)
474c8240 19330@end smallexample
104c1213 19331
8e04817f
AC
19332@menu
19333* VxWorks Connection:: Connecting to VxWorks
19334* VxWorks Download:: VxWorks download
19335* VxWorks Attach:: Running tasks
19336@end menu
104c1213 19337
8e04817f
AC
19338@node VxWorks Connection
19339@subsubsection Connecting to VxWorks
104c1213 19340
8e04817f
AC
19341The @value{GDBN} command @code{target} lets you connect to a VxWorks target on the
19342network. To connect to a target whose host name is ``@code{tt}'', type:
104c1213 19343
474c8240 19344@smallexample
8e04817f 19345(vxgdb) target vxworks tt
474c8240 19346@end smallexample
104c1213 19347
8e04817f
AC
19348@need 750
19349@value{GDBN} displays messages like these:
104c1213 19350
8e04817f
AC
19351@smallexample
19352Attaching remote machine across net...
19353Connected to tt.
19354@end smallexample
104c1213 19355
8e04817f
AC
19356@need 1000
19357@value{GDBN} then attempts to read the symbol tables of any object modules
19358loaded into the VxWorks target since it was last booted. @value{GDBN} locates
19359these files by searching the directories listed in the command search
79a6e687 19360path (@pxref{Environment, ,Your Program's Environment}); if it fails
8e04817f 19361to find an object file, it displays a message such as:
5d161b24 19362
474c8240 19363@smallexample
8e04817f 19364prog.o: No such file or directory.
474c8240 19365@end smallexample
104c1213 19366
8e04817f
AC
19367When this happens, add the appropriate directory to the search path with
19368the @value{GDBN} command @code{path}, and execute the @code{target}
19369command again.
104c1213 19370
8e04817f 19371@node VxWorks Download
79a6e687 19372@subsubsection VxWorks Download
104c1213 19373
8e04817f
AC
19374@cindex download to VxWorks
19375If you have connected to the VxWorks target and you want to debug an
19376object that has not yet been loaded, you can use the @value{GDBN}
19377@code{load} command to download a file from Unix to VxWorks
19378incrementally. The object file given as an argument to the @code{load}
19379command is actually opened twice: first by the VxWorks target in order
19380to download the code, then by @value{GDBN} in order to read the symbol
19381table. This can lead to problems if the current working directories on
19382the two systems differ. If both systems have NFS mounted the same
19383filesystems, you can avoid these problems by using absolute paths.
19384Otherwise, it is simplest to set the working directory on both systems
19385to the directory in which the object file resides, and then to reference
19386the file by its name, without any path. For instance, a program
19387@file{prog.o} may reside in @file{@var{vxpath}/vw/demo/rdb} in VxWorks
19388and in @file{@var{hostpath}/vw/demo/rdb} on the host. To load this
19389program, type this on VxWorks:
104c1213 19390
474c8240 19391@smallexample
8e04817f 19392-> cd "@var{vxpath}/vw/demo/rdb"
474c8240 19393@end smallexample
104c1213 19394
8e04817f
AC
19395@noindent
19396Then, in @value{GDBN}, type:
104c1213 19397
474c8240 19398@smallexample
8e04817f
AC
19399(vxgdb) cd @var{hostpath}/vw/demo/rdb
19400(vxgdb) load prog.o
474c8240 19401@end smallexample
104c1213 19402
8e04817f 19403@value{GDBN} displays a response similar to this:
104c1213 19404
8e04817f
AC
19405@smallexample
19406Reading symbol data from wherever/vw/demo/rdb/prog.o... done.
19407@end smallexample
104c1213 19408
8e04817f
AC
19409You can also use the @code{load} command to reload an object module
19410after editing and recompiling the corresponding source file. Note that
19411this makes @value{GDBN} delete all currently-defined breakpoints,
19412auto-displays, and convenience variables, and to clear the value
19413history. (This is necessary in order to preserve the integrity of
19414debugger's data structures that reference the target system's symbol
19415table.)
104c1213 19416
8e04817f 19417@node VxWorks Attach
79a6e687 19418@subsubsection Running Tasks
104c1213
JM
19419
19420@cindex running VxWorks tasks
19421You can also attach to an existing task using the @code{attach} command as
19422follows:
19423
474c8240 19424@smallexample
104c1213 19425(vxgdb) attach @var{task}
474c8240 19426@end smallexample
104c1213
JM
19427
19428@noindent
19429where @var{task} is the VxWorks hexadecimal task ID. The task can be running
19430or suspended when you attach to it. Running tasks are suspended at
19431the time of attachment.
19432
6d2ebf8b 19433@node Embedded Processors
104c1213
JM
19434@section Embedded Processors
19435
19436This section goes into details specific to particular embedded
19437configurations.
19438
c45da7e6
EZ
19439@cindex send command to simulator
19440Whenever a specific embedded processor has a simulator, @value{GDBN}
19441allows to send an arbitrary command to the simulator.
19442
19443@table @code
19444@item sim @var{command}
19445@kindex sim@r{, a command}
19446Send an arbitrary @var{command} string to the simulator. Consult the
19447documentation for the specific simulator in use for information about
19448acceptable commands.
19449@end table
19450
7d86b5d5 19451
104c1213 19452@menu
c45da7e6 19453* ARM:: ARM RDI
172c2a43 19454* M32R/D:: Renesas M32R/D
104c1213 19455* M68K:: Motorola M68K
08be9d71 19456* MicroBlaze:: Xilinx MicroBlaze
104c1213 19457* MIPS Embedded:: MIPS Embedded
a37295f9 19458* OpenRISC 1000:: OpenRisc 1000
4acd40f3 19459* PowerPC Embedded:: PowerPC Embedded
984359d2 19460* PA:: HP PA Embedded
104c1213
JM
19461* Sparclet:: Tsqware Sparclet
19462* Sparclite:: Fujitsu Sparclite
104c1213 19463* Z8000:: Zilog Z8000
a64548ea
EZ
19464* AVR:: Atmel AVR
19465* CRIS:: CRIS
19466* Super-H:: Renesas Super-H
104c1213
JM
19467@end menu
19468
6d2ebf8b 19469@node ARM
104c1213 19470@subsection ARM
c45da7e6 19471@cindex ARM RDI
104c1213
JM
19472
19473@table @code
8e04817f
AC
19474@kindex target rdi
19475@item target rdi @var{dev}
19476ARM Angel monitor, via RDI library interface to ADP protocol. You may
19477use this target to communicate with both boards running the Angel
19478monitor, or with the EmbeddedICE JTAG debug device.
19479
19480@kindex target rdp
19481@item target rdp @var{dev}
19482ARM Demon monitor.
19483
19484@end table
19485
e2f4edfd
EZ
19486@value{GDBN} provides the following ARM-specific commands:
19487
19488@table @code
19489@item set arm disassembler
19490@kindex set arm
19491This commands selects from a list of disassembly styles. The
19492@code{"std"} style is the standard style.
19493
19494@item show arm disassembler
19495@kindex show arm
19496Show the current disassembly style.
19497
19498@item set arm apcs32
19499@cindex ARM 32-bit mode
19500This command toggles ARM operation mode between 32-bit and 26-bit.
19501
19502@item show arm apcs32
19503Display the current usage of the ARM 32-bit mode.
19504
19505@item set arm fpu @var{fputype}
19506This command sets the ARM floating-point unit (FPU) type. The
19507argument @var{fputype} can be one of these:
19508
19509@table @code
19510@item auto
19511Determine the FPU type by querying the OS ABI.
19512@item softfpa
19513Software FPU, with mixed-endian doubles on little-endian ARM
19514processors.
19515@item fpa
19516GCC-compiled FPA co-processor.
19517@item softvfp
19518Software FPU with pure-endian doubles.
19519@item vfp
19520VFP co-processor.
19521@end table
19522
19523@item show arm fpu
19524Show the current type of the FPU.
19525
19526@item set arm abi
19527This command forces @value{GDBN} to use the specified ABI.
19528
19529@item show arm abi
19530Show the currently used ABI.
19531
0428b8f5
DJ
19532@item set arm fallback-mode (arm|thumb|auto)
19533@value{GDBN} uses the symbol table, when available, to determine
19534whether instructions are ARM or Thumb. This command controls
19535@value{GDBN}'s default behavior when the symbol table is not
19536available. The default is @samp{auto}, which causes @value{GDBN} to
19537use the current execution mode (from the @code{T} bit in the @code{CPSR}
19538register).
19539
19540@item show arm fallback-mode
19541Show the current fallback instruction mode.
19542
19543@item set arm force-mode (arm|thumb|auto)
19544This command overrides use of the symbol table to determine whether
19545instructions are ARM or Thumb. The default is @samp{auto}, which
19546causes @value{GDBN} to use the symbol table and then the setting
19547of @samp{set arm fallback-mode}.
19548
19549@item show arm force-mode
19550Show the current forced instruction mode.
19551
e2f4edfd
EZ
19552@item set debug arm
19553Toggle whether to display ARM-specific debugging messages from the ARM
19554target support subsystem.
19555
19556@item show debug arm
19557Show whether ARM-specific debugging messages are enabled.
19558@end table
19559
c45da7e6
EZ
19560The following commands are available when an ARM target is debugged
19561using the RDI interface:
19562
19563@table @code
19564@item rdilogfile @r{[}@var{file}@r{]}
19565@kindex rdilogfile
19566@cindex ADP (Angel Debugger Protocol) logging
19567Set the filename for the ADP (Angel Debugger Protocol) packet log.
19568With an argument, sets the log file to the specified @var{file}. With
19569no argument, show the current log file name. The default log file is
19570@file{rdi.log}.
19571
19572@item rdilogenable @r{[}@var{arg}@r{]}
19573@kindex rdilogenable
19574Control logging of ADP packets. With an argument of 1 or @code{"yes"}
19575enables logging, with an argument 0 or @code{"no"} disables it. With
19576no arguments displays the current setting. When logging is enabled,
19577ADP packets exchanged between @value{GDBN} and the RDI target device
19578are logged to a file.
19579
19580@item set rdiromatzero
19581@kindex set rdiromatzero
19582@cindex ROM at zero address, RDI
19583Tell @value{GDBN} whether the target has ROM at address 0. If on,
19584vector catching is disabled, so that zero address can be used. If off
19585(the default), vector catching is enabled. For this command to take
19586effect, it needs to be invoked prior to the @code{target rdi} command.
19587
19588@item show rdiromatzero
19589@kindex show rdiromatzero
19590Show the current setting of ROM at zero address.
19591
19592@item set rdiheartbeat
19593@kindex set rdiheartbeat
19594@cindex RDI heartbeat
19595Enable or disable RDI heartbeat packets. It is not recommended to
19596turn on this option, since it confuses ARM and EPI JTAG interface, as
19597well as the Angel monitor.
19598
19599@item show rdiheartbeat
19600@kindex show rdiheartbeat
19601Show the setting of RDI heartbeat packets.
19602@end table
19603
ee8e71d4
EZ
19604@table @code
19605@item target sim @r{[}@var{simargs}@r{]} @dots{}
19606The @value{GDBN} ARM simulator accepts the following optional arguments.
19607
19608@table @code
19609@item --swi-support=@var{type}
19610Tell the simulator which SWI interfaces to support.
19611@var{type} may be a comma separated list of the following values.
19612The default value is @code{all}.
19613
19614@table @code
19615@item none
19616@item demon
19617@item angel
19618@item redboot
19619@item all
19620@end table
19621@end table
19622@end table
e2f4edfd 19623
8e04817f 19624@node M32R/D
ba04e063 19625@subsection Renesas M32R/D and M32R/SDI
8e04817f
AC
19626
19627@table @code
8e04817f
AC
19628@kindex target m32r
19629@item target m32r @var{dev}
172c2a43 19630Renesas M32R/D ROM monitor.
8e04817f 19631
fb3e19c0
KI
19632@kindex target m32rsdi
19633@item target m32rsdi @var{dev}
19634Renesas M32R SDI server, connected via parallel port to the board.
721c2651
EZ
19635@end table
19636
19637The following @value{GDBN} commands are specific to the M32R monitor:
19638
19639@table @code
19640@item set download-path @var{path}
19641@kindex set download-path
19642@cindex find downloadable @sc{srec} files (M32R)
d3e8051b 19643Set the default path for finding downloadable @sc{srec} files.
721c2651
EZ
19644
19645@item show download-path
19646@kindex show download-path
19647Show the default path for downloadable @sc{srec} files.
fb3e19c0 19648
721c2651
EZ
19649@item set board-address @var{addr}
19650@kindex set board-address
19651@cindex M32-EVA target board address
19652Set the IP address for the M32R-EVA target board.
19653
19654@item show board-address
19655@kindex show board-address
19656Show the current IP address of the target board.
19657
19658@item set server-address @var{addr}
19659@kindex set server-address
19660@cindex download server address (M32R)
19661Set the IP address for the download server, which is the @value{GDBN}'s
19662host machine.
19663
19664@item show server-address
19665@kindex show server-address
19666Display the IP address of the download server.
19667
19668@item upload @r{[}@var{file}@r{]}
19669@kindex upload@r{, M32R}
19670Upload the specified @sc{srec} @var{file} via the monitor's Ethernet
19671upload capability. If no @var{file} argument is given, the current
19672executable file is uploaded.
19673
19674@item tload @r{[}@var{file}@r{]}
19675@kindex tload@r{, M32R}
19676Test the @code{upload} command.
8e04817f
AC
19677@end table
19678
ba04e063
EZ
19679The following commands are available for M32R/SDI:
19680
19681@table @code
19682@item sdireset
19683@kindex sdireset
19684@cindex reset SDI connection, M32R
19685This command resets the SDI connection.
19686
19687@item sdistatus
19688@kindex sdistatus
19689This command shows the SDI connection status.
19690
19691@item debug_chaos
19692@kindex debug_chaos
19693@cindex M32R/Chaos debugging
19694Instructs the remote that M32R/Chaos debugging is to be used.
19695
19696@item use_debug_dma
19697@kindex use_debug_dma
19698Instructs the remote to use the DEBUG_DMA method of accessing memory.
19699
19700@item use_mon_code
19701@kindex use_mon_code
19702Instructs the remote to use the MON_CODE method of accessing memory.
19703
19704@item use_ib_break
19705@kindex use_ib_break
19706Instructs the remote to set breakpoints by IB break.
19707
19708@item use_dbt_break
19709@kindex use_dbt_break
19710Instructs the remote to set breakpoints by DBT.
19711@end table
19712
8e04817f
AC
19713@node M68K
19714@subsection M68k
19715
7ce59000
DJ
19716The Motorola m68k configuration includes ColdFire support, and a
19717target command for the following ROM monitor.
8e04817f
AC
19718
19719@table @code
19720
8e04817f
AC
19721@kindex target dbug
19722@item target dbug @var{dev}
19723dBUG ROM monitor for Motorola ColdFire.
19724
8e04817f
AC
19725@end table
19726
08be9d71
ME
19727@node MicroBlaze
19728@subsection MicroBlaze
19729@cindex Xilinx MicroBlaze
19730@cindex XMD, Xilinx Microprocessor Debugger
19731
19732The MicroBlaze is a soft-core processor supported on various Xilinx
19733FPGAs, such as Spartan or Virtex series. Boards with these processors
19734usually have JTAG ports which connect to a host system running the Xilinx
19735Embedded Development Kit (EDK) or Software Development Kit (SDK).
19736This host system is used to download the configuration bitstream to
19737the target FPGA. The Xilinx Microprocessor Debugger (XMD) program
19738communicates with the target board using the JTAG interface and
19739presents a @code{gdbserver} interface to the board. By default
19740@code{xmd} uses port @code{1234}. (While it is possible to change
19741this default port, it requires the use of undocumented @code{xmd}
19742commands. Contact Xilinx support if you need to do this.)
19743
19744Use these GDB commands to connect to the MicroBlaze target processor.
19745
19746@table @code
19747@item target remote :1234
19748Use this command to connect to the target if you are running @value{GDBN}
19749on the same system as @code{xmd}.
19750
19751@item target remote @var{xmd-host}:1234
19752Use this command to connect to the target if it is connected to @code{xmd}
19753running on a different system named @var{xmd-host}.
19754
19755@item load
19756Use this command to download a program to the MicroBlaze target.
19757
19758@item set debug microblaze @var{n}
19759Enable MicroBlaze-specific debugging messages if non-zero.
19760
19761@item show debug microblaze @var{n}
19762Show MicroBlaze-specific debugging level.
19763@end table
19764
8e04817f 19765@node MIPS Embedded
eb17f351 19766@subsection @acronym{MIPS} Embedded
8e04817f 19767
eb17f351
EZ
19768@cindex @acronym{MIPS} boards
19769@value{GDBN} can use the @acronym{MIPS} remote debugging protocol to talk to a
19770@acronym{MIPS} board attached to a serial line. This is available when
cc30c4bd 19771you configure @value{GDBN} with @samp{--target=mips-elf}.
104c1213 19772
8e04817f
AC
19773@need 1000
19774Use these @value{GDBN} commands to specify the connection to your target board:
104c1213 19775
8e04817f
AC
19776@table @code
19777@item target mips @var{port}
19778@kindex target mips @var{port}
19779To run a program on the board, start up @code{@value{GDBP}} with the
19780name of your program as the argument. To connect to the board, use the
19781command @samp{target mips @var{port}}, where @var{port} is the name of
19782the serial port connected to the board. If the program has not already
19783been downloaded to the board, you may use the @code{load} command to
19784download it. You can then use all the usual @value{GDBN} commands.
104c1213 19785
8e04817f
AC
19786For example, this sequence connects to the target board through a serial
19787port, and loads and runs a program called @var{prog} through the
19788debugger:
104c1213 19789
474c8240 19790@smallexample
8e04817f
AC
19791host$ @value{GDBP} @var{prog}
19792@value{GDBN} is free software and @dots{}
19793(@value{GDBP}) target mips /dev/ttyb
19794(@value{GDBP}) load @var{prog}
19795(@value{GDBP}) run
474c8240 19796@end smallexample
104c1213 19797
8e04817f
AC
19798@item target mips @var{hostname}:@var{portnumber}
19799On some @value{GDBN} host configurations, you can specify a TCP
19800connection (for instance, to a serial line managed by a terminal
19801concentrator) instead of a serial port, using the syntax
19802@samp{@var{hostname}:@var{portnumber}}.
104c1213 19803
8e04817f
AC
19804@item target pmon @var{port}
19805@kindex target pmon @var{port}
19806PMON ROM monitor.
104c1213 19807
8e04817f
AC
19808@item target ddb @var{port}
19809@kindex target ddb @var{port}
19810NEC's DDB variant of PMON for Vr4300.
104c1213 19811
8e04817f
AC
19812@item target lsi @var{port}
19813@kindex target lsi @var{port}
19814LSI variant of PMON.
104c1213 19815
8e04817f
AC
19816@kindex target r3900
19817@item target r3900 @var{dev}
19818Densan DVE-R3900 ROM monitor for Toshiba R3900 Mips.
104c1213 19819
8e04817f
AC
19820@kindex target array
19821@item target array @var{dev}
19822Array Tech LSI33K RAID controller board.
104c1213 19823
8e04817f 19824@end table
104c1213 19825
104c1213 19826
8e04817f 19827@noindent
eb17f351 19828@value{GDBN} also supports these special commands for @acronym{MIPS} targets:
104c1213 19829
8e04817f 19830@table @code
8e04817f
AC
19831@item set mipsfpu double
19832@itemx set mipsfpu single
19833@itemx set mipsfpu none
a64548ea 19834@itemx set mipsfpu auto
8e04817f
AC
19835@itemx show mipsfpu
19836@kindex set mipsfpu
19837@kindex show mipsfpu
eb17f351
EZ
19838@cindex @acronym{MIPS} remote floating point
19839@cindex floating point, @acronym{MIPS} remote
19840If your target board does not support the @acronym{MIPS} floating point
8e04817f
AC
19841coprocessor, you should use the command @samp{set mipsfpu none} (if you
19842need this, you may wish to put the command in your @value{GDBN} init
19843file). This tells @value{GDBN} how to find the return value of
19844functions which return floating point values. It also allows
19845@value{GDBN} to avoid saving the floating point registers when calling
19846functions on the board. If you are using a floating point coprocessor
19847with only single precision floating point support, as on the @sc{r4650}
19848processor, use the command @samp{set mipsfpu single}. The default
19849double precision floating point coprocessor may be selected using
19850@samp{set mipsfpu double}.
104c1213 19851
8e04817f
AC
19852In previous versions the only choices were double precision or no
19853floating point, so @samp{set mipsfpu on} will select double precision
19854and @samp{set mipsfpu off} will select no floating point.
104c1213 19855
8e04817f
AC
19856As usual, you can inquire about the @code{mipsfpu} variable with
19857@samp{show mipsfpu}.
104c1213 19858
8e04817f
AC
19859@item set timeout @var{seconds}
19860@itemx set retransmit-timeout @var{seconds}
19861@itemx show timeout
19862@itemx show retransmit-timeout
eb17f351
EZ
19863@cindex @code{timeout}, @acronym{MIPS} protocol
19864@cindex @code{retransmit-timeout}, @acronym{MIPS} protocol
8e04817f
AC
19865@kindex set timeout
19866@kindex show timeout
19867@kindex set retransmit-timeout
19868@kindex show retransmit-timeout
eb17f351 19869You can control the timeout used while waiting for a packet, in the @acronym{MIPS}
8e04817f
AC
19870remote protocol, with the @code{set timeout @var{seconds}} command. The
19871default is 5 seconds. Similarly, you can control the timeout used while
a6f3e723 19872waiting for an acknowledgment of a packet with the @code{set
8e04817f
AC
19873retransmit-timeout @var{seconds}} command. The default is 3 seconds.
19874You can inspect both values with @code{show timeout} and @code{show
19875retransmit-timeout}. (These commands are @emph{only} available when
cc30c4bd 19876@value{GDBN} is configured for @samp{--target=mips-elf}.)
104c1213 19877
8e04817f
AC
19878The timeout set by @code{set timeout} does not apply when @value{GDBN}
19879is waiting for your program to stop. In that case, @value{GDBN} waits
19880forever because it has no way of knowing how long the program is going
19881to run before stopping.
ba04e063
EZ
19882
19883@item set syn-garbage-limit @var{num}
eb17f351
EZ
19884@kindex set syn-garbage-limit@r{, @acronym{MIPS} remote}
19885@cindex synchronize with remote @acronym{MIPS} target
ba04e063
EZ
19886Limit the maximum number of characters @value{GDBN} should ignore when
19887it tries to synchronize with the remote target. The default is 10
19888characters. Setting the limit to -1 means there's no limit.
19889
19890@item show syn-garbage-limit
eb17f351 19891@kindex show syn-garbage-limit@r{, @acronym{MIPS} remote}
ba04e063
EZ
19892Show the current limit on the number of characters to ignore when
19893trying to synchronize with the remote system.
19894
19895@item set monitor-prompt @var{prompt}
eb17f351 19896@kindex set monitor-prompt@r{, @acronym{MIPS} remote}
ba04e063
EZ
19897@cindex remote monitor prompt
19898Tell @value{GDBN} to expect the specified @var{prompt} string from the
19899remote monitor. The default depends on the target:
19900@table @asis
19901@item pmon target
19902@samp{PMON}
19903@item ddb target
19904@samp{NEC010}
19905@item lsi target
19906@samp{PMON>}
19907@end table
19908
19909@item show monitor-prompt
eb17f351 19910@kindex show monitor-prompt@r{, @acronym{MIPS} remote}
ba04e063
EZ
19911Show the current strings @value{GDBN} expects as the prompt from the
19912remote monitor.
19913
19914@item set monitor-warnings
eb17f351 19915@kindex set monitor-warnings@r{, @acronym{MIPS} remote}
ba04e063
EZ
19916Enable or disable monitor warnings about hardware breakpoints. This
19917has effect only for the @code{lsi} target. When on, @value{GDBN} will
19918display warning messages whose codes are returned by the @code{lsi}
19919PMON monitor for breakpoint commands.
19920
19921@item show monitor-warnings
eb17f351 19922@kindex show monitor-warnings@r{, @acronym{MIPS} remote}
ba04e063
EZ
19923Show the current setting of printing monitor warnings.
19924
19925@item pmon @var{command}
eb17f351 19926@kindex pmon@r{, @acronym{MIPS} remote}
ba04e063
EZ
19927@cindex send PMON command
19928This command allows sending an arbitrary @var{command} string to the
19929monitor. The monitor must be in debug mode for this to work.
8e04817f 19930@end table
104c1213 19931
a37295f9
MM
19932@node OpenRISC 1000
19933@subsection OpenRISC 1000
19934@cindex OpenRISC 1000
19935
19936@cindex or1k boards
19937See OR1k Architecture document (@uref{www.opencores.org}) for more information
19938about platform and commands.
19939
19940@table @code
19941
19942@kindex target jtag
19943@item target jtag jtag://@var{host}:@var{port}
19944
19945Connects to remote JTAG server.
19946JTAG remote server can be either an or1ksim or JTAG server,
19947connected via parallel port to the board.
19948
19949Example: @code{target jtag jtag://localhost:9999}
19950
19951@kindex or1ksim
19952@item or1ksim @var{command}
19953If connected to @code{or1ksim} OpenRISC 1000 Architectural
19954Simulator, proprietary commands can be executed.
19955
19956@kindex info or1k spr
19957@item info or1k spr
19958Displays spr groups.
19959
19960@item info or1k spr @var{group}
19961@itemx info or1k spr @var{groupno}
19962Displays register names in selected group.
19963
19964@item info or1k spr @var{group} @var{register}
19965@itemx info or1k spr @var{register}
19966@itemx info or1k spr @var{groupno} @var{registerno}
19967@itemx info or1k spr @var{registerno}
19968Shows information about specified spr register.
19969
19970@kindex spr
19971@item spr @var{group} @var{register} @var{value}
19972@itemx spr @var{register @var{value}}
19973@itemx spr @var{groupno} @var{registerno @var{value}}
19974@itemx spr @var{registerno @var{value}}
19975Writes @var{value} to specified spr register.
19976@end table
19977
19978Some implementations of OpenRISC 1000 Architecture also have hardware trace.
19979It is very similar to @value{GDBN} trace, except it does not interfere with normal
19980program execution and is thus much faster. Hardware breakpoints/watchpoint
19981triggers can be set using:
19982@table @code
19983@item $LEA/$LDATA
19984Load effective address/data
19985@item $SEA/$SDATA
19986Store effective address/data
19987@item $AEA/$ADATA
19988Access effective address ($SEA or $LEA) or data ($SDATA/$LDATA)
19989@item $FETCH
19990Fetch data
19991@end table
19992
19993When triggered, it can capture low level data, like: @code{PC}, @code{LSEA},
19994@code{LDATA}, @code{SDATA}, @code{READSPR}, @code{WRITESPR}, @code{INSTR}.
19995
19996@code{htrace} commands:
19997@cindex OpenRISC 1000 htrace
19998@table @code
19999@kindex hwatch
20000@item hwatch @var{conditional}
d3e8051b 20001Set hardware watchpoint on combination of Load/Store Effective Address(es)
a37295f9
MM
20002or Data. For example:
20003
20004@code{hwatch ($LEA == my_var) && ($LDATA < 50) || ($SEA == my_var) && ($SDATA >= 50)}
20005
20006@code{hwatch ($LEA == my_var) && ($LDATA < 50) || ($SEA == my_var) && ($SDATA >= 50)}
20007
4644b6e3 20008@kindex htrace
a37295f9
MM
20009@item htrace info
20010Display information about current HW trace configuration.
20011
a37295f9
MM
20012@item htrace trigger @var{conditional}
20013Set starting criteria for HW trace.
20014
a37295f9
MM
20015@item htrace qualifier @var{conditional}
20016Set acquisition qualifier for HW trace.
20017
a37295f9
MM
20018@item htrace stop @var{conditional}
20019Set HW trace stopping criteria.
20020
f153cc92 20021@item htrace record [@var{data}]*
a37295f9
MM
20022Selects the data to be recorded, when qualifier is met and HW trace was
20023triggered.
20024
a37295f9 20025@item htrace enable
a37295f9
MM
20026@itemx htrace disable
20027Enables/disables the HW trace.
20028
f153cc92 20029@item htrace rewind [@var{filename}]
a37295f9
MM
20030Clears currently recorded trace data.
20031
20032If filename is specified, new trace file is made and any newly collected data
20033will be written there.
20034
f153cc92 20035@item htrace print [@var{start} [@var{len}]]
a37295f9
MM
20036Prints trace buffer, using current record configuration.
20037
a37295f9
MM
20038@item htrace mode continuous
20039Set continuous trace mode.
20040
a37295f9
MM
20041@item htrace mode suspend
20042Set suspend trace mode.
20043
20044@end table
20045
4acd40f3
TJB
20046@node PowerPC Embedded
20047@subsection PowerPC Embedded
104c1213 20048
66b73624
TJB
20049@cindex DVC register
20050@value{GDBN} supports using the DVC (Data Value Compare) register to
20051implement in hardware simple hardware watchpoint conditions of the form:
20052
20053@smallexample
20054(@value{GDBP}) watch @var{ADDRESS|VARIABLE} \
20055 if @var{ADDRESS|VARIABLE} == @var{CONSTANT EXPRESSION}
20056@end smallexample
20057
e09342b5
TJB
20058The DVC register will be automatically used when @value{GDBN} detects
20059such pattern in a condition expression, and the created watchpoint uses one
20060debug register (either the @code{exact-watchpoints} option is on and the
20061variable is scalar, or the variable has a length of one byte). This feature
20062is available in native @value{GDBN} running on a Linux kernel version 2.6.34
20063or newer.
20064
20065When running on PowerPC embedded processors, @value{GDBN} automatically uses
20066ranged hardware watchpoints, unless the @code{exact-watchpoints} option is on,
20067in which case watchpoints using only one debug register are created when
20068watching variables of scalar types.
20069
20070You can create an artificial array to watch an arbitrary memory
20071region using one of the following commands (@pxref{Expressions}):
20072
20073@smallexample
20074(@value{GDBP}) watch *((char *) @var{address})@@@var{length}
20075(@value{GDBP}) watch @{char[@var{length}]@} @var{address}
20076@end smallexample
66b73624 20077
9c06b0b4
TJB
20078PowerPC embedded processors support masked watchpoints. See the discussion
20079about the @code{mask} argument in @ref{Set Watchpoints}.
20080
f1310107
TJB
20081@cindex ranged breakpoint
20082PowerPC embedded processors support hardware accelerated
20083@dfn{ranged breakpoints}. A ranged breakpoint stops execution of
20084the inferior whenever it executes an instruction at any address within
20085the range it specifies. To set a ranged breakpoint in @value{GDBN},
20086use the @code{break-range} command.
20087
55eddb0f
DJ
20088@value{GDBN} provides the following PowerPC-specific commands:
20089
104c1213 20090@table @code
f1310107
TJB
20091@kindex break-range
20092@item break-range @var{start-location}, @var{end-location}
20093Set a breakpoint for an address range.
20094@var{start-location} and @var{end-location} can specify a function name,
20095a line number, an offset of lines from the current line or from the start
20096location, or an address of an instruction (see @ref{Specify Location},
20097for a list of all the possible ways to specify a @var{location}.)
20098The breakpoint will stop execution of the inferior whenever it
20099executes an instruction at any address within the specified range,
20100(including @var{start-location} and @var{end-location}.)
20101
55eddb0f
DJ
20102@kindex set powerpc
20103@item set powerpc soft-float
20104@itemx show powerpc soft-float
20105Force @value{GDBN} to use (or not use) a software floating point calling
20106convention. By default, @value{GDBN} selects the calling convention based
20107on the selected architecture and the provided executable file.
20108
20109@item set powerpc vector-abi
20110@itemx show powerpc vector-abi
20111Force @value{GDBN} to use the specified calling convention for vector
20112arguments and return values. The valid options are @samp{auto};
20113@samp{generic}, to avoid vector registers even if they are present;
20114@samp{altivec}, to use AltiVec registers; and @samp{spe} to use SPE
20115registers. By default, @value{GDBN} selects the calling convention
20116based on the selected architecture and the provided executable file.
20117
e09342b5
TJB
20118@item set powerpc exact-watchpoints
20119@itemx show powerpc exact-watchpoints
20120Allow @value{GDBN} to use only one debug register when watching a variable
20121of scalar type, thus assuming that the variable is accessed through the
20122address of its first byte.
20123
8e04817f
AC
20124@kindex target dink32
20125@item target dink32 @var{dev}
20126DINK32 ROM monitor.
104c1213 20127
8e04817f
AC
20128@kindex target ppcbug
20129@item target ppcbug @var{dev}
20130@kindex target ppcbug1
20131@item target ppcbug1 @var{dev}
20132PPCBUG ROM monitor for PowerPC.
104c1213 20133
8e04817f
AC
20134@kindex target sds
20135@item target sds @var{dev}
20136SDS monitor, running on a PowerPC board (such as Motorola's ADS).
c45da7e6 20137@end table
8e04817f 20138
c45da7e6 20139@cindex SDS protocol
d52fb0e9 20140The following commands specific to the SDS protocol are supported
55eddb0f 20141by @value{GDBN}:
c45da7e6
EZ
20142
20143@table @code
20144@item set sdstimeout @var{nsec}
20145@kindex set sdstimeout
20146Set the timeout for SDS protocol reads to be @var{nsec} seconds. The
20147default is 2 seconds.
20148
20149@item show sdstimeout
20150@kindex show sdstimeout
20151Show the current value of the SDS timeout.
20152
20153@item sds @var{command}
20154@kindex sds@r{, a command}
20155Send the specified @var{command} string to the SDS monitor.
8e04817f
AC
20156@end table
20157
c45da7e6 20158
8e04817f
AC
20159@node PA
20160@subsection HP PA Embedded
104c1213
JM
20161
20162@table @code
20163
8e04817f
AC
20164@kindex target op50n
20165@item target op50n @var{dev}
20166OP50N monitor, running on an OKI HPPA board.
20167
20168@kindex target w89k
20169@item target w89k @var{dev}
20170W89K monitor, running on a Winbond HPPA board.
104c1213
JM
20171
20172@end table
20173
8e04817f
AC
20174@node Sparclet
20175@subsection Tsqware Sparclet
104c1213 20176
8e04817f
AC
20177@cindex Sparclet
20178
20179@value{GDBN} enables developers to debug tasks running on
20180Sparclet targets from a Unix host.
20181@value{GDBN} uses code that runs on
20182both the Unix host and on the Sparclet target. The program
20183@code{@value{GDBP}} is installed and executed on the Unix host.
104c1213 20184
8e04817f
AC
20185@table @code
20186@item remotetimeout @var{args}
20187@kindex remotetimeout
20188@value{GDBN} supports the option @code{remotetimeout}.
20189This option is set by the user, and @var{args} represents the number of
20190seconds @value{GDBN} waits for responses.
104c1213
JM
20191@end table
20192
8e04817f
AC
20193@cindex compiling, on Sparclet
20194When compiling for debugging, include the options @samp{-g} to get debug
20195information and @samp{-Ttext} to relocate the program to where you wish to
20196load it on the target. You may also want to add the options @samp{-n} or
20197@samp{-N} in order to reduce the size of the sections. Example:
104c1213 20198
474c8240 20199@smallexample
8e04817f 20200sparclet-aout-gcc prog.c -Ttext 0x12010000 -g -o prog -N
474c8240 20201@end smallexample
104c1213 20202
8e04817f 20203You can use @code{objdump} to verify that the addresses are what you intended:
104c1213 20204
474c8240 20205@smallexample
8e04817f 20206sparclet-aout-objdump --headers --syms prog
474c8240 20207@end smallexample
104c1213 20208
8e04817f
AC
20209@cindex running, on Sparclet
20210Once you have set
20211your Unix execution search path to find @value{GDBN}, you are ready to
20212run @value{GDBN}. From your Unix host, run @code{@value{GDBP}}
20213(or @code{sparclet-aout-gdb}, depending on your installation).
104c1213 20214
8e04817f
AC
20215@value{GDBN} comes up showing the prompt:
20216
474c8240 20217@smallexample
8e04817f 20218(gdbslet)
474c8240 20219@end smallexample
104c1213
JM
20220
20221@menu
8e04817f
AC
20222* Sparclet File:: Setting the file to debug
20223* Sparclet Connection:: Connecting to Sparclet
20224* Sparclet Download:: Sparclet download
20225* Sparclet Execution:: Running and debugging
104c1213
JM
20226@end menu
20227
8e04817f 20228@node Sparclet File
79a6e687 20229@subsubsection Setting File to Debug
104c1213 20230
8e04817f 20231The @value{GDBN} command @code{file} lets you choose with program to debug.
104c1213 20232
474c8240 20233@smallexample
8e04817f 20234(gdbslet) file prog
474c8240 20235@end smallexample
104c1213 20236
8e04817f
AC
20237@need 1000
20238@value{GDBN} then attempts to read the symbol table of @file{prog}.
20239@value{GDBN} locates
20240the file by searching the directories listed in the command search
20241path.
12c27660 20242If the file was compiled with debug information (option @samp{-g}), source
8e04817f
AC
20243files will be searched as well.
20244@value{GDBN} locates
20245the source files by searching the directories listed in the directory search
79a6e687 20246path (@pxref{Environment, ,Your Program's Environment}).
8e04817f
AC
20247If it fails
20248to find a file, it displays a message such as:
104c1213 20249
474c8240 20250@smallexample
8e04817f 20251prog: No such file or directory.
474c8240 20252@end smallexample
104c1213 20253
8e04817f
AC
20254When this happens, add the appropriate directories to the search paths with
20255the @value{GDBN} commands @code{path} and @code{dir}, and execute the
20256@code{target} command again.
104c1213 20257
8e04817f
AC
20258@node Sparclet Connection
20259@subsubsection Connecting to Sparclet
104c1213 20260
8e04817f
AC
20261The @value{GDBN} command @code{target} lets you connect to a Sparclet target.
20262To connect to a target on serial port ``@code{ttya}'', type:
104c1213 20263
474c8240 20264@smallexample
8e04817f
AC
20265(gdbslet) target sparclet /dev/ttya
20266Remote target sparclet connected to /dev/ttya
20267main () at ../prog.c:3
474c8240 20268@end smallexample
104c1213 20269
8e04817f
AC
20270@need 750
20271@value{GDBN} displays messages like these:
104c1213 20272
474c8240 20273@smallexample
8e04817f 20274Connected to ttya.
474c8240 20275@end smallexample
104c1213 20276
8e04817f 20277@node Sparclet Download
79a6e687 20278@subsubsection Sparclet Download
104c1213 20279
8e04817f
AC
20280@cindex download to Sparclet
20281Once connected to the Sparclet target,
20282you can use the @value{GDBN}
20283@code{load} command to download the file from the host to the target.
20284The file name and load offset should be given as arguments to the @code{load}
20285command.
20286Since the file format is aout, the program must be loaded to the starting
20287address. You can use @code{objdump} to find out what this value is. The load
20288offset is an offset which is added to the VMA (virtual memory address)
20289of each of the file's sections.
20290For instance, if the program
20291@file{prog} was linked to text address 0x1201000, with data at 0x12010160
20292and bss at 0x12010170, in @value{GDBN}, type:
104c1213 20293
474c8240 20294@smallexample
8e04817f
AC
20295(gdbslet) load prog 0x12010000
20296Loading section .text, size 0xdb0 vma 0x12010000
474c8240 20297@end smallexample
104c1213 20298
8e04817f
AC
20299If the code is loaded at a different address then what the program was linked
20300to, you may need to use the @code{section} and @code{add-symbol-file} commands
20301to tell @value{GDBN} where to map the symbol table.
20302
20303@node Sparclet Execution
79a6e687 20304@subsubsection Running and Debugging
8e04817f
AC
20305
20306@cindex running and debugging Sparclet programs
20307You can now begin debugging the task using @value{GDBN}'s execution control
20308commands, @code{b}, @code{step}, @code{run}, etc. See the @value{GDBN}
20309manual for the list of commands.
20310
474c8240 20311@smallexample
8e04817f
AC
20312(gdbslet) b main
20313Breakpoint 1 at 0x12010000: file prog.c, line 3.
20314(gdbslet) run
20315Starting program: prog
20316Breakpoint 1, main (argc=1, argv=0xeffff21c) at prog.c:3
203173 char *symarg = 0;
20318(gdbslet) step
203194 char *execarg = "hello!";
20320(gdbslet)
474c8240 20321@end smallexample
8e04817f
AC
20322
20323@node Sparclite
20324@subsection Fujitsu Sparclite
104c1213
JM
20325
20326@table @code
20327
8e04817f
AC
20328@kindex target sparclite
20329@item target sparclite @var{dev}
20330Fujitsu sparclite boards, used only for the purpose of loading.
20331You must use an additional command to debug the program.
20332For example: target remote @var{dev} using @value{GDBN} standard
20333remote protocol.
104c1213
JM
20334
20335@end table
20336
8e04817f
AC
20337@node Z8000
20338@subsection Zilog Z8000
104c1213 20339
8e04817f
AC
20340@cindex Z8000
20341@cindex simulator, Z8000
20342@cindex Zilog Z8000 simulator
104c1213 20343
8e04817f
AC
20344When configured for debugging Zilog Z8000 targets, @value{GDBN} includes
20345a Z8000 simulator.
20346
20347For the Z8000 family, @samp{target sim} simulates either the Z8002 (the
20348unsegmented variant of the Z8000 architecture) or the Z8001 (the
20349segmented variant). The simulator recognizes which architecture is
20350appropriate by inspecting the object code.
104c1213 20351
8e04817f
AC
20352@table @code
20353@item target sim @var{args}
20354@kindex sim
20355@kindex target sim@r{, with Z8000}
20356Debug programs on a simulated CPU. If the simulator supports setup
20357options, specify them via @var{args}.
104c1213
JM
20358@end table
20359
8e04817f
AC
20360@noindent
20361After specifying this target, you can debug programs for the simulated
20362CPU in the same style as programs for your host computer; use the
20363@code{file} command to load a new program image, the @code{run} command
20364to run your program, and so on.
20365
20366As well as making available all the usual machine registers
20367(@pxref{Registers, ,Registers}), the Z8000 simulator provides three
20368additional items of information as specially named registers:
104c1213
JM
20369
20370@table @code
20371
8e04817f
AC
20372@item cycles
20373Counts clock-ticks in the simulator.
104c1213 20374
8e04817f
AC
20375@item insts
20376Counts instructions run in the simulator.
104c1213 20377
8e04817f
AC
20378@item time
20379Execution time in 60ths of a second.
104c1213 20380
8e04817f 20381@end table
104c1213 20382
8e04817f
AC
20383You can refer to these values in @value{GDBN} expressions with the usual
20384conventions; for example, @w{@samp{b fputc if $cycles>5000}} sets a
20385conditional breakpoint that suspends only after at least 5000
20386simulated clock ticks.
104c1213 20387
a64548ea
EZ
20388@node AVR
20389@subsection Atmel AVR
20390@cindex AVR
20391
20392When configured for debugging the Atmel AVR, @value{GDBN} supports the
20393following AVR-specific commands:
20394
20395@table @code
20396@item info io_registers
20397@kindex info io_registers@r{, AVR}
20398@cindex I/O registers (Atmel AVR)
20399This command displays information about the AVR I/O registers. For
20400each register, @value{GDBN} prints its number and value.
20401@end table
20402
20403@node CRIS
20404@subsection CRIS
20405@cindex CRIS
20406
20407When configured for debugging CRIS, @value{GDBN} provides the
20408following CRIS-specific commands:
20409
20410@table @code
20411@item set cris-version @var{ver}
20412@cindex CRIS version
e22e55c9
OF
20413Set the current CRIS version to @var{ver}, either @samp{10} or @samp{32}.
20414The CRIS version affects register names and sizes. This command is useful in
20415case autodetection of the CRIS version fails.
a64548ea
EZ
20416
20417@item show cris-version
20418Show the current CRIS version.
20419
20420@item set cris-dwarf2-cfi
20421@cindex DWARF-2 CFI and CRIS
e22e55c9
OF
20422Set the usage of DWARF-2 CFI for CRIS debugging. The default is @samp{on}.
20423Change to @samp{off} when using @code{gcc-cris} whose version is below
20424@code{R59}.
a64548ea
EZ
20425
20426@item show cris-dwarf2-cfi
20427Show the current state of using DWARF-2 CFI.
e22e55c9
OF
20428
20429@item set cris-mode @var{mode}
20430@cindex CRIS mode
20431Set the current CRIS mode to @var{mode}. It should only be changed when
20432debugging in guru mode, in which case it should be set to
20433@samp{guru} (the default is @samp{normal}).
20434
20435@item show cris-mode
20436Show the current CRIS mode.
a64548ea
EZ
20437@end table
20438
20439@node Super-H
20440@subsection Renesas Super-H
20441@cindex Super-H
20442
20443For the Renesas Super-H processor, @value{GDBN} provides these
20444commands:
20445
20446@table @code
20447@item regs
20448@kindex regs@r{, Super-H}
2d4c29c5
TS
20449This command is deprecated, and @code{info all-registers} should be
20450used instead.
20451
a64548ea 20452Show the values of all Super-H registers.
c055b101
CV
20453
20454@item set sh calling-convention @var{convention}
20455@kindex set sh calling-convention
20456Set the calling-convention used when calling functions from @value{GDBN}.
20457Allowed values are @samp{gcc}, which is the default setting, and @samp{renesas}.
20458With the @samp{gcc} setting, functions are called using the @value{NGCC} calling
20459convention. If the DWARF-2 information of the called function specifies
20460that the function follows the Renesas calling convention, the function
20461is called using the Renesas calling convention. If the calling convention
20462is set to @samp{renesas}, the Renesas calling convention is always used,
20463regardless of the DWARF-2 information. This can be used to override the
20464default of @samp{gcc} if debug information is missing, or the compiler
20465does not emit the DWARF-2 calling convention entry for a function.
20466
20467@item show sh calling-convention
20468@kindex show sh calling-convention
20469Show the current calling convention setting.
20470
a64548ea
EZ
20471@end table
20472
20473
8e04817f
AC
20474@node Architectures
20475@section Architectures
104c1213 20476
8e04817f
AC
20477This section describes characteristics of architectures that affect
20478all uses of @value{GDBN} with the architecture, both native and cross.
104c1213 20479
8e04817f 20480@menu
9c16f35a 20481* i386::
8e04817f
AC
20482* Alpha::
20483* MIPS::
a64548ea 20484* HPPA:: HP PA architecture
23d964e7 20485* SPU:: Cell Broadband Engine SPU architecture
4acd40f3 20486* PowerPC::
8e04817f 20487@end menu
104c1213 20488
9c16f35a 20489@node i386
db2e3e2e 20490@subsection x86 Architecture-specific Issues
9c16f35a
EZ
20491
20492@table @code
20493@item set struct-convention @var{mode}
20494@kindex set struct-convention
20495@cindex struct return convention
20496@cindex struct/union returned in registers
20497Set the convention used by the inferior to return @code{struct}s and
20498@code{union}s from functions to @var{mode}. Possible values of
20499@var{mode} are @code{"pcc"}, @code{"reg"}, and @code{"default"} (the
20500default). @code{"default"} or @code{"pcc"} means that @code{struct}s
20501are returned on the stack, while @code{"reg"} means that a
20502@code{struct} or a @code{union} whose size is 1, 2, 4, or 8 bytes will
20503be returned in a register.
20504
20505@item show struct-convention
20506@kindex show struct-convention
20507Show the current setting of the convention to return @code{struct}s
20508from functions.
20509@end table
20510
8e04817f
AC
20511@node Alpha
20512@subsection Alpha
104c1213 20513
8e04817f 20514See the following section.
104c1213 20515
8e04817f 20516@node MIPS
eb17f351 20517@subsection @acronym{MIPS}
104c1213 20518
8e04817f 20519@cindex stack on Alpha
eb17f351 20520@cindex stack on @acronym{MIPS}
8e04817f 20521@cindex Alpha stack
eb17f351
EZ
20522@cindex @acronym{MIPS} stack
20523Alpha- and @acronym{MIPS}-based computers use an unusual stack frame, which
8e04817f
AC
20524sometimes requires @value{GDBN} to search backward in the object code to
20525find the beginning of a function.
104c1213 20526
eb17f351 20527@cindex response time, @acronym{MIPS} debugging
8e04817f
AC
20528To improve response time (especially for embedded applications, where
20529@value{GDBN} may be restricted to a slow serial line for this search)
20530you may want to limit the size of this search, using one of these
20531commands:
104c1213 20532
8e04817f 20533@table @code
eb17f351 20534@cindex @code{heuristic-fence-post} (Alpha, @acronym{MIPS})
8e04817f
AC
20535@item set heuristic-fence-post @var{limit}
20536Restrict @value{GDBN} to examining at most @var{limit} bytes in its
20537search for the beginning of a function. A value of @var{0} (the
20538default) means there is no limit. However, except for @var{0}, the
20539larger the limit the more bytes @code{heuristic-fence-post} must search
e2f4edfd
EZ
20540and therefore the longer it takes to run. You should only need to use
20541this command when debugging a stripped executable.
104c1213 20542
8e04817f
AC
20543@item show heuristic-fence-post
20544Display the current limit.
20545@end table
104c1213
JM
20546
20547@noindent
8e04817f 20548These commands are available @emph{only} when @value{GDBN} is configured
eb17f351 20549for debugging programs on Alpha or @acronym{MIPS} processors.
104c1213 20550
eb17f351 20551Several @acronym{MIPS}-specific commands are available when debugging @acronym{MIPS}
a64548ea
EZ
20552programs:
20553
20554@table @code
a64548ea
EZ
20555@item set mips abi @var{arg}
20556@kindex set mips abi
eb17f351
EZ
20557@cindex set ABI for @acronym{MIPS}
20558Tell @value{GDBN} which @acronym{MIPS} ABI is used by the inferior. Possible
a64548ea
EZ
20559values of @var{arg} are:
20560
20561@table @samp
20562@item auto
20563The default ABI associated with the current binary (this is the
20564default).
20565@item o32
20566@item o64
20567@item n32
20568@item n64
20569@item eabi32
20570@item eabi64
a64548ea
EZ
20571@end table
20572
20573@item show mips abi
20574@kindex show mips abi
eb17f351 20575Show the @acronym{MIPS} ABI used by @value{GDBN} to debug the inferior.
a64548ea 20576
4cc0665f
MR
20577@item set mips compression @var{arg}
20578@kindex set mips compression
20579@cindex code compression, @acronym{MIPS}
20580Tell @value{GDBN} which @acronym{MIPS} compressed
20581@acronym{ISA, Instruction Set Architecture} encoding is used by the
20582inferior. @value{GDBN} uses this for code disassembly and other
20583internal interpretation purposes. This setting is only referred to
20584when no executable has been associated with the debugging session or
20585the executable does not provide information about the encoding it uses.
20586Otherwise this setting is automatically updated from information
20587provided by the executable.
20588
20589Possible values of @var{arg} are @samp{mips16} and @samp{micromips}.
20590The default compressed @acronym{ISA} encoding is @samp{mips16}, as
20591executables containing @acronym{MIPS16} code frequently are not
20592identified as such.
20593
20594This setting is ``sticky''; that is, it retains its value across
20595debugging sessions until reset either explicitly with this command or
20596implicitly from an executable.
20597
20598The compiler and/or assembler typically add symbol table annotations to
20599identify functions compiled for the @acronym{MIPS16} or
20600@acronym{microMIPS} @acronym{ISA}s. If these function-scope annotations
20601are present, @value{GDBN} uses them in preference to the global
20602compressed @acronym{ISA} encoding setting.
20603
20604@item show mips compression
20605@kindex show mips compression
20606Show the @acronym{MIPS} compressed @acronym{ISA} encoding used by
20607@value{GDBN} to debug the inferior.
20608
a64548ea
EZ
20609@item set mipsfpu
20610@itemx show mipsfpu
20611@xref{MIPS Embedded, set mipsfpu}.
20612
20613@item set mips mask-address @var{arg}
20614@kindex set mips mask-address
eb17f351 20615@cindex @acronym{MIPS} addresses, masking
a64548ea 20616This command determines whether the most-significant 32 bits of 64-bit
eb17f351 20617@acronym{MIPS} addresses are masked off. The argument @var{arg} can be
a64548ea
EZ
20618@samp{on}, @samp{off}, or @samp{auto}. The latter is the default
20619setting, which lets @value{GDBN} determine the correct value.
20620
20621@item show mips mask-address
20622@kindex show mips mask-address
eb17f351 20623Show whether the upper 32 bits of @acronym{MIPS} addresses are masked off or
a64548ea
EZ
20624not.
20625
20626@item set remote-mips64-transfers-32bit-regs
20627@kindex set remote-mips64-transfers-32bit-regs
eb17f351
EZ
20628This command controls compatibility with 64-bit @acronym{MIPS} targets that
20629transfer data in 32-bit quantities. If you have an old @acronym{MIPS} 64 target
a64548ea
EZ
20630that transfers 32 bits for some registers, like @sc{sr} and @sc{fsr},
20631and 64 bits for other registers, set this option to @samp{on}.
20632
20633@item show remote-mips64-transfers-32bit-regs
20634@kindex show remote-mips64-transfers-32bit-regs
eb17f351 20635Show the current setting of compatibility with older @acronym{MIPS} 64 targets.
a64548ea
EZ
20636
20637@item set debug mips
20638@kindex set debug mips
eb17f351 20639This command turns on and off debugging messages for the @acronym{MIPS}-specific
a64548ea
EZ
20640target code in @value{GDBN}.
20641
20642@item show debug mips
20643@kindex show debug mips
eb17f351 20644Show the current setting of @acronym{MIPS} debugging messages.
a64548ea
EZ
20645@end table
20646
20647
20648@node HPPA
20649@subsection HPPA
20650@cindex HPPA support
20651
d3e8051b 20652When @value{GDBN} is debugging the HP PA architecture, it provides the
a64548ea
EZ
20653following special commands:
20654
20655@table @code
20656@item set debug hppa
20657@kindex set debug hppa
db2e3e2e 20658This command determines whether HPPA architecture-specific debugging
a64548ea
EZ
20659messages are to be displayed.
20660
20661@item show debug hppa
20662Show whether HPPA debugging messages are displayed.
20663
20664@item maint print unwind @var{address}
20665@kindex maint print unwind@r{, HPPA}
20666This command displays the contents of the unwind table entry at the
20667given @var{address}.
20668
20669@end table
20670
104c1213 20671
23d964e7
UW
20672@node SPU
20673@subsection Cell Broadband Engine SPU architecture
20674@cindex Cell Broadband Engine
20675@cindex SPU
20676
20677When @value{GDBN} is debugging the Cell Broadband Engine SPU architecture,
20678it provides the following special commands:
20679
20680@table @code
20681@item info spu event
20682@kindex info spu
20683Display SPU event facility status. Shows current event mask
20684and pending event status.
20685
20686@item info spu signal
20687Display SPU signal notification facility status. Shows pending
20688signal-control word and signal notification mode of both signal
20689notification channels.
20690
20691@item info spu mailbox
20692Display SPU mailbox facility status. Shows all pending entries,
20693in order of processing, in each of the SPU Write Outbound,
20694SPU Write Outbound Interrupt, and SPU Read Inbound mailboxes.
20695
20696@item info spu dma
20697Display MFC DMA status. Shows all pending commands in the MFC
20698DMA queue. For each entry, opcode, tag, class IDs, effective
20699and local store addresses and transfer size are shown.
20700
20701@item info spu proxydma
20702Display MFC Proxy-DMA status. Shows all pending commands in the MFC
20703Proxy-DMA queue. For each entry, opcode, tag, class IDs, effective
20704and local store addresses and transfer size are shown.
20705
20706@end table
20707
3285f3fe
UW
20708When @value{GDBN} is debugging a combined PowerPC/SPU application
20709on the Cell Broadband Engine, it provides in addition the following
20710special commands:
20711
20712@table @code
20713@item set spu stop-on-load @var{arg}
20714@kindex set spu
20715Set whether to stop for new SPE threads. When set to @code{on}, @value{GDBN}
20716will give control to the user when a new SPE thread enters its @code{main}
20717function. The default is @code{off}.
20718
20719@item show spu stop-on-load
20720@kindex show spu
20721Show whether to stop for new SPE threads.
20722
ff1a52c6
UW
20723@item set spu auto-flush-cache @var{arg}
20724Set whether to automatically flush the software-managed cache. When set to
20725@code{on}, @value{GDBN} will automatically cause the SPE software-managed
20726cache to be flushed whenever SPE execution stops. This provides a consistent
20727view of PowerPC memory that is accessed via the cache. If an application
20728does not use the software-managed cache, this option has no effect.
20729
20730@item show spu auto-flush-cache
20731Show whether to automatically flush the software-managed cache.
20732
3285f3fe
UW
20733@end table
20734
4acd40f3
TJB
20735@node PowerPC
20736@subsection PowerPC
20737@cindex PowerPC architecture
20738
20739When @value{GDBN} is debugging the PowerPC architecture, it provides a set of
20740pseudo-registers to enable inspection of 128-bit wide Decimal Floating Point
20741numbers stored in the floating point registers. These values must be stored
20742in two consecutive registers, always starting at an even register like
20743@code{f0} or @code{f2}.
20744
20745The pseudo-registers go from @code{$dl0} through @code{$dl15}, and are formed
20746by joining the even/odd register pairs @code{f0} and @code{f1} for @code{$dl0},
20747@code{f2} and @code{f3} for @code{$dl1} and so on.
20748
aeac0ff9 20749For POWER7 processors, @value{GDBN} provides a set of pseudo-registers, the 64-bit
677c5bb1
LM
20750wide Extended Floating Point Registers (@samp{f32} through @samp{f63}).
20751
23d964e7 20752
8e04817f
AC
20753@node Controlling GDB
20754@chapter Controlling @value{GDBN}
20755
20756You can alter the way @value{GDBN} interacts with you by using the
20757@code{set} command. For commands controlling how @value{GDBN} displays
79a6e687 20758data, see @ref{Print Settings, ,Print Settings}. Other settings are
8e04817f
AC
20759described here.
20760
20761@menu
20762* Prompt:: Prompt
20763* Editing:: Command editing
d620b259 20764* Command History:: Command history
8e04817f
AC
20765* Screen Size:: Screen size
20766* Numbers:: Numbers
1e698235 20767* ABI:: Configuring the current ABI
bf88dd68 20768* Auto-loading:: Automatically loading associated files
8e04817f
AC
20769* Messages/Warnings:: Optional warnings and messages
20770* Debugging Output:: Optional messages about internal happenings
14fb1bac 20771* Other Misc Settings:: Other Miscellaneous Settings
8e04817f
AC
20772@end menu
20773
20774@node Prompt
20775@section Prompt
104c1213 20776
8e04817f 20777@cindex prompt
104c1213 20778
8e04817f
AC
20779@value{GDBN} indicates its readiness to read a command by printing a string
20780called the @dfn{prompt}. This string is normally @samp{(@value{GDBP})}. You
20781can change the prompt string with the @code{set prompt} command. For
20782instance, when debugging @value{GDBN} with @value{GDBN}, it is useful to change
20783the prompt in one of the @value{GDBN} sessions so that you can always tell
20784which one you are talking to.
104c1213 20785
8e04817f
AC
20786@emph{Note:} @code{set prompt} does not add a space for you after the
20787prompt you set. This allows you to set a prompt which ends in a space
20788or a prompt that does not.
104c1213 20789
8e04817f
AC
20790@table @code
20791@kindex set prompt
20792@item set prompt @var{newprompt}
20793Directs @value{GDBN} to use @var{newprompt} as its prompt string henceforth.
104c1213 20794
8e04817f
AC
20795@kindex show prompt
20796@item show prompt
20797Prints a line of the form: @samp{Gdb's prompt is: @var{your-prompt}}
104c1213
JM
20798@end table
20799
fa3a4f15
PM
20800Versions of @value{GDBN} that ship with Python scripting enabled have
20801prompt extensions. The commands for interacting with these extensions
20802are:
20803
20804@table @code
20805@kindex set extended-prompt
20806@item set extended-prompt @var{prompt}
20807Set an extended prompt that allows for substitutions.
20808@xref{gdb.prompt}, for a list of escape sequences that can be used for
20809substitution. Any escape sequences specified as part of the prompt
20810string are replaced with the corresponding strings each time the prompt
20811is displayed.
20812
20813For example:
20814
20815@smallexample
20816set extended-prompt Current working directory: \w (gdb)
20817@end smallexample
20818
20819Note that when an extended-prompt is set, it takes control of the
20820@var{prompt_hook} hook. @xref{prompt_hook}, for further information.
20821
20822@kindex show extended-prompt
20823@item show extended-prompt
20824Prints the extended prompt. Any escape sequences specified as part of
20825the prompt string with @code{set extended-prompt}, are replaced with the
20826corresponding strings each time the prompt is displayed.
20827@end table
20828
8e04817f 20829@node Editing
79a6e687 20830@section Command Editing
8e04817f
AC
20831@cindex readline
20832@cindex command line editing
104c1213 20833
703663ab 20834@value{GDBN} reads its input commands via the @dfn{Readline} interface. This
8e04817f
AC
20835@sc{gnu} library provides consistent behavior for programs which provide a
20836command line interface to the user. Advantages are @sc{gnu} Emacs-style
20837or @dfn{vi}-style inline editing of commands, @code{csh}-like history
20838substitution, and a storage and recall of command history across
20839debugging sessions.
104c1213 20840
8e04817f
AC
20841You may control the behavior of command line editing in @value{GDBN} with the
20842command @code{set}.
104c1213 20843
8e04817f
AC
20844@table @code
20845@kindex set editing
20846@cindex editing
20847@item set editing
20848@itemx set editing on
20849Enable command line editing (enabled by default).
104c1213 20850
8e04817f
AC
20851@item set editing off
20852Disable command line editing.
104c1213 20853
8e04817f
AC
20854@kindex show editing
20855@item show editing
20856Show whether command line editing is enabled.
104c1213
JM
20857@end table
20858
39037522
TT
20859@ifset SYSTEM_READLINE
20860@xref{Command Line Editing, , , rluserman, GNU Readline Library},
20861@end ifset
20862@ifclear SYSTEM_READLINE
20863@xref{Command Line Editing},
20864@end ifclear
20865for more details about the Readline
703663ab
EZ
20866interface. Users unfamiliar with @sc{gnu} Emacs or @code{vi} are
20867encouraged to read that chapter.
20868
d620b259 20869@node Command History
79a6e687 20870@section Command History
703663ab 20871@cindex command history
8e04817f
AC
20872
20873@value{GDBN} can keep track of the commands you type during your
20874debugging sessions, so that you can be certain of precisely what
20875happened. Use these commands to manage the @value{GDBN} command
20876history facility.
104c1213 20877
703663ab 20878@value{GDBN} uses the @sc{gnu} History library, a part of the Readline
39037522
TT
20879package, to provide the history facility.
20880@ifset SYSTEM_READLINE
20881@xref{Using History Interactively, , , history, GNU History Library},
20882@end ifset
20883@ifclear SYSTEM_READLINE
20884@xref{Using History Interactively},
20885@end ifclear
20886for the detailed description of the History library.
703663ab 20887
d620b259 20888To issue a command to @value{GDBN} without affecting certain aspects of
9e6c4bd5
NR
20889the state which is seen by users, prefix it with @samp{server }
20890(@pxref{Server Prefix}). This
d620b259
NR
20891means that this command will not affect the command history, nor will it
20892affect @value{GDBN}'s notion of which command to repeat if @key{RET} is
20893pressed on a line by itself.
20894
20895@cindex @code{server}, command prefix
20896The server prefix does not affect the recording of values into the value
20897history; to print a value without recording it into the value history,
20898use the @code{output} command instead of the @code{print} command.
20899
703663ab
EZ
20900Here is the description of @value{GDBN} commands related to command
20901history.
20902
104c1213 20903@table @code
8e04817f
AC
20904@cindex history substitution
20905@cindex history file
20906@kindex set history filename
4644b6e3 20907@cindex @env{GDBHISTFILE}, environment variable
8e04817f
AC
20908@item set history filename @var{fname}
20909Set the name of the @value{GDBN} command history file to @var{fname}.
20910This is the file where @value{GDBN} reads an initial command history
20911list, and where it writes the command history from this session when it
20912exits. You can access this list through history expansion or through
20913the history command editing characters listed below. This file defaults
20914to the value of the environment variable @code{GDBHISTFILE}, or to
20915@file{./.gdb_history} (@file{./_gdb_history} on MS-DOS) if this variable
20916is not set.
104c1213 20917
9c16f35a
EZ
20918@cindex save command history
20919@kindex set history save
8e04817f
AC
20920@item set history save
20921@itemx set history save on
20922Record command history in a file, whose name may be specified with the
20923@code{set history filename} command. By default, this option is disabled.
104c1213 20924
8e04817f
AC
20925@item set history save off
20926Stop recording command history in a file.
104c1213 20927
8e04817f 20928@cindex history size
9c16f35a 20929@kindex set history size
6fc08d32 20930@cindex @env{HISTSIZE}, environment variable
8e04817f
AC
20931@item set history size @var{size}
20932Set the number of commands which @value{GDBN} keeps in its history list.
20933This defaults to the value of the environment variable
20934@code{HISTSIZE}, or to 256 if this variable is not set.
104c1213
JM
20935@end table
20936
8e04817f 20937History expansion assigns special meaning to the character @kbd{!}.
39037522
TT
20938@ifset SYSTEM_READLINE
20939@xref{Event Designators, , , history, GNU History Library},
20940@end ifset
20941@ifclear SYSTEM_READLINE
20942@xref{Event Designators},
20943@end ifclear
20944for more details.
8e04817f 20945
703663ab 20946@cindex history expansion, turn on/off
8e04817f
AC
20947Since @kbd{!} is also the logical not operator in C, history expansion
20948is off by default. If you decide to enable history expansion with the
20949@code{set history expansion on} command, you may sometimes need to
20950follow @kbd{!} (when it is used as logical not, in an expression) with
20951a space or a tab to prevent it from being expanded. The readline
20952history facilities do not attempt substitution on the strings
20953@kbd{!=} and @kbd{!(}, even when history expansion is enabled.
20954
20955The commands to control history expansion are:
104c1213
JM
20956
20957@table @code
8e04817f
AC
20958@item set history expansion on
20959@itemx set history expansion
703663ab 20960@kindex set history expansion
8e04817f 20961Enable history expansion. History expansion is off by default.
104c1213 20962
8e04817f
AC
20963@item set history expansion off
20964Disable history expansion.
104c1213 20965
8e04817f
AC
20966@c @group
20967@kindex show history
20968@item show history
20969@itemx show history filename
20970@itemx show history save
20971@itemx show history size
20972@itemx show history expansion
20973These commands display the state of the @value{GDBN} history parameters.
20974@code{show history} by itself displays all four states.
20975@c @end group
20976@end table
20977
20978@table @code
9c16f35a
EZ
20979@kindex show commands
20980@cindex show last commands
20981@cindex display command history
8e04817f
AC
20982@item show commands
20983Display the last ten commands in the command history.
104c1213 20984
8e04817f
AC
20985@item show commands @var{n}
20986Print ten commands centered on command number @var{n}.
20987
20988@item show commands +
20989Print ten commands just after the commands last printed.
104c1213
JM
20990@end table
20991
8e04817f 20992@node Screen Size
79a6e687 20993@section Screen Size
8e04817f
AC
20994@cindex size of screen
20995@cindex pauses in output
104c1213 20996
8e04817f
AC
20997Certain commands to @value{GDBN} may produce large amounts of
20998information output to the screen. To help you read all of it,
20999@value{GDBN} pauses and asks you for input at the end of each page of
21000output. Type @key{RET} when you want to continue the output, or @kbd{q}
21001to discard the remaining output. Also, the screen width setting
21002determines when to wrap lines of output. Depending on what is being
21003printed, @value{GDBN} tries to break the line at a readable place,
21004rather than simply letting it overflow onto the following line.
21005
21006Normally @value{GDBN} knows the size of the screen from the terminal
21007driver software. For example, on Unix @value{GDBN} uses the termcap data base
21008together with the value of the @code{TERM} environment variable and the
21009@code{stty rows} and @code{stty cols} settings. If this is not correct,
21010you can override it with the @code{set height} and @code{set
21011width} commands:
21012
21013@table @code
21014@kindex set height
21015@kindex set width
21016@kindex show width
21017@kindex show height
21018@item set height @var{lpp}
21019@itemx show height
21020@itemx set width @var{cpl}
21021@itemx show width
21022These @code{set} commands specify a screen height of @var{lpp} lines and
21023a screen width of @var{cpl} characters. The associated @code{show}
21024commands display the current settings.
104c1213 21025
8e04817f
AC
21026If you specify a height of zero lines, @value{GDBN} does not pause during
21027output no matter how long the output is. This is useful if output is to a
21028file or to an editor buffer.
104c1213 21029
8e04817f
AC
21030Likewise, you can specify @samp{set width 0} to prevent @value{GDBN}
21031from wrapping its output.
9c16f35a
EZ
21032
21033@item set pagination on
21034@itemx set pagination off
21035@kindex set pagination
21036Turn the output pagination on or off; the default is on. Turning
7c953934
TT
21037pagination off is the alternative to @code{set height 0}. Note that
21038running @value{GDBN} with the @option{--batch} option (@pxref{Mode
21039Options, -batch}) also automatically disables pagination.
9c16f35a
EZ
21040
21041@item show pagination
21042@kindex show pagination
21043Show the current pagination mode.
104c1213
JM
21044@end table
21045
8e04817f
AC
21046@node Numbers
21047@section Numbers
21048@cindex number representation
21049@cindex entering numbers
104c1213 21050
8e04817f
AC
21051You can always enter numbers in octal, decimal, or hexadecimal in
21052@value{GDBN} by the usual conventions: octal numbers begin with
21053@samp{0}, decimal numbers end with @samp{.}, and hexadecimal numbers
eb2dae08
EZ
21054begin with @samp{0x}. Numbers that neither begin with @samp{0} or
21055@samp{0x}, nor end with a @samp{.} are, by default, entered in base
2105610; likewise, the default display for numbers---when no particular
21057format is specified---is base 10. You can change the default base for
21058both input and output with the commands described below.
104c1213 21059
8e04817f
AC
21060@table @code
21061@kindex set input-radix
21062@item set input-radix @var{base}
21063Set the default base for numeric input. Supported choices
21064for @var{base} are decimal 8, 10, or 16. @var{base} must itself be
eb2dae08 21065specified either unambiguously or using the current input radix; for
8e04817f 21066example, any of
104c1213 21067
8e04817f 21068@smallexample
9c16f35a
EZ
21069set input-radix 012
21070set input-radix 10.
21071set input-radix 0xa
8e04817f 21072@end smallexample
104c1213 21073
8e04817f 21074@noindent
9c16f35a 21075sets the input base to decimal. On the other hand, @samp{set input-radix 10}
eb2dae08
EZ
21076leaves the input radix unchanged, no matter what it was, since
21077@samp{10}, being without any leading or trailing signs of its base, is
21078interpreted in the current radix. Thus, if the current radix is 16,
21079@samp{10} is interpreted in hex, i.e.@: as 16 decimal, which doesn't
21080change the radix.
104c1213 21081
8e04817f
AC
21082@kindex set output-radix
21083@item set output-radix @var{base}
21084Set the default base for numeric display. Supported choices
21085for @var{base} are decimal 8, 10, or 16. @var{base} must itself be
eb2dae08 21086specified either unambiguously or using the current input radix.
104c1213 21087
8e04817f
AC
21088@kindex show input-radix
21089@item show input-radix
21090Display the current default base for numeric input.
104c1213 21091
8e04817f
AC
21092@kindex show output-radix
21093@item show output-radix
21094Display the current default base for numeric display.
9c16f35a
EZ
21095
21096@item set radix @r{[}@var{base}@r{]}
21097@itemx show radix
21098@kindex set radix
21099@kindex show radix
21100These commands set and show the default base for both input and output
21101of numbers. @code{set radix} sets the radix of input and output to
21102the same base; without an argument, it resets the radix back to its
21103default value of 10.
21104
8e04817f 21105@end table
104c1213 21106
1e698235 21107@node ABI
79a6e687 21108@section Configuring the Current ABI
1e698235
DJ
21109
21110@value{GDBN} can determine the @dfn{ABI} (Application Binary Interface) of your
21111application automatically. However, sometimes you need to override its
21112conclusions. Use these commands to manage @value{GDBN}'s view of the
21113current ABI.
21114
98b45e30
DJ
21115@cindex OS ABI
21116@kindex set osabi
b4e9345d 21117@kindex show osabi
98b45e30
DJ
21118
21119One @value{GDBN} configuration can debug binaries for multiple operating
b383017d 21120system targets, either via remote debugging or native emulation.
98b45e30
DJ
21121@value{GDBN} will autodetect the @dfn{OS ABI} (Operating System ABI) in use,
21122but you can override its conclusion using the @code{set osabi} command.
21123One example where this is useful is in debugging of binaries which use
21124an alternate C library (e.g.@: @sc{uClibc} for @sc{gnu}/Linux) which does
21125not have the same identifying marks that the standard C library for your
21126platform provides.
21127
21128@table @code
21129@item show osabi
21130Show the OS ABI currently in use.
21131
21132@item set osabi
21133With no argument, show the list of registered available OS ABI's.
21134
21135@item set osabi @var{abi}
21136Set the current OS ABI to @var{abi}.
21137@end table
21138
1e698235 21139@cindex float promotion
1e698235
DJ
21140
21141Generally, the way that an argument of type @code{float} is passed to a
21142function depends on whether the function is prototyped. For a prototyped
21143(i.e.@: ANSI/ISO style) function, @code{float} arguments are passed unchanged,
21144according to the architecture's convention for @code{float}. For unprototyped
21145(i.e.@: K&R style) functions, @code{float} arguments are first promoted to type
21146@code{double} and then passed.
21147
21148Unfortunately, some forms of debug information do not reliably indicate whether
21149a function is prototyped. If @value{GDBN} calls a function that is not marked
21150as prototyped, it consults @kbd{set coerce-float-to-double}.
21151
21152@table @code
a8f24a35 21153@kindex set coerce-float-to-double
1e698235
DJ
21154@item set coerce-float-to-double
21155@itemx set coerce-float-to-double on
21156Arguments of type @code{float} will be promoted to @code{double} when passed
21157to an unprototyped function. This is the default setting.
21158
21159@item set coerce-float-to-double off
21160Arguments of type @code{float} will be passed directly to unprototyped
21161functions.
9c16f35a
EZ
21162
21163@kindex show coerce-float-to-double
21164@item show coerce-float-to-double
21165Show the current setting of promoting @code{float} to @code{double}.
1e698235
DJ
21166@end table
21167
f1212245
DJ
21168@kindex set cp-abi
21169@kindex show cp-abi
21170@value{GDBN} needs to know the ABI used for your program's C@t{++}
21171objects. The correct C@t{++} ABI depends on which C@t{++} compiler was
21172used to build your application. @value{GDBN} only fully supports
21173programs with a single C@t{++} ABI; if your program contains code using
21174multiple C@t{++} ABI's or if @value{GDBN} can not identify your
21175program's ABI correctly, you can tell @value{GDBN} which ABI to use.
21176Currently supported ABI's include ``gnu-v2'', for @code{g++} versions
21177before 3.0, ``gnu-v3'', for @code{g++} versions 3.0 and later, and
21178``hpaCC'' for the HP ANSI C@t{++} compiler. Other C@t{++} compilers may
21179use the ``gnu-v2'' or ``gnu-v3'' ABI's as well. The default setting is
21180``auto''.
21181
21182@table @code
21183@item show cp-abi
21184Show the C@t{++} ABI currently in use.
21185
21186@item set cp-abi
21187With no argument, show the list of supported C@t{++} ABI's.
21188
21189@item set cp-abi @var{abi}
21190@itemx set cp-abi auto
21191Set the current C@t{++} ABI to @var{abi}, or return to automatic detection.
21192@end table
21193
bf88dd68
JK
21194@node Auto-loading
21195@section Automatically loading associated files
21196@cindex auto-loading
21197
21198@value{GDBN} sometimes reads files with commands and settings automatically,
21199without being explicitly told so by the user. We call this feature
21200@dfn{auto-loading}. While auto-loading is useful for automatically adapting
21201@value{GDBN} to the needs of your project, it can sometimes produce unexpected
21202results or introduce security risks (e.g., if the file comes from untrusted
21203sources).
21204
c1668e4e
JK
21205Note that loading of these associated files (including the local @file{.gdbinit}
21206file) requires accordingly configured @code{auto-load safe-path}
21207(@pxref{Auto-loading safe path}).
21208
bf88dd68
JK
21209For these reasons, @value{GDBN} includes commands and options to let you
21210control when to auto-load files and which files should be auto-loaded.
21211
21212@table @code
21213@anchor{set auto-load off}
21214@kindex set auto-load off
21215@item set auto-load off
21216Globally disable loading of all auto-loaded files.
21217You may want to use this command with the @samp{-iex} option
21218(@pxref{Option -init-eval-command}) such as:
21219@smallexample
21220$ @kbd{gdb -iex "set auto-load off" untrusted-executable corefile}
21221@end smallexample
21222
21223Be aware that system init file (@pxref{System-wide configuration})
21224and init files from your home directory (@pxref{Home Directory Init File})
21225still get read (as they come from generally trusted directories).
21226To prevent @value{GDBN} from auto-loading even those init files, use the
21227@option{-nx} option (@pxref{Mode Options}), in addition to
21228@code{set auto-load no}.
21229
21230@anchor{show auto-load}
21231@kindex show auto-load
21232@item show auto-load
21233Show whether auto-loading of each specific @samp{auto-load} file(s) is enabled
21234or disabled.
21235
21236@smallexample
21237(gdb) show auto-load
21238gdb-scripts: Auto-loading of canned sequences of commands scripts is on.
21239libthread-db: Auto-loading of inferior specific libthread_db is on.
1ccacbcd
JK
21240local-gdbinit: Auto-loading of .gdbinit script from current directory
21241 is on.
bf88dd68 21242python-scripts: Auto-loading of Python scripts is on.
bccbefd2 21243safe-path: List of directories from which it is safe to auto-load files
1564a261 21244 is $debugdir:$datadir/auto-load.
7349ff92 21245scripts-directory: List of directories from which to load auto-loaded scripts
1564a261 21246 is $debugdir:$datadir/auto-load.
bf88dd68
JK
21247@end smallexample
21248
21249@anchor{info auto-load}
21250@kindex info auto-load
21251@item info auto-load
21252Print whether each specific @samp{auto-load} file(s) have been auto-loaded or
21253not.
21254
21255@smallexample
21256(gdb) info auto-load
21257gdb-scripts:
21258Loaded Script
21259Yes /home/user/gdb/gdb-gdb.gdb
21260libthread-db: No auto-loaded libthread-db.
1ccacbcd
JK
21261local-gdbinit: Local .gdbinit file "/home/user/gdb/.gdbinit" has been
21262 loaded.
bf88dd68
JK
21263python-scripts:
21264Loaded Script
21265Yes /home/user/gdb/gdb-gdb.py
21266@end smallexample
21267@end table
21268
21269These are various kinds of files @value{GDBN} can automatically load:
21270
21271@itemize @bullet
21272@item
21273@xref{objfile-gdb.py file}, controlled by @ref{set auto-load python-scripts}.
21274@item
21275@xref{objfile-gdb.gdb file}, controlled by @ref{set auto-load gdb-scripts}.
21276@item
21277@xref{dotdebug_gdb_scripts section},
21278controlled by @ref{set auto-load python-scripts}.
21279@item
21280@xref{Init File in the Current Directory},
21281controlled by @ref{set auto-load local-gdbinit}.
21282@item
21283@xref{libthread_db.so.1 file}, controlled by @ref{set auto-load libthread-db}.
21284@end itemize
21285
21286These are @value{GDBN} control commands for the auto-loading:
21287
21288@multitable @columnfractions .5 .5
21289@item @xref{set auto-load off}.
21290@tab Disable auto-loading globally.
21291@item @xref{show auto-load}.
21292@tab Show setting of all kinds of files.
21293@item @xref{info auto-load}.
21294@tab Show state of all kinds of files.
21295@item @xref{set auto-load gdb-scripts}.
21296@tab Control for @value{GDBN} command scripts.
21297@item @xref{show auto-load gdb-scripts}.
21298@tab Show setting of @value{GDBN} command scripts.
21299@item @xref{info auto-load gdb-scripts}.
21300@tab Show state of @value{GDBN} command scripts.
21301@item @xref{set auto-load python-scripts}.
21302@tab Control for @value{GDBN} Python scripts.
21303@item @xref{show auto-load python-scripts}.
21304@tab Show setting of @value{GDBN} Python scripts.
21305@item @xref{info auto-load python-scripts}.
21306@tab Show state of @value{GDBN} Python scripts.
7349ff92
JK
21307@item @xref{set auto-load scripts-directory}.
21308@tab Control for @value{GDBN} auto-loaded scripts location.
21309@item @xref{show auto-load scripts-directory}.
21310@tab Show @value{GDBN} auto-loaded scripts location.
bf88dd68
JK
21311@item @xref{set auto-load local-gdbinit}.
21312@tab Control for init file in the current directory.
21313@item @xref{show auto-load local-gdbinit}.
21314@tab Show setting of init file in the current directory.
21315@item @xref{info auto-load local-gdbinit}.
21316@tab Show state of init file in the current directory.
21317@item @xref{set auto-load libthread-db}.
21318@tab Control for thread debugging library.
21319@item @xref{show auto-load libthread-db}.
21320@tab Show setting of thread debugging library.
21321@item @xref{info auto-load libthread-db}.
21322@tab Show state of thread debugging library.
bccbefd2
JK
21323@item @xref{set auto-load safe-path}.
21324@tab Control directories trusted for automatic loading.
21325@item @xref{show auto-load safe-path}.
21326@tab Show directories trusted for automatic loading.
21327@item @xref{add-auto-load-safe-path}.
21328@tab Add directory trusted for automatic loading.
bf88dd68
JK
21329@end multitable
21330
21331@menu
21332* Init File in the Current Directory:: @samp{set/show/info auto-load local-gdbinit}
21333* libthread_db.so.1 file:: @samp{set/show/info auto-load libthread-db}
21334* objfile-gdb.gdb file:: @samp{set/show/info auto-load gdb-script}
bccbefd2 21335* Auto-loading safe path:: @samp{set/show/info auto-load safe-path}
4dc84fd1 21336* Auto-loading verbose mode:: @samp{set/show debug auto-load}
bf88dd68
JK
21337@xref{Python Auto-loading}.
21338@end menu
21339
21340@node Init File in the Current Directory
21341@subsection Automatically loading init file in the current directory
21342@cindex auto-loading init file in the current directory
21343
21344By default, @value{GDBN} reads and executes the canned sequences of commands
21345from init file (if any) in the current working directory,
21346see @ref{Init File in the Current Directory during Startup}.
21347
c1668e4e
JK
21348Note that loading of this local @file{.gdbinit} file also requires accordingly
21349configured @code{auto-load safe-path} (@pxref{Auto-loading safe path}).
21350
bf88dd68
JK
21351@table @code
21352@anchor{set auto-load local-gdbinit}
21353@kindex set auto-load local-gdbinit
21354@item set auto-load local-gdbinit [on|off]
21355Enable or disable the auto-loading of canned sequences of commands
21356(@pxref{Sequences}) found in init file in the current directory.
21357
21358@anchor{show auto-load local-gdbinit}
21359@kindex show auto-load local-gdbinit
21360@item show auto-load local-gdbinit
21361Show whether auto-loading of canned sequences of commands from init file in the
21362current directory is enabled or disabled.
21363
21364@anchor{info auto-load local-gdbinit}
21365@kindex info auto-load local-gdbinit
21366@item info auto-load local-gdbinit
21367Print whether canned sequences of commands from init file in the
21368current directory have been auto-loaded.
21369@end table
21370
21371@node libthread_db.so.1 file
21372@subsection Automatically loading thread debugging library
21373@cindex auto-loading libthread_db.so.1
21374
21375This feature is currently present only on @sc{gnu}/Linux native hosts.
21376
21377@value{GDBN} reads in some cases thread debugging library from places specific
21378to the inferior (@pxref{set libthread-db-search-path}).
21379
21380The special @samp{libthread-db-search-path} entry @samp{$sdir} is processed
21381without checking this @samp{set auto-load libthread-db} switch as system
21382libraries have to be trusted in general. In all other cases of
21383@samp{libthread-db-search-path} entries @value{GDBN} checks first if @samp{set
21384auto-load libthread-db} is enabled before trying to open such thread debugging
21385library.
21386
c1668e4e
JK
21387Note that loading of this debugging library also requires accordingly configured
21388@code{auto-load safe-path} (@pxref{Auto-loading safe path}).
21389
bf88dd68
JK
21390@table @code
21391@anchor{set auto-load libthread-db}
21392@kindex set auto-load libthread-db
21393@item set auto-load libthread-db [on|off]
21394Enable or disable the auto-loading of inferior specific thread debugging library.
21395
21396@anchor{show auto-load libthread-db}
21397@kindex show auto-load libthread-db
21398@item show auto-load libthread-db
21399Show whether auto-loading of inferior specific thread debugging library is
21400enabled or disabled.
21401
21402@anchor{info auto-load libthread-db}
21403@kindex info auto-load libthread-db
21404@item info auto-load libthread-db
21405Print the list of all loaded inferior specific thread debugging libraries and
21406for each such library print list of inferior @var{pid}s using it.
21407@end table
21408
21409@node objfile-gdb.gdb file
21410@subsection The @file{@var{objfile}-gdb.gdb} file
21411@cindex auto-loading @file{@var{objfile}-gdb.gdb}
21412
21413@value{GDBN} tries to load an @file{@var{objfile}-gdb.gdb} file containing
21414canned sequences of commands (@pxref{Sequences}), as long as @samp{set
21415auto-load gdb-scripts} is set to @samp{on}.
21416
c1668e4e
JK
21417Note that loading of this script file also requires accordingly configured
21418@code{auto-load safe-path} (@pxref{Auto-loading safe path}).
21419
bf88dd68
JK
21420For more background refer to the similar Python scripts auto-loading
21421description (@pxref{objfile-gdb.py file}).
21422
21423@table @code
21424@anchor{set auto-load gdb-scripts}
21425@kindex set auto-load gdb-scripts
21426@item set auto-load gdb-scripts [on|off]
21427Enable or disable the auto-loading of canned sequences of commands scripts.
21428
21429@anchor{show auto-load gdb-scripts}
21430@kindex show auto-load gdb-scripts
21431@item show auto-load gdb-scripts
21432Show whether auto-loading of canned sequences of commands scripts is enabled or
21433disabled.
21434
21435@anchor{info auto-load gdb-scripts}
21436@kindex info auto-load gdb-scripts
21437@cindex print list of auto-loaded canned sequences of commands scripts
21438@item info auto-load gdb-scripts [@var{regexp}]
21439Print the list of all canned sequences of commands scripts that @value{GDBN}
21440auto-loaded.
21441@end table
21442
21443If @var{regexp} is supplied only canned sequences of commands scripts with
21444matching names are printed.
21445
bccbefd2
JK
21446@node Auto-loading safe path
21447@subsection Security restriction for auto-loading
21448@cindex auto-loading safe-path
21449
21450As the files of inferior can come from untrusted source (such as submitted by
21451an application user) @value{GDBN} does not always load any files automatically.
21452@value{GDBN} provides the @samp{set auto-load safe-path} setting to list
21453directories trusted for loading files not explicitly requested by user.
21454
21455If the path is not set properly you will see a warning and the file will not
21456get loaded:
21457
21458@smallexample
21459$ ./gdb -q ./gdb
21460Reading symbols from /home/user/gdb/gdb...done.
21461warning: File "/home/user/gdb/gdb-gdb.gdb" auto-loading has been
1564a261
JK
21462 declined by your `auto-load safe-path' set
21463 to "$debugdir:$datadir/auto-load".
bccbefd2 21464warning: File "/home/user/gdb/gdb-gdb.py" auto-loading has been
1564a261
JK
21465 declined by your `auto-load safe-path' set
21466 to "$debugdir:$datadir/auto-load".
bccbefd2
JK
21467@end smallexample
21468
21469The list of trusted directories is controlled by the following commands:
21470
21471@table @code
21472@anchor{set auto-load safe-path}
21473@kindex set auto-load safe-path
af2c1515 21474@item set auto-load safe-path @r{[}@var{directories}@r{]}
bccbefd2
JK
21475Set the list of directories (and their subdirectories) trusted for automatic
21476loading and execution of scripts. You can also enter a specific trusted file.
af2c1515
JK
21477If you omit @var{directories}, @samp{auto-load safe-path} will be reset to
21478its default value as specified during @value{GDBN} compilation.
21479
d9242c17 21480The list of directories uses path separator (@samp{:} on GNU and Unix
bccbefd2
JK
21481systems, @samp{;} on MS-Windows and MS-DOS) to separate directories, similarly
21482to the @env{PATH} environment variable.
21483
21484@anchor{show auto-load safe-path}
21485@kindex show auto-load safe-path
21486@item show auto-load safe-path
21487Show the list of directories trusted for automatic loading and execution of
21488scripts.
21489
21490@anchor{add-auto-load-safe-path}
21491@kindex add-auto-load-safe-path
21492@item add-auto-load-safe-path
21493Add an entry (or list of entries) the list of directories trusted for automatic
21494loading and execution of scripts. Multiple entries may be delimited by the
d9242c17 21495host platform path separator in use.
bccbefd2
JK
21496@end table
21497
7349ff92 21498This variable defaults to what @code{--with-auto-load-dir} has been configured
1564a261
JK
21499to (@pxref{with-auto-load-dir}). @file{$debugdir} and @file{$datadir}
21500substitution applies the same as for @ref{set auto-load scripts-directory}.
21501The default @code{set auto-load safe-path} value can be also overriden by
21502@value{GDBN} configuration option @option{--with-auto-load-safe-path}.
6dea1fbd 21503
6dea1fbd
JK
21504Setting this variable to @file{/} disables this security protection,
21505corresponding @value{GDBN} configuration option is
21506@option{--without-auto-load-safe-path}.
bccbefd2
JK
21507This variable is supposed to be set to the system directories writable by the
21508system superuser only. Users can add their source directories in init files in
21509their home directories (@pxref{Home Directory Init File}). See also deprecated
21510init file in the current directory
21511(@pxref{Init File in the Current Directory during Startup}).
21512
21513To force @value{GDBN} to load the files it declined to load in the previous
21514example, you could use one of the following ways:
21515
0511cc75
JK
21516@table @asis
21517@item @file{~/.gdbinit}: @samp{add-auto-load-safe-path ~/src/gdb}
bccbefd2
JK
21518Specify this trusted directory (or a file) as additional component of the list.
21519You have to specify also any existing directories displayed by
21520by @samp{show auto-load safe-path} (such as @samp{/usr:/bin} in this example).
21521
174bb630 21522@item @kbd{gdb -iex "set auto-load safe-path /usr:/bin:~/src/gdb" @dots{}}
bccbefd2
JK
21523Specify this directory as in the previous case but just for a single
21524@value{GDBN} session.
21525
af2c1515 21526@item @kbd{gdb -iex "set auto-load safe-path /" @dots{}}
bccbefd2
JK
21527Disable auto-loading safety for a single @value{GDBN} session.
21528This assumes all the files you debug during this @value{GDBN} session will come
21529from trusted sources.
21530
21531@item @kbd{./configure --without-auto-load-safe-path}
21532During compilation of @value{GDBN} you may disable any auto-loading safety.
21533This assumes all the files you will ever debug with this @value{GDBN} come from
21534trusted sources.
0511cc75 21535@end table
bccbefd2
JK
21536
21537On the other hand you can also explicitly forbid automatic files loading which
21538also suppresses any such warning messages:
21539
0511cc75 21540@table @asis
174bb630 21541@item @kbd{gdb -iex "set auto-load no" @dots{}}
bccbefd2
JK
21542You can use @value{GDBN} command-line option for a single @value{GDBN} session.
21543
0511cc75 21544@item @file{~/.gdbinit}: @samp{set auto-load no}
bccbefd2
JK
21545Disable auto-loading globally for the user
21546(@pxref{Home Directory Init File}). While it is improbable, you could also
21547use system init file instead (@pxref{System-wide configuration}).
0511cc75 21548@end table
bccbefd2
JK
21549
21550This setting applies to the file names as entered by user. If no entry matches
21551@value{GDBN} tries as a last resort to also resolve all the file names into
21552their canonical form (typically resolving symbolic links) and compare the
21553entries again. @value{GDBN} already canonicalizes most of the filenames on its
21554own before starting the comparison so a canonical form of directories is
21555recommended to be entered.
21556
4dc84fd1
JK
21557@node Auto-loading verbose mode
21558@subsection Displaying files tried for auto-load
21559@cindex auto-loading verbose mode
21560
21561For better visibility of all the file locations where you can place scripts to
21562be auto-loaded with inferior --- or to protect yourself against accidental
21563execution of untrusted scripts --- @value{GDBN} provides a feature for printing
21564all the files attempted to be loaded. Both existing and non-existing files may
21565be printed.
21566
21567For example the list of directories from which it is safe to auto-load files
21568(@pxref{Auto-loading safe path}) applies also to canonicalized filenames which
21569may not be too obvious while setting it up.
21570
21571@smallexample
0070f25a 21572(gdb) set debug auto-load on
4dc84fd1
JK
21573(gdb) file ~/src/t/true
21574auto-load: Loading canned sequences of commands script "/tmp/true-gdb.gdb"
21575 for objfile "/tmp/true".
21576auto-load: Updating directories of "/usr:/opt".
21577auto-load: Using directory "/usr".
21578auto-load: Using directory "/opt".
21579warning: File "/tmp/true-gdb.gdb" auto-loading has been declined
21580 by your `auto-load safe-path' set to "/usr:/opt".
21581@end smallexample
21582
21583@table @code
21584@anchor{set debug auto-load}
21585@kindex set debug auto-load
21586@item set debug auto-load [on|off]
21587Set whether to print the filenames attempted to be auto-loaded.
21588
21589@anchor{show debug auto-load}
21590@kindex show debug auto-load
21591@item show debug auto-load
21592Show whether printing of the filenames attempted to be auto-loaded is turned
21593on or off.
21594@end table
21595
8e04817f 21596@node Messages/Warnings
79a6e687 21597@section Optional Warnings and Messages
104c1213 21598
9c16f35a
EZ
21599@cindex verbose operation
21600@cindex optional warnings
8e04817f
AC
21601By default, @value{GDBN} is silent about its inner workings. If you are
21602running on a slow machine, you may want to use the @code{set verbose}
21603command. This makes @value{GDBN} tell you when it does a lengthy
21604internal operation, so you will not think it has crashed.
104c1213 21605
8e04817f
AC
21606Currently, the messages controlled by @code{set verbose} are those
21607which announce that the symbol table for a source file is being read;
79a6e687 21608see @code{symbol-file} in @ref{Files, ,Commands to Specify Files}.
104c1213 21609
8e04817f
AC
21610@table @code
21611@kindex set verbose
21612@item set verbose on
21613Enables @value{GDBN} output of certain informational messages.
104c1213 21614
8e04817f
AC
21615@item set verbose off
21616Disables @value{GDBN} output of certain informational messages.
104c1213 21617
8e04817f
AC
21618@kindex show verbose
21619@item show verbose
21620Displays whether @code{set verbose} is on or off.
21621@end table
104c1213 21622
8e04817f
AC
21623By default, if @value{GDBN} encounters bugs in the symbol table of an
21624object file, it is silent; but if you are debugging a compiler, you may
79a6e687
BW
21625find this information useful (@pxref{Symbol Errors, ,Errors Reading
21626Symbol Files}).
104c1213 21627
8e04817f 21628@table @code
104c1213 21629
8e04817f
AC
21630@kindex set complaints
21631@item set complaints @var{limit}
21632Permits @value{GDBN} to output @var{limit} complaints about each type of
21633unusual symbols before becoming silent about the problem. Set
21634@var{limit} to zero to suppress all complaints; set it to a large number
21635to prevent complaints from being suppressed.
104c1213 21636
8e04817f
AC
21637@kindex show complaints
21638@item show complaints
21639Displays how many symbol complaints @value{GDBN} is permitted to produce.
104c1213 21640
8e04817f 21641@end table
104c1213 21642
d837706a 21643@anchor{confirmation requests}
8e04817f
AC
21644By default, @value{GDBN} is cautious, and asks what sometimes seems to be a
21645lot of stupid questions to confirm certain commands. For example, if
21646you try to run a program which is already running:
104c1213 21647
474c8240 21648@smallexample
8e04817f
AC
21649(@value{GDBP}) run
21650The program being debugged has been started already.
21651Start it from the beginning? (y or n)
474c8240 21652@end smallexample
104c1213 21653
8e04817f
AC
21654If you are willing to unflinchingly face the consequences of your own
21655commands, you can disable this ``feature'':
104c1213 21656
8e04817f 21657@table @code
104c1213 21658
8e04817f
AC
21659@kindex set confirm
21660@cindex flinching
21661@cindex confirmation
21662@cindex stupid questions
21663@item set confirm off
7c953934
TT
21664Disables confirmation requests. Note that running @value{GDBN} with
21665the @option{--batch} option (@pxref{Mode Options, -batch}) also
21666automatically disables confirmation requests.
104c1213 21667
8e04817f
AC
21668@item set confirm on
21669Enables confirmation requests (the default).
104c1213 21670
8e04817f
AC
21671@kindex show confirm
21672@item show confirm
21673Displays state of confirmation requests.
21674
21675@end table
104c1213 21676
16026cd7
AS
21677@cindex command tracing
21678If you need to debug user-defined commands or sourced files you may find it
21679useful to enable @dfn{command tracing}. In this mode each command will be
21680printed as it is executed, prefixed with one or more @samp{+} symbols, the
21681quantity denoting the call depth of each command.
21682
21683@table @code
21684@kindex set trace-commands
21685@cindex command scripts, debugging
21686@item set trace-commands on
21687Enable command tracing.
21688@item set trace-commands off
21689Disable command tracing.
21690@item show trace-commands
21691Display the current state of command tracing.
21692@end table
21693
8e04817f 21694@node Debugging Output
79a6e687 21695@section Optional Messages about Internal Happenings
4644b6e3
EZ
21696@cindex optional debugging messages
21697
da316a69
EZ
21698@value{GDBN} has commands that enable optional debugging messages from
21699various @value{GDBN} subsystems; normally these commands are of
21700interest to @value{GDBN} maintainers, or when reporting a bug. This
21701section documents those commands.
21702
104c1213 21703@table @code
a8f24a35
EZ
21704@kindex set exec-done-display
21705@item set exec-done-display
21706Turns on or off the notification of asynchronous commands'
21707completion. When on, @value{GDBN} will print a message when an
21708asynchronous command finishes its execution. The default is off.
21709@kindex show exec-done-display
21710@item show exec-done-display
21711Displays the current setting of asynchronous command completion
21712notification.
4644b6e3
EZ
21713@kindex set debug
21714@cindex gdbarch debugging info
a8f24a35 21715@cindex architecture debugging info
8e04817f 21716@item set debug arch
a8f24a35 21717Turns on or off display of gdbarch debugging info. The default is off
4644b6e3 21718@kindex show debug
8e04817f
AC
21719@item show debug arch
21720Displays the current state of displaying gdbarch debugging info.
721c2651
EZ
21721@item set debug aix-thread
21722@cindex AIX threads
21723Display debugging messages about inner workings of the AIX thread
21724module.
21725@item show debug aix-thread
21726Show the current state of AIX thread debugging info display.
900e11f9
JK
21727@item set debug check-physname
21728@cindex physname
21729Check the results of the ``physname'' computation. When reading DWARF
21730debugging information for C@t{++}, @value{GDBN} attempts to compute
21731each entity's name. @value{GDBN} can do this computation in two
21732different ways, depending on exactly what information is present.
21733When enabled, this setting causes @value{GDBN} to compute the names
21734both ways and display any discrepancies.
21735@item show debug check-physname
21736Show the current state of ``physname'' checking.
d97bc12b
DE
21737@item set debug dwarf2-die
21738@cindex DWARF2 DIEs
21739Dump DWARF2 DIEs after they are read in.
21740The value is the number of nesting levels to print.
21741A value of zero turns off the display.
21742@item show debug dwarf2-die
21743Show the current state of DWARF2 DIE debugging.
45cfd468
DE
21744@item set debug dwarf2-read
21745@cindex DWARF2 Reading
21746Turns on or off display of debugging messages related to reading
21747DWARF debug info. The default is off.
21748@item show debug dwarf2-read
21749Show the current state of DWARF2 reader debugging.
237fc4c9
PA
21750@item set debug displaced
21751@cindex displaced stepping debugging info
21752Turns on or off display of @value{GDBN} debugging info for the
21753displaced stepping support. The default is off.
21754@item show debug displaced
21755Displays the current state of displaying @value{GDBN} debugging info
21756related to displaced stepping.
8e04817f 21757@item set debug event
4644b6e3 21758@cindex event debugging info
a8f24a35 21759Turns on or off display of @value{GDBN} event debugging info. The
8e04817f 21760default is off.
8e04817f
AC
21761@item show debug event
21762Displays the current state of displaying @value{GDBN} event debugging
21763info.
8e04817f 21764@item set debug expression
4644b6e3 21765@cindex expression debugging info
721c2651
EZ
21766Turns on or off display of debugging info about @value{GDBN}
21767expression parsing. The default is off.
8e04817f 21768@item show debug expression
721c2651
EZ
21769Displays the current state of displaying debugging info about
21770@value{GDBN} expression parsing.
7453dc06 21771@item set debug frame
4644b6e3 21772@cindex frame debugging info
7453dc06
AC
21773Turns on or off display of @value{GDBN} frame debugging info. The
21774default is off.
7453dc06
AC
21775@item show debug frame
21776Displays the current state of displaying @value{GDBN} frame debugging
21777info.
cbe54154
PA
21778@item set debug gnu-nat
21779@cindex @sc{gnu}/Hurd debug messages
21780Turns on or off debugging messages from the @sc{gnu}/Hurd debug support.
21781@item show debug gnu-nat
21782Show the current state of @sc{gnu}/Hurd debugging messages.
30e91e0b
RC
21783@item set debug infrun
21784@cindex inferior debugging info
21785Turns on or off display of @value{GDBN} debugging info for running the inferior.
21786The default is off. @file{infrun.c} contains GDB's runtime state machine used
21787for implementing operations such as single-stepping the inferior.
21788@item show debug infrun
21789Displays the current state of @value{GDBN} inferior debugging.
a255712f
PP
21790@item set debug jit
21791@cindex just-in-time compilation, debugging messages
21792Turns on or off debugging messages from JIT debug support.
21793@item show debug jit
21794Displays the current state of @value{GDBN} JIT debugging.
da316a69
EZ
21795@item set debug lin-lwp
21796@cindex @sc{gnu}/Linux LWP debug messages
21797@cindex Linux lightweight processes
721c2651 21798Turns on or off debugging messages from the Linux LWP debug support.
da316a69
EZ
21799@item show debug lin-lwp
21800Show the current state of Linux LWP debugging messages.
2b4855ab 21801@item set debug observer
4644b6e3 21802@cindex observer debugging info
2b4855ab
AC
21803Turns on or off display of @value{GDBN} observer debugging. This
21804includes info such as the notification of observable events.
2b4855ab
AC
21805@item show debug observer
21806Displays the current state of observer debugging.
8e04817f 21807@item set debug overload
4644b6e3 21808@cindex C@t{++} overload debugging info
8e04817f 21809Turns on or off display of @value{GDBN} C@t{++} overload debugging
359df76b 21810info. This includes info such as ranking of functions, etc. The default
8e04817f 21811is off.
8e04817f
AC
21812@item show debug overload
21813Displays the current state of displaying @value{GDBN} C@t{++} overload
21814debugging info.
92981e24
TT
21815@cindex expression parser, debugging info
21816@cindex debug expression parser
21817@item set debug parser
21818Turns on or off the display of expression parser debugging output.
21819Internally, this sets the @code{yydebug} variable in the expression
21820parser. @xref{Tracing, , Tracing Your Parser, bison, Bison}, for
21821details. The default is off.
21822@item show debug parser
21823Show the current state of expression parser debugging.
8e04817f
AC
21824@cindex packets, reporting on stdout
21825@cindex serial connections, debugging
605a56cb
DJ
21826@cindex debug remote protocol
21827@cindex remote protocol debugging
21828@cindex display remote packets
8e04817f
AC
21829@item set debug remote
21830Turns on or off display of reports on all packets sent back and forth across
21831the serial line to the remote machine. The info is printed on the
21832@value{GDBN} standard output stream. The default is off.
8e04817f
AC
21833@item show debug remote
21834Displays the state of display of remote packets.
8e04817f
AC
21835@item set debug serial
21836Turns on or off display of @value{GDBN} serial debugging info. The
21837default is off.
8e04817f
AC
21838@item show debug serial
21839Displays the current state of displaying @value{GDBN} serial debugging
21840info.
c45da7e6
EZ
21841@item set debug solib-frv
21842@cindex FR-V shared-library debugging
21843Turns on or off debugging messages for FR-V shared-library code.
21844@item show debug solib-frv
21845Display the current state of FR-V shared-library code debugging
21846messages.
45cfd468
DE
21847@item set debug symtab-create
21848@cindex symbol table creation
21849Turns on or off display of debugging messages related to symbol table creation.
21850The default is off.
21851@item show debug symtab-create
21852Show the current state of symbol table creation debugging.
8e04817f 21853@item set debug target
4644b6e3 21854@cindex target debugging info
8e04817f
AC
21855Turns on or off display of @value{GDBN} target debugging info. This info
21856includes what is going on at the target level of GDB, as it happens. The
701b08bb
DJ
21857default is 0. Set it to 1 to track events, and to 2 to also track the
21858value of large memory transfers. Changes to this flag do not take effect
21859until the next time you connect to a target or use the @code{run} command.
8e04817f
AC
21860@item show debug target
21861Displays the current state of displaying @value{GDBN} target debugging
21862info.
75feb17d
DJ
21863@item set debug timestamp
21864@cindex timestampping debugging info
21865Turns on or off display of timestamps with @value{GDBN} debugging info.
21866When enabled, seconds and microseconds are displayed before each debugging
21867message.
21868@item show debug timestamp
21869Displays the current state of displaying timestamps with @value{GDBN}
21870debugging info.
c45da7e6 21871@item set debugvarobj
4644b6e3 21872@cindex variable object debugging info
8e04817f
AC
21873Turns on or off display of @value{GDBN} variable object debugging
21874info. The default is off.
c45da7e6 21875@item show debugvarobj
8e04817f
AC
21876Displays the current state of displaying @value{GDBN} variable object
21877debugging info.
e776119f
DJ
21878@item set debug xml
21879@cindex XML parser debugging
21880Turns on or off debugging messages for built-in XML parsers.
21881@item show debug xml
21882Displays the current state of XML debugging messages.
8e04817f 21883@end table
104c1213 21884
14fb1bac
JB
21885@node Other Misc Settings
21886@section Other Miscellaneous Settings
21887@cindex miscellaneous settings
21888
21889@table @code
21890@kindex set interactive-mode
21891@item set interactive-mode
7bfc9434
JB
21892If @code{on}, forces @value{GDBN} to assume that GDB was started
21893in a terminal. In practice, this means that @value{GDBN} should wait
21894for the user to answer queries generated by commands entered at
21895the command prompt. If @code{off}, forces @value{GDBN} to operate
21896in the opposite mode, and it uses the default answers to all queries.
21897If @code{auto} (the default), @value{GDBN} tries to determine whether
21898its standard input is a terminal, and works in interactive-mode if it
21899is, non-interactively otherwise.
14fb1bac
JB
21900
21901In the vast majority of cases, the debugger should be able to guess
21902correctly which mode should be used. But this setting can be useful
21903in certain specific cases, such as running a MinGW @value{GDBN}
21904inside a cygwin window.
21905
21906@kindex show interactive-mode
21907@item show interactive-mode
21908Displays whether the debugger is operating in interactive mode or not.
21909@end table
21910
d57a3c85
TJB
21911@node Extending GDB
21912@chapter Extending @value{GDBN}
21913@cindex extending GDB
21914
5a56e9c5
DE
21915@value{GDBN} provides three mechanisms for extension. The first is based
21916on composition of @value{GDBN} commands, the second is based on the
21917Python scripting language, and the third is for defining new aliases of
21918existing commands.
d57a3c85 21919
5a56e9c5 21920To facilitate the use of the first two extensions, @value{GDBN} is capable
95433b34
JB
21921of evaluating the contents of a file. When doing so, @value{GDBN}
21922can recognize which scripting language is being used by looking at
21923the filename extension. Files with an unrecognized filename extension
21924are always treated as a @value{GDBN} Command Files.
21925@xref{Command Files,, Command files}.
21926
21927You can control how @value{GDBN} evaluates these files with the following
21928setting:
21929
21930@table @code
21931@kindex set script-extension
21932@kindex show script-extension
21933@item set script-extension off
21934All scripts are always evaluated as @value{GDBN} Command Files.
21935
21936@item set script-extension soft
21937The debugger determines the scripting language based on filename
21938extension. If this scripting language is supported, @value{GDBN}
21939evaluates the script using that language. Otherwise, it evaluates
21940the file as a @value{GDBN} Command File.
21941
21942@item set script-extension strict
21943The debugger determines the scripting language based on filename
21944extension, and evaluates the script using that language. If the
21945language is not supported, then the evaluation fails.
21946
21947@item show script-extension
21948Display the current value of the @code{script-extension} option.
21949
21950@end table
21951
d57a3c85
TJB
21952@menu
21953* Sequences:: Canned Sequences of Commands
21954* Python:: Scripting @value{GDBN} using Python
5a56e9c5 21955* Aliases:: Creating new spellings of existing commands
d57a3c85
TJB
21956@end menu
21957
8e04817f 21958@node Sequences
d57a3c85 21959@section Canned Sequences of Commands
104c1213 21960
8e04817f 21961Aside from breakpoint commands (@pxref{Break Commands, ,Breakpoint
79a6e687 21962Command Lists}), @value{GDBN} provides two ways to store sequences of
8e04817f
AC
21963commands for execution as a unit: user-defined commands and command
21964files.
104c1213 21965
8e04817f 21966@menu
fcc73fe3
EZ
21967* Define:: How to define your own commands
21968* Hooks:: Hooks for user-defined commands
21969* Command Files:: How to write scripts of commands to be stored in a file
21970* Output:: Commands for controlled output
8e04817f 21971@end menu
104c1213 21972
8e04817f 21973@node Define
d57a3c85 21974@subsection User-defined Commands
104c1213 21975
8e04817f 21976@cindex user-defined command
fcc73fe3 21977@cindex arguments, to user-defined commands
8e04817f
AC
21978A @dfn{user-defined command} is a sequence of @value{GDBN} commands to
21979which you assign a new name as a command. This is done with the
21980@code{define} command. User commands may accept up to 10 arguments
21981separated by whitespace. Arguments are accessed within the user command
c03c782f 21982via @code{$arg0@dots{}$arg9}. A trivial example:
104c1213 21983
8e04817f
AC
21984@smallexample
21985define adder
21986 print $arg0 + $arg1 + $arg2
c03c782f 21987end
8e04817f 21988@end smallexample
104c1213
JM
21989
21990@noindent
8e04817f 21991To execute the command use:
104c1213 21992
8e04817f
AC
21993@smallexample
21994adder 1 2 3
21995@end smallexample
104c1213 21996
8e04817f
AC
21997@noindent
21998This defines the command @code{adder}, which prints the sum of
21999its three arguments. Note the arguments are text substitutions, so they may
22000reference variables, use complex expressions, or even perform inferior
22001functions calls.
104c1213 22002
fcc73fe3
EZ
22003@cindex argument count in user-defined commands
22004@cindex how many arguments (user-defined commands)
c03c782f
AS
22005In addition, @code{$argc} may be used to find out how many arguments have
22006been passed. This expands to a number in the range 0@dots{}10.
22007
22008@smallexample
22009define adder
22010 if $argc == 2
22011 print $arg0 + $arg1
22012 end
22013 if $argc == 3
22014 print $arg0 + $arg1 + $arg2
22015 end
22016end
22017@end smallexample
22018
104c1213 22019@table @code
104c1213 22020
8e04817f
AC
22021@kindex define
22022@item define @var{commandname}
22023Define a command named @var{commandname}. If there is already a command
22024by that name, you are asked to confirm that you want to redefine it.
adb483fe
DJ
22025@var{commandname} may be a bare command name consisting of letters,
22026numbers, dashes, and underscores. It may also start with any predefined
22027prefix command. For example, @samp{define target my-target} creates
22028a user-defined @samp{target my-target} command.
104c1213 22029
8e04817f
AC
22030The definition of the command is made up of other @value{GDBN} command lines,
22031which are given following the @code{define} command. The end of these
22032commands is marked by a line containing @code{end}.
104c1213 22033
8e04817f 22034@kindex document
ca91424e 22035@kindex end@r{ (user-defined commands)}
8e04817f
AC
22036@item document @var{commandname}
22037Document the user-defined command @var{commandname}, so that it can be
22038accessed by @code{help}. The command @var{commandname} must already be
22039defined. This command reads lines of documentation just as @code{define}
22040reads the lines of the command definition, ending with @code{end}.
22041After the @code{document} command is finished, @code{help} on command
22042@var{commandname} displays the documentation you have written.
104c1213 22043
8e04817f
AC
22044You may use the @code{document} command again to change the
22045documentation of a command. Redefining the command with @code{define}
22046does not change the documentation.
104c1213 22047
c45da7e6
EZ
22048@kindex dont-repeat
22049@cindex don't repeat command
22050@item dont-repeat
22051Used inside a user-defined command, this tells @value{GDBN} that this
22052command should not be repeated when the user hits @key{RET}
22053(@pxref{Command Syntax, repeat last command}).
22054
8e04817f
AC
22055@kindex help user-defined
22056@item help user-defined
7d74f244
DE
22057List all user-defined commands and all python commands defined in class
22058COMAND_USER. The first line of the documentation or docstring is
22059included (if any).
104c1213 22060
8e04817f
AC
22061@kindex show user
22062@item show user
22063@itemx show user @var{commandname}
22064Display the @value{GDBN} commands used to define @var{commandname} (but
22065not its documentation). If no @var{commandname} is given, display the
22066definitions for all user-defined commands.
7d74f244 22067This does not work for user-defined python commands.
104c1213 22068
fcc73fe3 22069@cindex infinite recursion in user-defined commands
20f01a46
DH
22070@kindex show max-user-call-depth
22071@kindex set max-user-call-depth
22072@item show max-user-call-depth
5ca0cb28
DH
22073@itemx set max-user-call-depth
22074The value of @code{max-user-call-depth} controls how many recursion
3f94c067 22075levels are allowed in user-defined commands before @value{GDBN} suspects an
5ca0cb28 22076infinite recursion and aborts the command.
7d74f244 22077This does not apply to user-defined python commands.
104c1213
JM
22078@end table
22079
fcc73fe3
EZ
22080In addition to the above commands, user-defined commands frequently
22081use control flow commands, described in @ref{Command Files}.
22082
8e04817f
AC
22083When user-defined commands are executed, the
22084commands of the definition are not printed. An error in any command
22085stops execution of the user-defined command.
104c1213 22086
8e04817f
AC
22087If used interactively, commands that would ask for confirmation proceed
22088without asking when used inside a user-defined command. Many @value{GDBN}
22089commands that normally print messages to say what they are doing omit the
22090messages when used in a user-defined command.
104c1213 22091
8e04817f 22092@node Hooks
d57a3c85 22093@subsection User-defined Command Hooks
8e04817f
AC
22094@cindex command hooks
22095@cindex hooks, for commands
22096@cindex hooks, pre-command
104c1213 22097
8e04817f 22098@kindex hook
8e04817f
AC
22099You may define @dfn{hooks}, which are a special kind of user-defined
22100command. Whenever you run the command @samp{foo}, if the user-defined
22101command @samp{hook-foo} exists, it is executed (with no arguments)
22102before that command.
104c1213 22103
8e04817f
AC
22104@cindex hooks, post-command
22105@kindex hookpost
8e04817f
AC
22106A hook may also be defined which is run after the command you executed.
22107Whenever you run the command @samp{foo}, if the user-defined command
22108@samp{hookpost-foo} exists, it is executed (with no arguments) after
22109that command. Post-execution hooks may exist simultaneously with
22110pre-execution hooks, for the same command.
104c1213 22111
8e04817f 22112It is valid for a hook to call the command which it hooks. If this
9f1c6395 22113occurs, the hook is not re-executed, thereby avoiding infinite recursion.
104c1213 22114
8e04817f
AC
22115@c It would be nice if hookpost could be passed a parameter indicating
22116@c if the command it hooks executed properly or not. FIXME!
104c1213 22117
8e04817f
AC
22118@kindex stop@r{, a pseudo-command}
22119In addition, a pseudo-command, @samp{stop} exists. Defining
22120(@samp{hook-stop}) makes the associated commands execute every time
22121execution stops in your program: before breakpoint commands are run,
22122displays are printed, or the stack frame is printed.
104c1213 22123
8e04817f
AC
22124For example, to ignore @code{SIGALRM} signals while
22125single-stepping, but treat them normally during normal execution,
22126you could define:
104c1213 22127
474c8240 22128@smallexample
8e04817f
AC
22129define hook-stop
22130handle SIGALRM nopass
22131end
104c1213 22132
8e04817f
AC
22133define hook-run
22134handle SIGALRM pass
22135end
104c1213 22136
8e04817f 22137define hook-continue
d3e8051b 22138handle SIGALRM pass
8e04817f 22139end
474c8240 22140@end smallexample
104c1213 22141
d3e8051b 22142As a further example, to hook at the beginning and end of the @code{echo}
b383017d 22143command, and to add extra text to the beginning and end of the message,
8e04817f 22144you could define:
104c1213 22145
474c8240 22146@smallexample
8e04817f
AC
22147define hook-echo
22148echo <<<---
22149end
104c1213 22150
8e04817f
AC
22151define hookpost-echo
22152echo --->>>\n
22153end
104c1213 22154
8e04817f
AC
22155(@value{GDBP}) echo Hello World
22156<<<---Hello World--->>>
22157(@value{GDBP})
104c1213 22158
474c8240 22159@end smallexample
104c1213 22160
8e04817f
AC
22161You can define a hook for any single-word command in @value{GDBN}, but
22162not for command aliases; you should define a hook for the basic command
c1468174 22163name, e.g.@: @code{backtrace} rather than @code{bt}.
8e04817f
AC
22164@c FIXME! So how does Joe User discover whether a command is an alias
22165@c or not?
adb483fe
DJ
22166You can hook a multi-word command by adding @code{hook-} or
22167@code{hookpost-} to the last word of the command, e.g.@:
22168@samp{define target hook-remote} to add a hook to @samp{target remote}.
22169
8e04817f
AC
22170If an error occurs during the execution of your hook, execution of
22171@value{GDBN} commands stops and @value{GDBN} issues a prompt
22172(before the command that you actually typed had a chance to run).
104c1213 22173
8e04817f
AC
22174If you try to define a hook which does not match any known command, you
22175get a warning from the @code{define} command.
c906108c 22176
8e04817f 22177@node Command Files
d57a3c85 22178@subsection Command Files
c906108c 22179
8e04817f 22180@cindex command files
fcc73fe3 22181@cindex scripting commands
6fc08d32
EZ
22182A command file for @value{GDBN} is a text file made of lines that are
22183@value{GDBN} commands. Comments (lines starting with @kbd{#}) may
22184also be included. An empty line in a command file does nothing; it
22185does not mean to repeat the last command, as it would from the
22186terminal.
c906108c 22187
6fc08d32 22188You can request the execution of a command file with the @code{source}
95433b34
JB
22189command. Note that the @code{source} command is also used to evaluate
22190scripts that are not Command Files. The exact behavior can be configured
22191using the @code{script-extension} setting.
22192@xref{Extending GDB,, Extending GDB}.
c906108c 22193
8e04817f
AC
22194@table @code
22195@kindex source
ca91424e 22196@cindex execute commands from a file
3f7b2faa 22197@item source [-s] [-v] @var{filename}
8e04817f 22198Execute the command file @var{filename}.
c906108c
SS
22199@end table
22200
fcc73fe3
EZ
22201The lines in a command file are generally executed sequentially,
22202unless the order of execution is changed by one of the
22203@emph{flow-control commands} described below. The commands are not
a71ec265
DH
22204printed as they are executed. An error in any command terminates
22205execution of the command file and control is returned to the console.
c906108c 22206
08001717
DE
22207@value{GDBN} first searches for @var{filename} in the current directory.
22208If the file is not found there, and @var{filename} does not specify a
22209directory, then @value{GDBN} also looks for the file on the source search path
22210(specified with the @samp{directory} command);
22211except that @file{$cdir} is not searched because the compilation directory
22212is not relevant to scripts.
4b505b12 22213
3f7b2faa
DE
22214If @code{-s} is specified, then @value{GDBN} searches for @var{filename}
22215on the search path even if @var{filename} specifies a directory.
22216The search is done by appending @var{filename} to each element of the
22217search path. So, for example, if @var{filename} is @file{mylib/myscript}
22218and the search path contains @file{/home/user} then @value{GDBN} will
22219look for the script @file{/home/user/mylib/myscript}.
22220The search is also done if @var{filename} is an absolute path.
22221For example, if @var{filename} is @file{/tmp/myscript} and
22222the search path contains @file{/home/user} then @value{GDBN} will
22223look for the script @file{/home/user/tmp/myscript}.
22224For DOS-like systems, if @var{filename} contains a drive specification,
22225it is stripped before concatenation. For example, if @var{filename} is
22226@file{d:myscript} and the search path contains @file{c:/tmp} then @value{GDBN}
22227will look for the script @file{c:/tmp/myscript}.
22228
16026cd7
AS
22229If @code{-v}, for verbose mode, is given then @value{GDBN} displays
22230each command as it is executed. The option must be given before
22231@var{filename}, and is interpreted as part of the filename anywhere else.
22232
8e04817f
AC
22233Commands that would ask for confirmation if used interactively proceed
22234without asking when used in a command file. Many @value{GDBN} commands that
22235normally print messages to say what they are doing omit the messages
22236when called from command files.
c906108c 22237
8e04817f
AC
22238@value{GDBN} also accepts command input from standard input. In this
22239mode, normal output goes to standard output and error output goes to
22240standard error. Errors in a command file supplied on standard input do
6fc08d32 22241not terminate execution of the command file---execution continues with
8e04817f 22242the next command.
c906108c 22243
474c8240 22244@smallexample
8e04817f 22245gdb < cmds > log 2>&1
474c8240 22246@end smallexample
c906108c 22247
8e04817f
AC
22248(The syntax above will vary depending on the shell used.) This example
22249will execute commands from the file @file{cmds}. All output and errors
22250would be directed to @file{log}.
c906108c 22251
fcc73fe3
EZ
22252Since commands stored on command files tend to be more general than
22253commands typed interactively, they frequently need to deal with
22254complicated situations, such as different or unexpected values of
22255variables and symbols, changes in how the program being debugged is
22256built, etc. @value{GDBN} provides a set of flow-control commands to
22257deal with these complexities. Using these commands, you can write
22258complex scripts that loop over data structures, execute commands
22259conditionally, etc.
22260
22261@table @code
22262@kindex if
22263@kindex else
22264@item if
22265@itemx else
22266This command allows to include in your script conditionally executed
22267commands. The @code{if} command takes a single argument, which is an
22268expression to evaluate. It is followed by a series of commands that
22269are executed only if the expression is true (its value is nonzero).
22270There can then optionally be an @code{else} line, followed by a series
22271of commands that are only executed if the expression was false. The
22272end of the list is marked by a line containing @code{end}.
22273
22274@kindex while
22275@item while
22276This command allows to write loops. Its syntax is similar to
22277@code{if}: the command takes a single argument, which is an expression
22278to evaluate, and must be followed by the commands to execute, one per
22279line, terminated by an @code{end}. These commands are called the
22280@dfn{body} of the loop. The commands in the body of @code{while} are
22281executed repeatedly as long as the expression evaluates to true.
22282
22283@kindex loop_break
22284@item loop_break
22285This command exits the @code{while} loop in whose body it is included.
22286Execution of the script continues after that @code{while}s @code{end}
22287line.
22288
22289@kindex loop_continue
22290@item loop_continue
22291This command skips the execution of the rest of the body of commands
22292in the @code{while} loop in whose body it is included. Execution
22293branches to the beginning of the @code{while} loop, where it evaluates
22294the controlling expression.
ca91424e
EZ
22295
22296@kindex end@r{ (if/else/while commands)}
22297@item end
22298Terminate the block of commands that are the body of @code{if},
22299@code{else}, or @code{while} flow-control commands.
fcc73fe3
EZ
22300@end table
22301
22302
8e04817f 22303@node Output
d57a3c85 22304@subsection Commands for Controlled Output
c906108c 22305
8e04817f
AC
22306During the execution of a command file or a user-defined command, normal
22307@value{GDBN} output is suppressed; the only output that appears is what is
22308explicitly printed by the commands in the definition. This section
22309describes three commands useful for generating exactly the output you
22310want.
c906108c
SS
22311
22312@table @code
8e04817f
AC
22313@kindex echo
22314@item echo @var{text}
22315@c I do not consider backslash-space a standard C escape sequence
22316@c because it is not in ANSI.
22317Print @var{text}. Nonprinting characters can be included in
22318@var{text} using C escape sequences, such as @samp{\n} to print a
22319newline. @strong{No newline is printed unless you specify one.}
22320In addition to the standard C escape sequences, a backslash followed
22321by a space stands for a space. This is useful for displaying a
22322string with spaces at the beginning or the end, since leading and
22323trailing spaces are otherwise trimmed from all arguments.
22324To print @samp{@w{ }and foo =@w{ }}, use the command
22325@samp{echo \@w{ }and foo = \@w{ }}.
c906108c 22326
8e04817f
AC
22327A backslash at the end of @var{text} can be used, as in C, to continue
22328the command onto subsequent lines. For example,
c906108c 22329
474c8240 22330@smallexample
8e04817f
AC
22331echo This is some text\n\
22332which is continued\n\
22333onto several lines.\n
474c8240 22334@end smallexample
c906108c 22335
8e04817f 22336produces the same output as
c906108c 22337
474c8240 22338@smallexample
8e04817f
AC
22339echo This is some text\n
22340echo which is continued\n
22341echo onto several lines.\n
474c8240 22342@end smallexample
c906108c 22343
8e04817f
AC
22344@kindex output
22345@item output @var{expression}
22346Print the value of @var{expression} and nothing but that value: no
22347newlines, no @samp{$@var{nn} = }. The value is not entered in the
22348value history either. @xref{Expressions, ,Expressions}, for more information
22349on expressions.
c906108c 22350
8e04817f
AC
22351@item output/@var{fmt} @var{expression}
22352Print the value of @var{expression} in format @var{fmt}. You can use
22353the same formats as for @code{print}. @xref{Output Formats,,Output
79a6e687 22354Formats}, for more information.
c906108c 22355
8e04817f 22356@kindex printf
82160952
EZ
22357@item printf @var{template}, @var{expressions}@dots{}
22358Print the values of one or more @var{expressions} under the control of
22359the string @var{template}. To print several values, make
22360@var{expressions} be a comma-separated list of individual expressions,
22361which may be either numbers or pointers. Their values are printed as
22362specified by @var{template}, exactly as a C program would do by
22363executing the code below:
c906108c 22364
474c8240 22365@smallexample
82160952 22366printf (@var{template}, @var{expressions}@dots{});
474c8240 22367@end smallexample
c906108c 22368
82160952
EZ
22369As in @code{C} @code{printf}, ordinary characters in @var{template}
22370are printed verbatim, while @dfn{conversion specification} introduced
22371by the @samp{%} character cause subsequent @var{expressions} to be
22372evaluated, their values converted and formatted according to type and
22373style information encoded in the conversion specifications, and then
22374printed.
22375
8e04817f 22376For example, you can print two values in hex like this:
c906108c 22377
8e04817f
AC
22378@smallexample
22379printf "foo, bar-foo = 0x%x, 0x%x\n", foo, bar-foo
22380@end smallexample
c906108c 22381
82160952
EZ
22382@code{printf} supports all the standard @code{C} conversion
22383specifications, including the flags and modifiers between the @samp{%}
22384character and the conversion letter, with the following exceptions:
22385
22386@itemize @bullet
22387@item
22388The argument-ordering modifiers, such as @samp{2$}, are not supported.
22389
22390@item
22391The modifier @samp{*} is not supported for specifying precision or
22392width.
22393
22394@item
22395The @samp{'} flag (for separation of digits into groups according to
22396@code{LC_NUMERIC'}) is not supported.
22397
22398@item
22399The type modifiers @samp{hh}, @samp{j}, @samp{t}, and @samp{z} are not
22400supported.
22401
22402@item
22403The conversion letter @samp{n} (as in @samp{%n}) is not supported.
22404
22405@item
22406The conversion letters @samp{a} and @samp{A} are not supported.
22407@end itemize
22408
22409@noindent
22410Note that the @samp{ll} type modifier is supported only if the
22411underlying @code{C} implementation used to build @value{GDBN} supports
22412the @code{long long int} type, and the @samp{L} type modifier is
22413supported only if @code{long double} type is available.
22414
22415As in @code{C}, @code{printf} supports simple backslash-escape
22416sequences, such as @code{\n}, @samp{\t}, @samp{\\}, @samp{\"},
22417@samp{\a}, and @samp{\f}, that consist of backslash followed by a
22418single character. Octal and hexadecimal escape sequences are not
22419supported.
1a619819
LM
22420
22421Additionally, @code{printf} supports conversion specifications for DFP
0aea4bf3
LM
22422(@dfn{Decimal Floating Point}) types using the following length modifiers
22423together with a floating point specifier.
1a619819
LM
22424letters:
22425
22426@itemize @bullet
22427@item
22428@samp{H} for printing @code{Decimal32} types.
22429
22430@item
22431@samp{D} for printing @code{Decimal64} types.
22432
22433@item
22434@samp{DD} for printing @code{Decimal128} types.
22435@end itemize
22436
22437If the underlying @code{C} implementation used to build @value{GDBN} has
0aea4bf3 22438support for the three length modifiers for DFP types, other modifiers
3b784c4f 22439such as width and precision will also be available for @value{GDBN} to use.
1a619819
LM
22440
22441In case there is no such @code{C} support, no additional modifiers will be
22442available and the value will be printed in the standard way.
22443
22444Here's an example of printing DFP types using the above conversion letters:
22445@smallexample
0aea4bf3 22446printf "D32: %Hf - D64: %Df - D128: %DDf\n",1.2345df,1.2E10dd,1.2E1dl
1a619819
LM
22447@end smallexample
22448
f1421989
HZ
22449@kindex eval
22450@item eval @var{template}, @var{expressions}@dots{}
22451Convert the values of one or more @var{expressions} under the control of
22452the string @var{template} to a command line, and call it.
22453
c906108c
SS
22454@end table
22455
d57a3c85
TJB
22456@node Python
22457@section Scripting @value{GDBN} using Python
22458@cindex python scripting
22459@cindex scripting with python
22460
22461You can script @value{GDBN} using the @uref{http://www.python.org/,
22462Python programming language}. This feature is available only if
22463@value{GDBN} was configured using @option{--with-python}.
22464
9279c692
JB
22465@cindex python directory
22466Python scripts used by @value{GDBN} should be installed in
22467@file{@var{data-directory}/python}, where @var{data-directory} is
9eeee977
DE
22468the data directory as determined at @value{GDBN} startup (@pxref{Data Files}).
22469This directory, known as the @dfn{python directory},
9279c692
JB
22470is automatically added to the Python Search Path in order to allow
22471the Python interpreter to locate all scripts installed at this location.
22472
5e239b84
PM
22473Additionally, @value{GDBN} commands and convenience functions which
22474are written in Python and are located in the
22475@file{@var{data-directory}/python/gdb/command} or
22476@file{@var{data-directory}/python/gdb/function} directories are
22477automatically imported when @value{GDBN} starts.
22478
d57a3c85
TJB
22479@menu
22480* Python Commands:: Accessing Python from @value{GDBN}.
22481* Python API:: Accessing @value{GDBN} from Python.
bf88dd68 22482* Python Auto-loading:: Automatically loading Python code.
0e3509db 22483* Python modules:: Python modules provided by @value{GDBN}.
d57a3c85
TJB
22484@end menu
22485
22486@node Python Commands
22487@subsection Python Commands
22488@cindex python commands
22489@cindex commands to access python
22490
22491@value{GDBN} provides one command for accessing the Python interpreter,
22492and one related setting:
22493
22494@table @code
22495@kindex python
22496@item python @r{[}@var{code}@r{]}
22497The @code{python} command can be used to evaluate Python code.
22498
22499If given an argument, the @code{python} command will evaluate the
22500argument as a Python command. For example:
22501
22502@smallexample
22503(@value{GDBP}) python print 23
2250423
22505@end smallexample
22506
22507If you do not provide an argument to @code{python}, it will act as a
22508multi-line command, like @code{define}. In this case, the Python
22509script is made up of subsequent command lines, given after the
22510@code{python} command. This command list is terminated using a line
22511containing @code{end}. For example:
22512
22513@smallexample
22514(@value{GDBP}) python
22515Type python script
22516End with a line saying just "end".
22517>print 23
22518>end
2251923
22520@end smallexample
22521
713389e0
PM
22522@kindex set python print-stack
22523@item set python print-stack
80b6e756
PM
22524By default, @value{GDBN} will print only the message component of a
22525Python exception when an error occurs in a Python script. This can be
22526controlled using @code{set python print-stack}: if @code{full}, then
22527full Python stack printing is enabled; if @code{none}, then Python stack
22528and message printing is disabled; if @code{message}, the default, only
22529the message component of the error is printed.
d57a3c85
TJB
22530@end table
22531
95433b34
JB
22532It is also possible to execute a Python script from the @value{GDBN}
22533interpreter:
22534
22535@table @code
22536@item source @file{script-name}
22537The script name must end with @samp{.py} and @value{GDBN} must be configured
22538to recognize the script language based on filename extension using
22539the @code{script-extension} setting. @xref{Extending GDB, ,Extending GDB}.
22540
22541@item python execfile ("script-name")
22542This method is based on the @code{execfile} Python built-in function,
22543and thus is always available.
22544@end table
22545
d57a3c85
TJB
22546@node Python API
22547@subsection Python API
22548@cindex python api
22549@cindex programming in python
22550
22551@cindex python stdout
22552@cindex python pagination
22553At startup, @value{GDBN} overrides Python's @code{sys.stdout} and
22554@code{sys.stderr} to print using @value{GDBN}'s output-paging streams.
22555A Python program which outputs to one of these streams may have its
22556output interrupted by the user (@pxref{Screen Size}). In this
22557situation, a Python @code{KeyboardInterrupt} exception is thrown.
22558
22559@menu
22560* Basic Python:: Basic Python Functions.
06e65f44
TT
22561* Exception Handling:: How Python exceptions are translated.
22562* Values From Inferior:: Python representation of values.
4c374409
JK
22563* Types In Python:: Python representation of types.
22564* Pretty Printing API:: Pretty-printing values.
a6bac58e 22565* Selecting Pretty-Printers:: How GDB chooses a pretty-printer.
7b51bc51 22566* Writing a Pretty-Printer:: Writing a Pretty-Printer.
595939de 22567* Inferiors In Python:: Python representation of inferiors (processes)
505500db 22568* Events In Python:: Listening for events from @value{GDBN}.
595939de 22569* Threads In Python:: Accessing inferior threads from Python.
d8906c6f 22570* Commands In Python:: Implementing new commands in Python.
d7b32ed3 22571* Parameters In Python:: Adding new @value{GDBN} parameters.
bc3b79fd 22572* Functions In Python:: Writing new convenience functions.
fa33c3cd 22573* Progspaces In Python:: Program spaces.
89c73ade 22574* Objfiles In Python:: Object files.
f3e9a817
PM
22575* Frames In Python:: Accessing inferior stack frames from Python.
22576* Blocks In Python:: Accessing frame blocks from Python.
22577* Symbols In Python:: Python representation of symbols.
22578* Symbol Tables In Python:: Python representation of symbol tables.
adc36818 22579* Breakpoints In Python:: Manipulating breakpoints using Python.
cc72b2a2
KP
22580* Finish Breakpoints in Python:: Setting Breakpoints on function return
22581 using Python.
984359d2 22582* Lazy Strings In Python:: Python representation of lazy strings.
d57a3c85
TJB
22583@end menu
22584
22585@node Basic Python
22586@subsubsection Basic Python
22587
22588@cindex python functions
22589@cindex python module
22590@cindex gdb module
22591@value{GDBN} introduces a new Python module, named @code{gdb}. All
22592methods and classes added by @value{GDBN} are placed in this module.
22593@value{GDBN} automatically @code{import}s the @code{gdb} module for
22594use in all scripts evaluated by the @code{python} command.
22595
9279c692 22596@findex gdb.PYTHONDIR
d812018b 22597@defvar gdb.PYTHONDIR
9279c692
JB
22598A string containing the python directory (@pxref{Python}).
22599@end defvar
22600
d57a3c85 22601@findex gdb.execute
d812018b 22602@defun gdb.execute (command @r{[}, from_tty @r{[}, to_string@r{]]})
d57a3c85
TJB
22603Evaluate @var{command}, a string, as a @value{GDBN} CLI command.
22604If a GDB exception happens while @var{command} runs, it is
22605translated as described in @ref{Exception Handling,,Exception Handling}.
12453b93
TJB
22606
22607@var{from_tty} specifies whether @value{GDBN} ought to consider this
22608command as having originated from the user invoking it interactively.
22609It must be a boolean value. If omitted, it defaults to @code{False}.
bc9f0842
TT
22610
22611By default, any output produced by @var{command} is sent to
22612@value{GDBN}'s standard output. If the @var{to_string} parameter is
22613@code{True}, then output will be collected by @code{gdb.execute} and
22614returned as a string. The default is @code{False}, in which case the
5da1313b
JK
22615return value is @code{None}. If @var{to_string} is @code{True}, the
22616@value{GDBN} virtual terminal will be temporarily set to unlimited width
22617and height, and its pagination will be disabled; @pxref{Screen Size}.
d57a3c85
TJB
22618@end defun
22619
adc36818 22620@findex gdb.breakpoints
d812018b 22621@defun gdb.breakpoints ()
adc36818
PM
22622Return a sequence holding all of @value{GDBN}'s breakpoints.
22623@xref{Breakpoints In Python}, for more information.
22624@end defun
22625
8f500870 22626@findex gdb.parameter
d812018b 22627@defun gdb.parameter (parameter)
d57a3c85
TJB
22628Return the value of a @value{GDBN} parameter. @var{parameter} is a
22629string naming the parameter to look up; @var{parameter} may contain
22630spaces if the parameter has a multi-part name. For example,
22631@samp{print object} is a valid parameter name.
22632
22633If the named parameter does not exist, this function throws a
621c8364
TT
22634@code{gdb.error} (@pxref{Exception Handling}). Otherwise, the
22635parameter's value is converted to a Python value of the appropriate
22636type, and returned.
d57a3c85
TJB
22637@end defun
22638
08c637de 22639@findex gdb.history
d812018b 22640@defun gdb.history (number)
08c637de
TJB
22641Return a value from @value{GDBN}'s value history (@pxref{Value
22642History}). @var{number} indicates which history element to return.
22643If @var{number} is negative, then @value{GDBN} will take its absolute value
22644and count backward from the last element (i.e., the most recent element) to
22645find the value to return. If @var{number} is zero, then @value{GDBN} will
a0c36267 22646return the most recent element. If the element specified by @var{number}
621c8364 22647doesn't exist in the value history, a @code{gdb.error} exception will be
08c637de
TJB
22648raised.
22649
22650If no exception is raised, the return value is always an instance of
22651@code{gdb.Value} (@pxref{Values From Inferior}).
22652@end defun
22653
57a1d736 22654@findex gdb.parse_and_eval
d812018b 22655@defun gdb.parse_and_eval (expression)
57a1d736
TT
22656Parse @var{expression} as an expression in the current language,
22657evaluate it, and return the result as a @code{gdb.Value}.
22658@var{expression} must be a string.
22659
22660This function can be useful when implementing a new command
22661(@pxref{Commands In Python}), as it provides a way to parse the
22662command's argument as an expression. It is also useful simply to
22663compute values, for example, it is the only way to get the value of a
22664convenience variable (@pxref{Convenience Vars}) as a @code{gdb.Value}.
22665@end defun
22666
7efc75aa
SCR
22667@findex gdb.find_pc_line
22668@defun gdb.find_pc_line (pc)
22669Return the @code{gdb.Symtab_and_line} object corresponding to the
22670@var{pc} value. @xref{Symbol Tables In Python}. If an invalid
22671value of @var{pc} is passed as an argument, then the @code{symtab} and
22672@code{line} attributes of the returned @code{gdb.Symtab_and_line} object
22673will be @code{None} and 0 respectively.
22674@end defun
22675
ca5c20b6 22676@findex gdb.post_event
d812018b 22677@defun gdb.post_event (event)
ca5c20b6
PM
22678Put @var{event}, a callable object taking no arguments, into
22679@value{GDBN}'s internal event queue. This callable will be invoked at
22680some later point, during @value{GDBN}'s event processing. Events
22681posted using @code{post_event} will be run in the order in which they
22682were posted; however, there is no way to know when they will be
22683processed relative to other events inside @value{GDBN}.
22684
22685@value{GDBN} is not thread-safe. If your Python program uses multiple
22686threads, you must be careful to only call @value{GDBN}-specific
22687functions in the main @value{GDBN} thread. @code{post_event} ensures
22688this. For example:
22689
22690@smallexample
22691(@value{GDBP}) python
22692>import threading
22693>
22694>class Writer():
22695> def __init__(self, message):
22696> self.message = message;
22697> def __call__(self):
22698> gdb.write(self.message)
22699>
22700>class MyThread1 (threading.Thread):
22701> def run (self):
22702> gdb.post_event(Writer("Hello "))
22703>
22704>class MyThread2 (threading.Thread):
22705> def run (self):
22706> gdb.post_event(Writer("World\n"))
22707>
22708>MyThread1().start()
22709>MyThread2().start()
22710>end
22711(@value{GDBP}) Hello World
22712@end smallexample
22713@end defun
22714
99c3dc11 22715@findex gdb.write
d812018b 22716@defun gdb.write (string @r{[}, stream{]})
99c3dc11
PM
22717Print a string to @value{GDBN}'s paginated output stream. The
22718optional @var{stream} determines the stream to print to. The default
22719stream is @value{GDBN}'s standard output stream. Possible stream
22720values are:
22721
22722@table @code
22723@findex STDOUT
22724@findex gdb.STDOUT
d812018b 22725@item gdb.STDOUT
99c3dc11
PM
22726@value{GDBN}'s standard output stream.
22727
22728@findex STDERR
22729@findex gdb.STDERR
d812018b 22730@item gdb.STDERR
99c3dc11
PM
22731@value{GDBN}'s standard error stream.
22732
22733@findex STDLOG
22734@findex gdb.STDLOG
d812018b 22735@item gdb.STDLOG
99c3dc11
PM
22736@value{GDBN}'s log stream (@pxref{Logging Output}).
22737@end table
22738
d57a3c85 22739Writing to @code{sys.stdout} or @code{sys.stderr} will automatically
99c3dc11
PM
22740call this function and will automatically direct the output to the
22741relevant stream.
d57a3c85
TJB
22742@end defun
22743
22744@findex gdb.flush
d812018b 22745@defun gdb.flush ()
99c3dc11
PM
22746Flush the buffer of a @value{GDBN} paginated stream so that the
22747contents are displayed immediately. @value{GDBN} will flush the
22748contents of a stream automatically when it encounters a newline in the
22749buffer. The optional @var{stream} determines the stream to flush. The
22750default stream is @value{GDBN}'s standard output stream. Possible
22751stream values are:
22752
22753@table @code
22754@findex STDOUT
22755@findex gdb.STDOUT
d812018b 22756@item gdb.STDOUT
99c3dc11
PM
22757@value{GDBN}'s standard output stream.
22758
22759@findex STDERR
22760@findex gdb.STDERR
d812018b 22761@item gdb.STDERR
99c3dc11
PM
22762@value{GDBN}'s standard error stream.
22763
22764@findex STDLOG
22765@findex gdb.STDLOG
d812018b 22766@item gdb.STDLOG
99c3dc11
PM
22767@value{GDBN}'s log stream (@pxref{Logging Output}).
22768
22769@end table
22770
22771Flushing @code{sys.stdout} or @code{sys.stderr} will automatically
22772call this function for the relevant stream.
d57a3c85
TJB
22773@end defun
22774
f870a310 22775@findex gdb.target_charset
d812018b 22776@defun gdb.target_charset ()
f870a310
TT
22777Return the name of the current target character set (@pxref{Character
22778Sets}). This differs from @code{gdb.parameter('target-charset')} in
22779that @samp{auto} is never returned.
22780@end defun
22781
22782@findex gdb.target_wide_charset
d812018b 22783@defun gdb.target_wide_charset ()
f870a310
TT
22784Return the name of the current target wide character set
22785(@pxref{Character Sets}). This differs from
22786@code{gdb.parameter('target-wide-charset')} in that @samp{auto} is
22787never returned.
22788@end defun
22789
cb2e07a6 22790@findex gdb.solib_name
d812018b 22791@defun gdb.solib_name (address)
cb2e07a6
PM
22792Return the name of the shared library holding the given @var{address}
22793as a string, or @code{None}.
22794@end defun
22795
22796@findex gdb.decode_line
d812018b 22797@defun gdb.decode_line @r{[}expression@r{]}
cb2e07a6
PM
22798Return locations of the line specified by @var{expression}, or of the
22799current line if no argument was given. This function returns a Python
22800tuple containing two elements. The first element contains a string
22801holding any unparsed section of @var{expression} (or @code{None} if
22802the expression has been fully parsed). The second element contains
22803either @code{None} or another tuple that contains all the locations
22804that match the expression represented as @code{gdb.Symtab_and_line}
22805objects (@pxref{Symbol Tables In Python}). If @var{expression} is
22806provided, it is decoded the way that @value{GDBN}'s inbuilt
22807@code{break} or @code{edit} commands do (@pxref{Specify Location}).
22808@end defun
22809
d812018b 22810@defun gdb.prompt_hook (current_prompt)
fa3a4f15
PM
22811@anchor{prompt_hook}
22812
d17b6f81
PM
22813If @var{prompt_hook} is callable, @value{GDBN} will call the method
22814assigned to this operation before a prompt is displayed by
22815@value{GDBN}.
22816
22817The parameter @code{current_prompt} contains the current @value{GDBN}
22818prompt. This method must return a Python string, or @code{None}. If
22819a string is returned, the @value{GDBN} prompt will be set to that
22820string. If @code{None} is returned, @value{GDBN} will continue to use
22821the current prompt.
22822
22823Some prompts cannot be substituted in @value{GDBN}. Secondary prompts
22824such as those used by readline for command input, and annotation
22825related prompts are prohibited from being changed.
d812018b 22826@end defun
d17b6f81 22827
d57a3c85
TJB
22828@node Exception Handling
22829@subsubsection Exception Handling
22830@cindex python exceptions
22831@cindex exceptions, python
22832
22833When executing the @code{python} command, Python exceptions
22834uncaught within the Python code are translated to calls to
22835@value{GDBN} error-reporting mechanism. If the command that called
22836@code{python} does not handle the error, @value{GDBN} will
22837terminate it and print an error message containing the Python
22838exception name, the associated value, and the Python call stack
22839backtrace at the point where the exception was raised. Example:
22840
22841@smallexample
22842(@value{GDBP}) python print foo
22843Traceback (most recent call last):
22844 File "<string>", line 1, in <module>
22845NameError: name 'foo' is not defined
22846@end smallexample
22847
621c8364
TT
22848@value{GDBN} errors that happen in @value{GDBN} commands invoked by
22849Python code are converted to Python exceptions. The type of the
22850Python exception depends on the error.
22851
22852@ftable @code
22853@item gdb.error
22854This is the base class for most exceptions generated by @value{GDBN}.
22855It is derived from @code{RuntimeError}, for compatibility with earlier
22856versions of @value{GDBN}.
22857
22858If an error occurring in @value{GDBN} does not fit into some more
22859specific category, then the generated exception will have this type.
22860
22861@item gdb.MemoryError
22862This is a subclass of @code{gdb.error} which is thrown when an
22863operation tried to access invalid memory in the inferior.
22864
22865@item KeyboardInterrupt
22866User interrupt (via @kbd{C-c} or by typing @kbd{q} at a pagination
22867prompt) is translated to a Python @code{KeyboardInterrupt} exception.
22868@end ftable
22869
22870In all cases, your exception handler will see the @value{GDBN} error
22871message as its value and the Python call stack backtrace at the Python
22872statement closest to where the @value{GDBN} error occured as the
d57a3c85
TJB
22873traceback.
22874
07ca107c
DE
22875@findex gdb.GdbError
22876When implementing @value{GDBN} commands in Python via @code{gdb.Command},
22877it is useful to be able to throw an exception that doesn't cause a
22878traceback to be printed. For example, the user may have invoked the
22879command incorrectly. Use the @code{gdb.GdbError} exception
22880to handle this case. Example:
22881
22882@smallexample
22883(gdb) python
22884>class HelloWorld (gdb.Command):
22885> """Greet the whole world."""
22886> def __init__ (self):
7d74f244 22887> super (HelloWorld, self).__init__ ("hello-world", gdb.COMMAND_USER)
07ca107c
DE
22888> def invoke (self, args, from_tty):
22889> argv = gdb.string_to_argv (args)
22890> if len (argv) != 0:
22891> raise gdb.GdbError ("hello-world takes no arguments")
22892> print "Hello, World!"
22893>HelloWorld ()
22894>end
22895(gdb) hello-world 42
22896hello-world takes no arguments
22897@end smallexample
22898
a08702d6
TJB
22899@node Values From Inferior
22900@subsubsection Values From Inferior
22901@cindex values from inferior, with Python
22902@cindex python, working with values from inferior
22903
22904@cindex @code{gdb.Value}
22905@value{GDBN} provides values it obtains from the inferior program in
22906an object of type @code{gdb.Value}. @value{GDBN} uses this object
22907for its internal bookkeeping of the inferior's values, and for
22908fetching values when necessary.
22909
22910Inferior values that are simple scalars can be used directly in
22911Python expressions that are valid for the value's data type. Here's
22912an example for an integer or floating-point value @code{some_val}:
22913
22914@smallexample
22915bar = some_val + 2
22916@end smallexample
22917
22918@noindent
22919As result of this, @code{bar} will also be a @code{gdb.Value} object
22920whose values are of the same type as those of @code{some_val}.
22921
22922Inferior values that are structures or instances of some class can
22923be accessed using the Python @dfn{dictionary syntax}. For example, if
22924@code{some_val} is a @code{gdb.Value} instance holding a structure, you
22925can access its @code{foo} element with:
22926
22927@smallexample
22928bar = some_val['foo']
22929@end smallexample
22930
22931Again, @code{bar} will also be a @code{gdb.Value} object.
22932
5374244e
PM
22933A @code{gdb.Value} that represents a function can be executed via
22934inferior function call. Any arguments provided to the call must match
22935the function's prototype, and must be provided in the order specified
22936by that prototype.
22937
22938For example, @code{some_val} is a @code{gdb.Value} instance
22939representing a function that takes two integers as arguments. To
22940execute this function, call it like so:
22941
22942@smallexample
22943result = some_val (10,20)
22944@end smallexample
22945
22946Any values returned from a function call will be stored as a
22947@code{gdb.Value}.
22948
c0c6f777 22949The following attributes are provided:
a08702d6 22950
def2b000 22951@table @code
d812018b 22952@defvar Value.address
c0c6f777
TJB
22953If this object is addressable, this read-only attribute holds a
22954@code{gdb.Value} object representing the address. Otherwise,
22955this attribute holds @code{None}.
d812018b 22956@end defvar
c0c6f777 22957
def2b000 22958@cindex optimized out value in Python
d812018b 22959@defvar Value.is_optimized_out
def2b000
TJB
22960This read-only boolean attribute is true if the compiler optimized out
22961this value, thus it is not available for fetching from the inferior.
d812018b 22962@end defvar
2c74e833 22963
d812018b 22964@defvar Value.type
2c74e833 22965The type of this @code{gdb.Value}. The value of this attribute is a
44592cc4 22966@code{gdb.Type} object (@pxref{Types In Python}).
d812018b 22967@end defvar
03f17ccf 22968
d812018b 22969@defvar Value.dynamic_type
03f17ccf 22970The dynamic type of this @code{gdb.Value}. This uses C@t{++} run-time
fccd1d1e
EZ
22971type information (@acronym{RTTI}) to determine the dynamic type of the
22972value. If this value is of class type, it will return the class in
22973which the value is embedded, if any. If this value is of pointer or
22974reference to a class type, it will compute the dynamic type of the
22975referenced object, and return a pointer or reference to that type,
22976respectively. In all other cases, it will return the value's static
22977type.
22978
22979Note that this feature will only work when debugging a C@t{++} program
22980that includes @acronym{RTTI} for the object in question. Otherwise,
22981it will just return the static type of the value as in @kbd{ptype foo}
22982(@pxref{Symbols, ptype}).
d812018b 22983@end defvar
22dbab46
PK
22984
22985@defvar Value.is_lazy
22986The value of this read-only boolean attribute is @code{True} if this
22987@code{gdb.Value} has not yet been fetched from the inferior.
22988@value{GDBN} does not fetch values until necessary, for efficiency.
22989For example:
22990
22991@smallexample
22992myval = gdb.parse_and_eval ('somevar')
22993@end smallexample
22994
22995The value of @code{somevar} is not fetched at this time. It will be
22996fetched when the value is needed, or when the @code{fetch_lazy}
22997method is invoked.
22998@end defvar
def2b000
TJB
22999@end table
23000
23001The following methods are provided:
23002
23003@table @code
d812018b 23004@defun Value.__init__ (@var{val})
e8467610
TT
23005Many Python values can be converted directly to a @code{gdb.Value} via
23006this object initializer. Specifically:
23007
23008@table @asis
23009@item Python boolean
23010A Python boolean is converted to the boolean type from the current
23011language.
23012
23013@item Python integer
23014A Python integer is converted to the C @code{long} type for the
23015current architecture.
23016
23017@item Python long
23018A Python long is converted to the C @code{long long} type for the
23019current architecture.
23020
23021@item Python float
23022A Python float is converted to the C @code{double} type for the
23023current architecture.
23024
23025@item Python string
23026A Python string is converted to a target string, using the current
23027target encoding.
23028
23029@item @code{gdb.Value}
23030If @code{val} is a @code{gdb.Value}, then a copy of the value is made.
23031
23032@item @code{gdb.LazyString}
23033If @code{val} is a @code{gdb.LazyString} (@pxref{Lazy Strings In
23034Python}), then the lazy string's @code{value} method is called, and
23035its result is used.
23036@end table
d812018b 23037@end defun
e8467610 23038
d812018b 23039@defun Value.cast (type)
14ff2235
PM
23040Return a new instance of @code{gdb.Value} that is the result of
23041casting this instance to the type described by @var{type}, which must
23042be a @code{gdb.Type} object. If the cast cannot be performed for some
23043reason, this method throws an exception.
d812018b 23044@end defun
14ff2235 23045
d812018b 23046@defun Value.dereference ()
def2b000
TJB
23047For pointer data types, this method returns a new @code{gdb.Value} object
23048whose contents is the object pointed to by the pointer. For example, if
23049@code{foo} is a C pointer to an @code{int}, declared in your C program as
a08702d6
TJB
23050
23051@smallexample
23052int *foo;
23053@end smallexample
23054
23055@noindent
23056then you can use the corresponding @code{gdb.Value} to access what
23057@code{foo} points to like this:
23058
23059@smallexample
23060bar = foo.dereference ()
23061@end smallexample
23062
23063The result @code{bar} will be a @code{gdb.Value} object holding the
23064value pointed to by @code{foo}.
7b282c5a
SCR
23065
23066A similar function @code{Value.referenced_value} exists which also
23067returns @code{gdb.Value} objects corresonding to the values pointed to
23068by pointer values (and additionally, values referenced by reference
23069values). However, the behavior of @code{Value.dereference}
23070differs from @code{Value.referenced_value} by the fact that the
23071behavior of @code{Value.dereference} is identical to applying the C
23072unary operator @code{*} on a given value. For example, consider a
23073reference to a pointer @code{ptrref}, declared in your C@t{++} program
23074as
23075
23076@smallexample
23077typedef int *intptr;
23078...
23079int val = 10;
23080intptr ptr = &val;
23081intptr &ptrref = ptr;
23082@end smallexample
23083
23084Though @code{ptrref} is a reference value, one can apply the method
23085@code{Value.dereference} to the @code{gdb.Value} object corresponding
23086to it and obtain a @code{gdb.Value} which is identical to that
23087corresponding to @code{val}. However, if you apply the method
23088@code{Value.referenced_value}, the result would be a @code{gdb.Value}
23089object identical to that corresponding to @code{ptr}.
23090
23091@smallexample
23092py_ptrref = gdb.parse_and_eval ("ptrref")
23093py_val = py_ptrref.dereference ()
23094py_ptr = py_ptrref.referenced_value ()
23095@end smallexample
23096
23097The @code{gdb.Value} object @code{py_val} is identical to that
23098corresponding to @code{val}, and @code{py_ptr} is identical to that
23099corresponding to @code{ptr}. In general, @code{Value.dereference} can
23100be applied whenever the C unary operator @code{*} can be applied
23101to the corresponding C value. For those cases where applying both
23102@code{Value.dereference} and @code{Value.referenced_value} is allowed,
23103the results obtained need not be identical (as we have seen in the above
23104example). The results are however identical when applied on
23105@code{gdb.Value} objects corresponding to pointers (@code{gdb.Value}
23106objects with type code @code{TYPE_CODE_PTR}) in a C/C@t{++} program.
23107@end defun
23108
23109@defun Value.referenced_value ()
23110For pointer or reference data types, this method returns a new
23111@code{gdb.Value} object corresponding to the value referenced by the
23112pointer/reference value. For pointer data types,
23113@code{Value.dereference} and @code{Value.referenced_value} produce
23114identical results. The difference between these methods is that
23115@code{Value.dereference} cannot get the values referenced by reference
23116values. For example, consider a reference to an @code{int}, declared
23117in your C@t{++} program as
23118
23119@smallexample
23120int val = 10;
23121int &ref = val;
23122@end smallexample
23123
23124@noindent
23125then applying @code{Value.dereference} to the @code{gdb.Value} object
23126corresponding to @code{ref} will result in an error, while applying
23127@code{Value.referenced_value} will result in a @code{gdb.Value} object
23128identical to that corresponding to @code{val}.
23129
23130@smallexample
23131py_ref = gdb.parse_and_eval ("ref")
23132er_ref = py_ref.dereference () # Results in error
23133py_val = py_ref.referenced_value () # Returns the referenced value
23134@end smallexample
23135
23136The @code{gdb.Value} object @code{py_val} is identical to that
23137corresponding to @code{val}.
d812018b 23138@end defun
a08702d6 23139
d812018b 23140@defun Value.dynamic_cast (type)
f9ffd4bb
TT
23141Like @code{Value.cast}, but works as if the C@t{++} @code{dynamic_cast}
23142operator were used. Consult a C@t{++} reference for details.
d812018b 23143@end defun
f9ffd4bb 23144
d812018b 23145@defun Value.reinterpret_cast (type)
f9ffd4bb
TT
23146Like @code{Value.cast}, but works as if the C@t{++} @code{reinterpret_cast}
23147operator were used. Consult a C@t{++} reference for details.
d812018b 23148@end defun
f9ffd4bb 23149
d812018b 23150@defun Value.string (@r{[}encoding@r{[}, errors@r{[}, length@r{]]]})
b6cb8e7d
TJB
23151If this @code{gdb.Value} represents a string, then this method
23152converts the contents to a Python string. Otherwise, this method will
23153throw an exception.
23154
23155Strings are recognized in a language-specific way; whether a given
23156@code{gdb.Value} represents a string is determined by the current
23157language.
23158
23159For C-like languages, a value is a string if it is a pointer to or an
23160array of characters or ints. The string is assumed to be terminated
fbb8f299
PM
23161by a zero of the appropriate width. However if the optional length
23162argument is given, the string will be converted to that given length,
23163ignoring any embedded zeros that the string may contain.
b6cb8e7d
TJB
23164
23165If the optional @var{encoding} argument is given, it must be a string
23166naming the encoding of the string in the @code{gdb.Value}, such as
23167@code{"ascii"}, @code{"iso-8859-6"} or @code{"utf-8"}. It accepts
23168the same encodings as the corresponding argument to Python's
23169@code{string.decode} method, and the Python codec machinery will be used
23170to convert the string. If @var{encoding} is not given, or if
23171@var{encoding} is the empty string, then either the @code{target-charset}
23172(@pxref{Character Sets}) will be used, or a language-specific encoding
23173will be used, if the current language is able to supply one.
23174
23175The optional @var{errors} argument is the same as the corresponding
23176argument to Python's @code{string.decode} method.
fbb8f299
PM
23177
23178If the optional @var{length} argument is given, the string will be
23179fetched and converted to the given length.
d812018b 23180@end defun
be759fcf 23181
d812018b 23182@defun Value.lazy_string (@r{[}encoding @r{[}, length@r{]]})
be759fcf
PM
23183If this @code{gdb.Value} represents a string, then this method
23184converts the contents to a @code{gdb.LazyString} (@pxref{Lazy Strings
23185In Python}). Otherwise, this method will throw an exception.
23186
23187If the optional @var{encoding} argument is given, it must be a string
23188naming the encoding of the @code{gdb.LazyString}. Some examples are:
23189@samp{ascii}, @samp{iso-8859-6} or @samp{utf-8}. If the
23190@var{encoding} argument is an encoding that @value{GDBN} does
23191recognize, @value{GDBN} will raise an error.
23192
23193When a lazy string is printed, the @value{GDBN} encoding machinery is
23194used to convert the string during printing. If the optional
23195@var{encoding} argument is not provided, or is an empty string,
23196@value{GDBN} will automatically select the encoding most suitable for
23197the string type. For further information on encoding in @value{GDBN}
23198please see @ref{Character Sets}.
23199
23200If the optional @var{length} argument is given, the string will be
23201fetched and encoded to the length of characters specified. If
23202the @var{length} argument is not provided, the string will be fetched
23203and encoded until a null of appropriate width is found.
d812018b 23204@end defun
22dbab46
PK
23205
23206@defun Value.fetch_lazy ()
23207If the @code{gdb.Value} object is currently a lazy value
23208(@code{gdb.Value.is_lazy} is @code{True}), then the value is
23209fetched from the inferior. Any errors that occur in the process
23210will produce a Python exception.
23211
23212If the @code{gdb.Value} object is not a lazy value, this method
23213has no effect.
23214
23215This method does not return a value.
23216@end defun
23217
def2b000 23218@end table
b6cb8e7d 23219
2c74e833
TT
23220@node Types In Python
23221@subsubsection Types In Python
23222@cindex types in Python
23223@cindex Python, working with types
23224
23225@tindex gdb.Type
23226@value{GDBN} represents types from the inferior using the class
23227@code{gdb.Type}.
23228
23229The following type-related functions are available in the @code{gdb}
23230module:
23231
23232@findex gdb.lookup_type
d812018b 23233@defun gdb.lookup_type (name @r{[}, block@r{]})
2c74e833
TT
23234This function looks up a type by name. @var{name} is the name of the
23235type to look up. It must be a string.
23236
5107b149
PM
23237If @var{block} is given, then @var{name} is looked up in that scope.
23238Otherwise, it is searched for globally.
23239
2c74e833
TT
23240Ordinarily, this function will return an instance of @code{gdb.Type}.
23241If the named type cannot be found, it will throw an exception.
23242@end defun
23243
a73bb892
PK
23244If the type is a structure or class type, or an enum type, the fields
23245of that type can be accessed using the Python @dfn{dictionary syntax}.
23246For example, if @code{some_type} is a @code{gdb.Type} instance holding
23247a structure type, you can access its @code{foo} field with:
23248
23249@smallexample
23250bar = some_type['foo']
23251@end smallexample
23252
23253@code{bar} will be a @code{gdb.Field} object; see below under the
23254description of the @code{Type.fields} method for a description of the
23255@code{gdb.Field} class.
23256
2c74e833
TT
23257An instance of @code{Type} has the following attributes:
23258
23259@table @code
d812018b 23260@defvar Type.code
2c74e833
TT
23261The type code for this type. The type code will be one of the
23262@code{TYPE_CODE_} constants defined below.
d812018b 23263@end defvar
2c74e833 23264
d812018b 23265@defvar Type.sizeof
2c74e833
TT
23266The size of this type, in target @code{char} units. Usually, a
23267target's @code{char} type will be an 8-bit byte. However, on some
23268unusual platforms, this type may have a different size.
d812018b 23269@end defvar
2c74e833 23270
d812018b 23271@defvar Type.tag
2c74e833
TT
23272The tag name for this type. The tag name is the name after
23273@code{struct}, @code{union}, or @code{enum} in C and C@t{++}; not all
23274languages have this concept. If this type has no tag name, then
23275@code{None} is returned.
d812018b 23276@end defvar
2c74e833
TT
23277@end table
23278
23279The following methods are provided:
23280
23281@table @code
d812018b 23282@defun Type.fields ()
2c74e833
TT
23283For structure and union types, this method returns the fields. Range
23284types have two fields, the minimum and maximum values. Enum types
23285have one field per enum constant. Function and method types have one
23286field per parameter. The base types of C@t{++} classes are also
23287represented as fields. If the type has no fields, or does not fit
23288into one of these categories, an empty sequence will be returned.
23289
a73bb892 23290Each field is a @code{gdb.Field} object, with some pre-defined attributes:
2c74e833
TT
23291@table @code
23292@item bitpos
23293This attribute is not available for @code{static} fields (as in
23294C@t{++} or Java). For non-@code{static} fields, the value is the bit
a9f54f60
TT
23295position of the field. For @code{enum} fields, the value is the
23296enumeration member's integer representation.
2c74e833
TT
23297
23298@item name
23299The name of the field, or @code{None} for anonymous fields.
23300
23301@item artificial
23302This is @code{True} if the field is artificial, usually meaning that
23303it was provided by the compiler and not the user. This attribute is
23304always provided, and is @code{False} if the field is not artificial.
23305
bfd31e71
PM
23306@item is_base_class
23307This is @code{True} if the field represents a base class of a C@t{++}
23308structure. This attribute is always provided, and is @code{False}
23309if the field is not a base class of the type that is the argument of
23310@code{fields}, or if that type was not a C@t{++} class.
23311
2c74e833
TT
23312@item bitsize
23313If the field is packed, or is a bitfield, then this will have a
23314non-zero value, which is the size of the field in bits. Otherwise,
23315this will be zero; in this case the field's size is given by its type.
23316
23317@item type
23318The type of the field. This is usually an instance of @code{Type},
23319but it can be @code{None} in some situations.
23320@end table
d812018b 23321@end defun
2c74e833 23322
d812018b 23323@defun Type.array (@var{n1} @r{[}, @var{n2}@r{]})
702c2711
TT
23324Return a new @code{gdb.Type} object which represents an array of this
23325type. If one argument is given, it is the inclusive upper bound of
23326the array; in this case the lower bound is zero. If two arguments are
23327given, the first argument is the lower bound of the array, and the
23328second argument is the upper bound of the array. An array's length
23329must not be negative, but the bounds can be.
d812018b 23330@end defun
702c2711 23331
d812018b 23332@defun Type.const ()
2c74e833
TT
23333Return a new @code{gdb.Type} object which represents a
23334@code{const}-qualified variant of this type.
d812018b 23335@end defun
2c74e833 23336
d812018b 23337@defun Type.volatile ()
2c74e833
TT
23338Return a new @code{gdb.Type} object which represents a
23339@code{volatile}-qualified variant of this type.
d812018b 23340@end defun
2c74e833 23341
d812018b 23342@defun Type.unqualified ()
2c74e833
TT
23343Return a new @code{gdb.Type} object which represents an unqualified
23344variant of this type. That is, the result is neither @code{const} nor
23345@code{volatile}.
d812018b 23346@end defun
2c74e833 23347
d812018b 23348@defun Type.range ()
361ae042
PM
23349Return a Python @code{Tuple} object that contains two elements: the
23350low bound of the argument type and the high bound of that type. If
23351the type does not have a range, @value{GDBN} will raise a
621c8364 23352@code{gdb.error} exception (@pxref{Exception Handling}).
d812018b 23353@end defun
361ae042 23354
d812018b 23355@defun Type.reference ()
2c74e833
TT
23356Return a new @code{gdb.Type} object which represents a reference to this
23357type.
d812018b 23358@end defun
2c74e833 23359
d812018b 23360@defun Type.pointer ()
7a6973ad
TT
23361Return a new @code{gdb.Type} object which represents a pointer to this
23362type.
d812018b 23363@end defun
7a6973ad 23364
d812018b 23365@defun Type.strip_typedefs ()
2c74e833
TT
23366Return a new @code{gdb.Type} that represents the real type,
23367after removing all layers of typedefs.
d812018b 23368@end defun
2c74e833 23369
d812018b 23370@defun Type.target ()
2c74e833
TT
23371Return a new @code{gdb.Type} object which represents the target type
23372of this type.
23373
23374For a pointer type, the target type is the type of the pointed-to
23375object. For an array type (meaning C-like arrays), the target type is
23376the type of the elements of the array. For a function or method type,
23377the target type is the type of the return value. For a complex type,
23378the target type is the type of the elements. For a typedef, the
23379target type is the aliased type.
23380
23381If the type does not have a target, this method will throw an
23382exception.
d812018b 23383@end defun
2c74e833 23384
d812018b 23385@defun Type.template_argument (n @r{[}, block@r{]})
2c74e833
TT
23386If this @code{gdb.Type} is an instantiation of a template, this will
23387return a new @code{gdb.Type} which represents the type of the
23388@var{n}th template argument.
23389
23390If this @code{gdb.Type} is not a template type, this will throw an
23391exception. Ordinarily, only C@t{++} code will have template types.
23392
5107b149
PM
23393If @var{block} is given, then @var{name} is looked up in that scope.
23394Otherwise, it is searched for globally.
d812018b 23395@end defun
2c74e833
TT
23396@end table
23397
23398
23399Each type has a code, which indicates what category this type falls
23400into. The available type categories are represented by constants
23401defined in the @code{gdb} module:
23402
23403@table @code
23404@findex TYPE_CODE_PTR
23405@findex gdb.TYPE_CODE_PTR
d812018b 23406@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_PTR
2c74e833
TT
23407The type is a pointer.
23408
23409@findex TYPE_CODE_ARRAY
23410@findex gdb.TYPE_CODE_ARRAY
d812018b 23411@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_ARRAY
2c74e833
TT
23412The type is an array.
23413
23414@findex TYPE_CODE_STRUCT
23415@findex gdb.TYPE_CODE_STRUCT
d812018b 23416@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_STRUCT
2c74e833
TT
23417The type is a structure.
23418
23419@findex TYPE_CODE_UNION
23420@findex gdb.TYPE_CODE_UNION
d812018b 23421@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_UNION
2c74e833
TT
23422The type is a union.
23423
23424@findex TYPE_CODE_ENUM
23425@findex gdb.TYPE_CODE_ENUM
d812018b 23426@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_ENUM
2c74e833
TT
23427The type is an enum.
23428
23429@findex TYPE_CODE_FLAGS
23430@findex gdb.TYPE_CODE_FLAGS
d812018b 23431@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_FLAGS
2c74e833
TT
23432A bit flags type, used for things such as status registers.
23433
23434@findex TYPE_CODE_FUNC
23435@findex gdb.TYPE_CODE_FUNC
d812018b 23436@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_FUNC
2c74e833
TT
23437The type is a function.
23438
23439@findex TYPE_CODE_INT
23440@findex gdb.TYPE_CODE_INT
d812018b 23441@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_INT
2c74e833
TT
23442The type is an integer type.
23443
23444@findex TYPE_CODE_FLT
23445@findex gdb.TYPE_CODE_FLT
d812018b 23446@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_FLT
2c74e833
TT
23447A floating point type.
23448
23449@findex TYPE_CODE_VOID
23450@findex gdb.TYPE_CODE_VOID
d812018b 23451@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_VOID
2c74e833
TT
23452The special type @code{void}.
23453
23454@findex TYPE_CODE_SET
23455@findex gdb.TYPE_CODE_SET
d812018b 23456@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_SET
2c74e833
TT
23457A Pascal set type.
23458
23459@findex TYPE_CODE_RANGE
23460@findex gdb.TYPE_CODE_RANGE
d812018b 23461@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_RANGE
2c74e833
TT
23462A range type, that is, an integer type with bounds.
23463
23464@findex TYPE_CODE_STRING
23465@findex gdb.TYPE_CODE_STRING
d812018b 23466@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_STRING
2c74e833
TT
23467A string type. Note that this is only used for certain languages with
23468language-defined string types; C strings are not represented this way.
23469
23470@findex TYPE_CODE_BITSTRING
23471@findex gdb.TYPE_CODE_BITSTRING
d812018b 23472@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_BITSTRING
2c74e833
TT
23473A string of bits.
23474
23475@findex TYPE_CODE_ERROR
23476@findex gdb.TYPE_CODE_ERROR
d812018b 23477@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_ERROR
2c74e833
TT
23478An unknown or erroneous type.
23479
23480@findex TYPE_CODE_METHOD
23481@findex gdb.TYPE_CODE_METHOD
d812018b 23482@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_METHOD
2c74e833
TT
23483A method type, as found in C@t{++} or Java.
23484
23485@findex TYPE_CODE_METHODPTR
23486@findex gdb.TYPE_CODE_METHODPTR
d812018b 23487@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_METHODPTR
2c74e833
TT
23488A pointer-to-member-function.
23489
23490@findex TYPE_CODE_MEMBERPTR
23491@findex gdb.TYPE_CODE_MEMBERPTR
d812018b 23492@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_MEMBERPTR
2c74e833
TT
23493A pointer-to-member.
23494
23495@findex TYPE_CODE_REF
23496@findex gdb.TYPE_CODE_REF
d812018b 23497@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_REF
2c74e833
TT
23498A reference type.
23499
23500@findex TYPE_CODE_CHAR
23501@findex gdb.TYPE_CODE_CHAR
d812018b 23502@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_CHAR
2c74e833
TT
23503A character type.
23504
23505@findex TYPE_CODE_BOOL
23506@findex gdb.TYPE_CODE_BOOL
d812018b 23507@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_BOOL
2c74e833
TT
23508A boolean type.
23509
23510@findex TYPE_CODE_COMPLEX
23511@findex gdb.TYPE_CODE_COMPLEX
d812018b 23512@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_COMPLEX
2c74e833
TT
23513A complex float type.
23514
23515@findex TYPE_CODE_TYPEDEF
23516@findex gdb.TYPE_CODE_TYPEDEF
d812018b 23517@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_TYPEDEF
2c74e833
TT
23518A typedef to some other type.
23519
23520@findex TYPE_CODE_NAMESPACE
23521@findex gdb.TYPE_CODE_NAMESPACE
d812018b 23522@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_NAMESPACE
2c74e833
TT
23523A C@t{++} namespace.
23524
23525@findex TYPE_CODE_DECFLOAT
23526@findex gdb.TYPE_CODE_DECFLOAT
d812018b 23527@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_DECFLOAT
2c74e833
TT
23528A decimal floating point type.
23529
23530@findex TYPE_CODE_INTERNAL_FUNCTION
23531@findex gdb.TYPE_CODE_INTERNAL_FUNCTION
d812018b 23532@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_INTERNAL_FUNCTION
2c74e833
TT
23533A function internal to @value{GDBN}. This is the type used to represent
23534convenience functions.
23535@end table
23536
0e3509db
DE
23537Further support for types is provided in the @code{gdb.types}
23538Python module (@pxref{gdb.types}).
23539
4c374409
JK
23540@node Pretty Printing API
23541@subsubsection Pretty Printing API
a6bac58e 23542
4c374409 23543An example output is provided (@pxref{Pretty Printing}).
a6bac58e
TT
23544
23545A pretty-printer is just an object that holds a value and implements a
23546specific interface, defined here.
23547
d812018b 23548@defun pretty_printer.children (self)
a6bac58e
TT
23549@value{GDBN} will call this method on a pretty-printer to compute the
23550children of the pretty-printer's value.
23551
23552This method must return an object conforming to the Python iterator
23553protocol. Each item returned by the iterator must be a tuple holding
23554two elements. The first element is the ``name'' of the child; the
23555second element is the child's value. The value can be any Python
23556object which is convertible to a @value{GDBN} value.
23557
23558This method is optional. If it does not exist, @value{GDBN} will act
23559as though the value has no children.
d812018b 23560@end defun
a6bac58e 23561
d812018b 23562@defun pretty_printer.display_hint (self)
a6bac58e
TT
23563The CLI may call this method and use its result to change the
23564formatting of a value. The result will also be supplied to an MI
23565consumer as a @samp{displayhint} attribute of the variable being
23566printed.
23567
23568This method is optional. If it does exist, this method must return a
23569string.
23570
23571Some display hints are predefined by @value{GDBN}:
23572
23573@table @samp
23574@item array
23575Indicate that the object being printed is ``array-like''. The CLI
23576uses this to respect parameters such as @code{set print elements} and
23577@code{set print array}.
23578
23579@item map
23580Indicate that the object being printed is ``map-like'', and that the
23581children of this value can be assumed to alternate between keys and
23582values.
23583
23584@item string
23585Indicate that the object being printed is ``string-like''. If the
23586printer's @code{to_string} method returns a Python string of some
23587kind, then @value{GDBN} will call its internal language-specific
23588string-printing function to format the string. For the CLI this means
23589adding quotation marks, possibly escaping some characters, respecting
23590@code{set print elements}, and the like.
23591@end table
d812018b 23592@end defun
a6bac58e 23593
d812018b 23594@defun pretty_printer.to_string (self)
a6bac58e
TT
23595@value{GDBN} will call this method to display the string
23596representation of the value passed to the object's constructor.
23597
23598When printing from the CLI, if the @code{to_string} method exists,
23599then @value{GDBN} will prepend its result to the values returned by
23600@code{children}. Exactly how this formatting is done is dependent on
23601the display hint, and may change as more hints are added. Also,
23602depending on the print settings (@pxref{Print Settings}), the CLI may
23603print just the result of @code{to_string} in a stack trace, omitting
23604the result of @code{children}.
23605
23606If this method returns a string, it is printed verbatim.
23607
23608Otherwise, if this method returns an instance of @code{gdb.Value},
23609then @value{GDBN} prints this value. This may result in a call to
23610another pretty-printer.
23611
23612If instead the method returns a Python value which is convertible to a
23613@code{gdb.Value}, then @value{GDBN} performs the conversion and prints
23614the resulting value. Again, this may result in a call to another
23615pretty-printer. Python scalars (integers, floats, and booleans) and
23616strings are convertible to @code{gdb.Value}; other types are not.
23617
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23618Finally, if this method returns @code{None} then no further operations
23619are peformed in this method and nothing is printed.
23620
a6bac58e 23621If the result is not one of these types, an exception is raised.
d812018b 23622@end defun
a6bac58e 23623
464b3efb
TT
23624@value{GDBN} provides a function which can be used to look up the
23625default pretty-printer for a @code{gdb.Value}:
23626
23627@findex gdb.default_visualizer
d812018b 23628@defun gdb.default_visualizer (value)
464b3efb
TT
23629This function takes a @code{gdb.Value} object as an argument. If a
23630pretty-printer for this value exists, then it is returned. If no such
23631printer exists, then this returns @code{None}.
23632@end defun
23633
a6bac58e
TT
23634@node Selecting Pretty-Printers
23635@subsubsection Selecting Pretty-Printers
23636
23637The Python list @code{gdb.pretty_printers} contains an array of
967cf477 23638functions or callable objects that have been registered via addition
7b51bc51
DE
23639as a pretty-printer. Printers in this list are called @code{global}
23640printers, they're available when debugging all inferiors.
fa33c3cd 23641Each @code{gdb.Progspace} contains a @code{pretty_printers} attribute.
a6bac58e
TT
23642Each @code{gdb.Objfile} also contains a @code{pretty_printers}
23643attribute.
23644
7b51bc51 23645Each function on these lists is passed a single @code{gdb.Value}
a6bac58e 23646argument and should return a pretty-printer object conforming to the
4c374409 23647interface definition above (@pxref{Pretty Printing API}). If a function
a6bac58e
TT
23648cannot create a pretty-printer for the value, it should return
23649@code{None}.
23650
23651@value{GDBN} first checks the @code{pretty_printers} attribute of each
fa33c3cd 23652@code{gdb.Objfile} in the current program space and iteratively calls
7b51bc51
DE
23653each enabled lookup routine in the list for that @code{gdb.Objfile}
23654until it receives a pretty-printer object.
fa33c3cd
DE
23655If no pretty-printer is found in the objfile lists, @value{GDBN} then
23656searches the pretty-printer list of the current program space,
967cf477 23657calling each enabled function until an object is returned.
a6bac58e 23658After these lists have been exhausted, it tries the global
967cf477 23659@code{gdb.pretty_printers} list, again calling each enabled function until an
a6bac58e
TT
23660object is returned.
23661
23662The order in which the objfiles are searched is not specified. For a
23663given list, functions are always invoked from the head of the list,
23664and iterated over sequentially until the end of the list, or a printer
23665object is returned.
23666
7b51bc51
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23667For various reasons a pretty-printer may not work.
23668For example, the underlying data structure may have changed and
23669the pretty-printer is out of date.
23670
23671The consequences of a broken pretty-printer are severe enough that
23672@value{GDBN} provides support for enabling and disabling individual
23673printers. For example, if @code{print frame-arguments} is on,
23674a backtrace can become highly illegible if any argument is printed
23675with a broken printer.
23676
23677Pretty-printers are enabled and disabled by attaching an @code{enabled}
23678attribute to the registered function or callable object. If this attribute
23679is present and its value is @code{False}, the printer is disabled, otherwise
23680the printer is enabled.
23681
23682@node Writing a Pretty-Printer
23683@subsubsection Writing a Pretty-Printer
23684@cindex writing a pretty-printer
23685
23686A pretty-printer consists of two parts: a lookup function to detect
23687if the type is supported, and the printer itself.
23688
a6bac58e 23689Here is an example showing how a @code{std::string} printer might be
7b51bc51
DE
23690written. @xref{Pretty Printing API}, for details on the API this class
23691must provide.
a6bac58e
TT
23692
23693@smallexample
7b51bc51 23694class StdStringPrinter(object):
a6bac58e
TT
23695 "Print a std::string"
23696
7b51bc51 23697 def __init__(self, val):
a6bac58e
TT
23698 self.val = val
23699
7b51bc51 23700 def to_string(self):
a6bac58e
TT
23701 return self.val['_M_dataplus']['_M_p']
23702
7b51bc51 23703 def display_hint(self):
a6bac58e
TT
23704 return 'string'
23705@end smallexample
23706
23707And here is an example showing how a lookup function for the printer
23708example above might be written.
23709
23710@smallexample
7b51bc51 23711def str_lookup_function(val):
a6bac58e 23712 lookup_tag = val.type.tag
a6bac58e
TT
23713 if lookup_tag == None:
23714 return None
7b51bc51
DE
23715 regex = re.compile("^std::basic_string<char,.*>$")
23716 if regex.match(lookup_tag):
23717 return StdStringPrinter(val)
a6bac58e
TT
23718 return None
23719@end smallexample
23720
23721The example lookup function extracts the value's type, and attempts to
23722match it to a type that it can pretty-print. If it is a type the
23723printer can pretty-print, it will return a printer object. If not, it
23724returns @code{None}.
23725
23726We recommend that you put your core pretty-printers into a Python
23727package. If your pretty-printers are for use with a library, we
23728further recommend embedding a version number into the package name.
23729This practice will enable @value{GDBN} to load multiple versions of
23730your pretty-printers at the same time, because they will have
23731different names.
23732
bf88dd68 23733You should write auto-loaded code (@pxref{Python Auto-loading}) such that it
a6bac58e
TT
23734can be evaluated multiple times without changing its meaning. An
23735ideal auto-load file will consist solely of @code{import}s of your
23736printer modules, followed by a call to a register pretty-printers with
23737the current objfile.
23738
23739Taken as a whole, this approach will scale nicely to multiple
23740inferiors, each potentially using a different library version.
23741Embedding a version number in the Python package name will ensure that
23742@value{GDBN} is able to load both sets of printers simultaneously.
23743Then, because the search for pretty-printers is done by objfile, and
23744because your auto-loaded code took care to register your library's
23745printers with a specific objfile, @value{GDBN} will find the correct
23746printers for the specific version of the library used by each
23747inferior.
23748
4c374409 23749To continue the @code{std::string} example (@pxref{Pretty Printing API}),
a6bac58e
TT
23750this code might appear in @code{gdb.libstdcxx.v6}:
23751
23752@smallexample
7b51bc51 23753def register_printers(objfile):
ae6f0d5b 23754 objfile.pretty_printers.append(str_lookup_function)
a6bac58e
TT
23755@end smallexample
23756
23757@noindent
23758And then the corresponding contents of the auto-load file would be:
23759
23760@smallexample
23761import gdb.libstdcxx.v6
7b51bc51 23762gdb.libstdcxx.v6.register_printers(gdb.current_objfile())
a6bac58e
TT
23763@end smallexample
23764
7b51bc51
DE
23765The previous example illustrates a basic pretty-printer.
23766There are a few things that can be improved on.
23767The printer doesn't have a name, making it hard to identify in a
23768list of installed printers. The lookup function has a name, but
23769lookup functions can have arbitrary, even identical, names.
967cf477 23770
7b51bc51
DE
23771Second, the printer only handles one type, whereas a library typically has
23772several types. One could install a lookup function for each desired type
23773in the library, but one could also have a single lookup function recognize
23774several types. The latter is the conventional way this is handled.
23775If a pretty-printer can handle multiple data types, then its
23776@dfn{subprinters} are the printers for the individual data types.
967cf477 23777
7b51bc51
DE
23778The @code{gdb.printing} module provides a formal way of solving these
23779problems (@pxref{gdb.printing}).
23780Here is another example that handles multiple types.
967cf477 23781
7b51bc51
DE
23782These are the types we are going to pretty-print:
23783
23784@smallexample
23785struct foo @{ int a, b; @};
23786struct bar @{ struct foo x, y; @};
23787@end smallexample
23788
23789Here are the printers:
23790
23791@smallexample
23792class fooPrinter:
23793 """Print a foo object."""
23794
23795 def __init__(self, val):
23796 self.val = val
23797
23798 def to_string(self):
23799 return ("a=<" + str(self.val["a"]) +
23800 "> b=<" + str(self.val["b"]) + ">")
23801
23802class barPrinter:
23803 """Print a bar object."""
23804
23805 def __init__(self, val):
23806 self.val = val
23807
23808 def to_string(self):
23809 return ("x=<" + str(self.val["x"]) +
23810 "> y=<" + str(self.val["y"]) + ">")
23811@end smallexample
23812
23813This example doesn't need a lookup function, that is handled by the
23814@code{gdb.printing} module. Instead a function is provided to build up
23815the object that handles the lookup.
23816
23817@smallexample
23818import gdb.printing
23819
23820def build_pretty_printer():
23821 pp = gdb.printing.RegexpCollectionPrettyPrinter(
23822 "my_library")
23823 pp.add_printer('foo', '^foo$', fooPrinter)
23824 pp.add_printer('bar', '^bar$', barPrinter)
23825 return pp
23826@end smallexample
23827
23828And here is the autoload support:
23829
23830@smallexample
23831import gdb.printing
23832import my_library
23833gdb.printing.register_pretty_printer(
23834 gdb.current_objfile(),
23835 my_library.build_pretty_printer())
23836@end smallexample
23837
23838Finally, when this printer is loaded into @value{GDBN}, here is the
23839corresponding output of @samp{info pretty-printer}:
23840
23841@smallexample
23842(gdb) info pretty-printer
23843my_library.so:
23844 my_library
23845 foo
23846 bar
23847@end smallexample
967cf477 23848
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23849@node Inferiors In Python
23850@subsubsection Inferiors In Python
505500db 23851@cindex inferiors in Python
595939de
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23852
23853@findex gdb.Inferior
23854Programs which are being run under @value{GDBN} are called inferiors
23855(@pxref{Inferiors and Programs}). Python scripts can access
23856information about and manipulate inferiors controlled by @value{GDBN}
23857via objects of the @code{gdb.Inferior} class.
23858
23859The following inferior-related functions are available in the @code{gdb}
23860module:
23861
d812018b 23862@defun gdb.inferiors ()
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23863Return a tuple containing all inferior objects.
23864@end defun
23865
d812018b 23866@defun gdb.selected_inferior ()
2aa48337
KP
23867Return an object representing the current inferior.
23868@end defun
23869
595939de
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23870A @code{gdb.Inferior} object has the following attributes:
23871
23872@table @code
d812018b 23873@defvar Inferior.num
595939de 23874ID of inferior, as assigned by GDB.
d812018b 23875@end defvar
595939de 23876
d812018b 23877@defvar Inferior.pid
595939de
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23878Process ID of the inferior, as assigned by the underlying operating
23879system.
d812018b 23880@end defvar
595939de 23881
d812018b 23882@defvar Inferior.was_attached
595939de
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23883Boolean signaling whether the inferior was created using `attach', or
23884started by @value{GDBN} itself.
d812018b 23885@end defvar
595939de
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23886@end table
23887
23888A @code{gdb.Inferior} object has the following methods:
23889
23890@table @code
d812018b 23891@defun Inferior.is_valid ()
29703da4
PM
23892Returns @code{True} if the @code{gdb.Inferior} object is valid,
23893@code{False} if not. A @code{gdb.Inferior} object will become invalid
23894if the inferior no longer exists within @value{GDBN}. All other
23895@code{gdb.Inferior} methods will throw an exception if it is invalid
23896at the time the method is called.
d812018b 23897@end defun
29703da4 23898
d812018b 23899@defun Inferior.threads ()
595939de
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23900This method returns a tuple holding all the threads which are valid
23901when it is called. If there are no valid threads, the method will
23902return an empty tuple.
d812018b 23903@end defun
595939de 23904
2678e2af 23905@findex Inferior.read_memory
d812018b 23906@defun Inferior.read_memory (address, length)
595939de
PM
23907Read @var{length} bytes of memory from the inferior, starting at
23908@var{address}. Returns a buffer object, which behaves much like an array
2678e2af
YQ
23909or a string. It can be modified and given to the
23910@code{Inferior.write_memory} function.
d812018b 23911@end defun
595939de 23912
2678e2af 23913@findex Inferior.write_memory
d812018b 23914@defun Inferior.write_memory (address, buffer @r{[}, length@r{]})
595939de
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23915Write the contents of @var{buffer} to the inferior, starting at
23916@var{address}. The @var{buffer} parameter must be a Python object
23917which supports the buffer protocol, i.e., a string, an array or the
2678e2af 23918object returned from @code{Inferior.read_memory}. If given, @var{length}
595939de 23919determines the number of bytes from @var{buffer} to be written.
d812018b 23920@end defun
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23921
23922@findex gdb.search_memory
d812018b 23923@defun Inferior.search_memory (address, length, pattern)
595939de
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23924Search a region of the inferior memory starting at @var{address} with
23925the given @var{length} using the search pattern supplied in
23926@var{pattern}. The @var{pattern} parameter must be a Python object
23927which supports the buffer protocol, i.e., a string, an array or the
23928object returned from @code{gdb.read_memory}. Returns a Python @code{Long}
23929containing the address where the pattern was found, or @code{None} if
23930the pattern could not be found.
d812018b 23931@end defun
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23932@end table
23933
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23934@node Events In Python
23935@subsubsection Events In Python
23936@cindex inferior events in Python
23937
23938@value{GDBN} provides a general event facility so that Python code can be
23939notified of various state changes, particularly changes that occur in
23940the inferior.
23941
23942An @dfn{event} is just an object that describes some state change. The
23943type of the object and its attributes will vary depending on the details
23944of the change. All the existing events are described below.
23945
23946In order to be notified of an event, you must register an event handler
23947with an @dfn{event registry}. An event registry is an object in the
23948@code{gdb.events} module which dispatches particular events. A registry
23949provides methods to register and unregister event handlers:
23950
23951@table @code
d812018b 23952@defun EventRegistry.connect (object)
505500db
SW
23953Add the given callable @var{object} to the registry. This object will be
23954called when an event corresponding to this registry occurs.
d812018b 23955@end defun
505500db 23956
d812018b 23957@defun EventRegistry.disconnect (object)
505500db
SW
23958Remove the given @var{object} from the registry. Once removed, the object
23959will no longer receive notifications of events.
d812018b 23960@end defun
505500db
SW
23961@end table
23962
23963Here is an example:
23964
23965@smallexample
23966def exit_handler (event):
23967 print "event type: exit"
23968 print "exit code: %d" % (event.exit_code)
23969
23970gdb.events.exited.connect (exit_handler)
23971@end smallexample
23972
23973In the above example we connect our handler @code{exit_handler} to the
23974registry @code{events.exited}. Once connected, @code{exit_handler} gets
23975called when the inferior exits. The argument @dfn{event} in this example is
23976of type @code{gdb.ExitedEvent}. As you can see in the example the
23977@code{ExitedEvent} object has an attribute which indicates the exit code of
23978the inferior.
23979
23980The following is a listing of the event registries that are available and
23981details of the events they emit:
23982
23983@table @code
23984
23985@item events.cont
23986Emits @code{gdb.ThreadEvent}.
23987
23988Some events can be thread specific when @value{GDBN} is running in non-stop
23989mode. When represented in Python, these events all extend
23990@code{gdb.ThreadEvent}. Note, this event is not emitted directly; instead,
23991events which are emitted by this or other modules might extend this event.
23992Examples of these events are @code{gdb.BreakpointEvent} and
23993@code{gdb.ContinueEvent}.
23994
23995@table @code
d812018b 23996@defvar ThreadEvent.inferior_thread
505500db
SW
23997In non-stop mode this attribute will be set to the specific thread which was
23998involved in the emitted event. Otherwise, it will be set to @code{None}.
d812018b 23999@end defvar
505500db
SW
24000@end table
24001
24002Emits @code{gdb.ContinueEvent} which extends @code{gdb.ThreadEvent}.
24003
24004This event indicates that the inferior has been continued after a stop. For
24005inherited attribute refer to @code{gdb.ThreadEvent} above.
24006
24007@item events.exited
24008Emits @code{events.ExitedEvent} which indicates that the inferior has exited.
cb6be26b 24009@code{events.ExitedEvent} has two attributes:
505500db 24010@table @code
d812018b 24011@defvar ExitedEvent.exit_code
cb6be26b
KP
24012An integer representing the exit code, if available, which the inferior
24013has returned. (The exit code could be unavailable if, for example,
24014@value{GDBN} detaches from the inferior.) If the exit code is unavailable,
24015the attribute does not exist.
24016@end defvar
24017@defvar ExitedEvent inferior
24018A reference to the inferior which triggered the @code{exited} event.
d812018b 24019@end defvar
505500db
SW
24020@end table
24021
24022@item events.stop
24023Emits @code{gdb.StopEvent} which extends @code{gdb.ThreadEvent}.
24024
24025Indicates that the inferior has stopped. All events emitted by this registry
24026extend StopEvent. As a child of @code{gdb.ThreadEvent}, @code{gdb.StopEvent}
24027will indicate the stopped thread when @value{GDBN} is running in non-stop
24028mode. Refer to @code{gdb.ThreadEvent} above for more details.
24029
24030Emits @code{gdb.SignalEvent} which extends @code{gdb.StopEvent}.
24031
24032This event indicates that the inferior or one of its threads has received as
24033signal. @code{gdb.SignalEvent} has the following attributes:
24034
24035@table @code
d812018b 24036@defvar SignalEvent.stop_signal
505500db
SW
24037A string representing the signal received by the inferior. A list of possible
24038signal values can be obtained by running the command @code{info signals} in
24039the @value{GDBN} command prompt.
d812018b 24040@end defvar
505500db
SW
24041@end table
24042
24043Also emits @code{gdb.BreakpointEvent} which extends @code{gdb.StopEvent}.
24044
6839b47f
KP
24045@code{gdb.BreakpointEvent} event indicates that one or more breakpoints have
24046been hit, and has the following attributes:
505500db
SW
24047
24048@table @code
d812018b 24049@defvar BreakpointEvent.breakpoints
6839b47f
KP
24050A sequence containing references to all the breakpoints (type
24051@code{gdb.Breakpoint}) that were hit.
505500db 24052@xref{Breakpoints In Python}, for details of the @code{gdb.Breakpoint} object.
d812018b
PK
24053@end defvar
24054@defvar BreakpointEvent.breakpoint
6839b47f
KP
24055A reference to the first breakpoint that was hit.
24056This function is maintained for backward compatibility and is now deprecated
d812018b
PK
24057in favor of the @code{gdb.BreakpointEvent.breakpoints} attribute.
24058@end defvar
505500db
SW
24059@end table
24060
20c168b5
KP
24061@item events.new_objfile
24062Emits @code{gdb.NewObjFileEvent} which indicates that a new object file has
24063been loaded by @value{GDBN}. @code{gdb.NewObjFileEvent} has one attribute:
24064
24065@table @code
24066@defvar NewObjFileEvent.new_objfile
24067A reference to the object file (@code{gdb.Objfile}) which has been loaded.
24068@xref{Objfiles In Python}, for details of the @code{gdb.Objfile} object.
24069@end defvar
24070@end table
24071
505500db
SW
24072@end table
24073
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24074@node Threads In Python
24075@subsubsection Threads In Python
24076@cindex threads in python
24077
24078@findex gdb.InferiorThread
24079Python scripts can access information about, and manipulate inferior threads
24080controlled by @value{GDBN}, via objects of the @code{gdb.InferiorThread} class.
24081
24082The following thread-related functions are available in the @code{gdb}
24083module:
24084
24085@findex gdb.selected_thread
d812018b 24086@defun gdb.selected_thread ()
595939de
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24087This function returns the thread object for the selected thread. If there
24088is no selected thread, this will return @code{None}.
24089@end defun
24090
24091A @code{gdb.InferiorThread} object has the following attributes:
24092
24093@table @code
d812018b 24094@defvar InferiorThread.name
4694da01
TT
24095The name of the thread. If the user specified a name using
24096@code{thread name}, then this returns that name. Otherwise, if an
24097OS-supplied name is available, then it is returned. Otherwise, this
24098returns @code{None}.
24099
24100This attribute can be assigned to. The new value must be a string
24101object, which sets the new name, or @code{None}, which removes any
24102user-specified thread name.
d812018b 24103@end defvar
4694da01 24104
d812018b 24105@defvar InferiorThread.num
595939de 24106ID of the thread, as assigned by GDB.
d812018b 24107@end defvar
595939de 24108
d812018b 24109@defvar InferiorThread.ptid
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24110ID of the thread, as assigned by the operating system. This attribute is a
24111tuple containing three integers. The first is the Process ID (PID); the second
24112is the Lightweight Process ID (LWPID), and the third is the Thread ID (TID).
24113Either the LWPID or TID may be 0, which indicates that the operating system
24114does not use that identifier.
d812018b 24115@end defvar
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24116@end table
24117
24118A @code{gdb.InferiorThread} object has the following methods:
24119
dc3b15be 24120@table @code
d812018b 24121@defun InferiorThread.is_valid ()
29703da4
PM
24122Returns @code{True} if the @code{gdb.InferiorThread} object is valid,
24123@code{False} if not. A @code{gdb.InferiorThread} object will become
24124invalid if the thread exits, or the inferior that the thread belongs
24125is deleted. All other @code{gdb.InferiorThread} methods will throw an
24126exception if it is invalid at the time the method is called.
d812018b 24127@end defun
29703da4 24128
d812018b 24129@defun InferiorThread.switch ()
595939de
PM
24130This changes @value{GDBN}'s currently selected thread to the one represented
24131by this object.
d812018b 24132@end defun
595939de 24133
d812018b 24134@defun InferiorThread.is_stopped ()
595939de 24135Return a Boolean indicating whether the thread is stopped.
d812018b 24136@end defun
595939de 24137
d812018b 24138@defun InferiorThread.is_running ()
595939de 24139Return a Boolean indicating whether the thread is running.
d812018b 24140@end defun
595939de 24141
d812018b 24142@defun InferiorThread.is_exited ()
595939de 24143Return a Boolean indicating whether the thread is exited.
d812018b 24144@end defun
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PM
24145@end table
24146
d8906c6f
TJB
24147@node Commands In Python
24148@subsubsection Commands In Python
24149
24150@cindex commands in python
24151@cindex python commands
d8906c6f
TJB
24152You can implement new @value{GDBN} CLI commands in Python. A CLI
24153command is implemented using an instance of the @code{gdb.Command}
24154class, most commonly using a subclass.
24155
f05e2e1d 24156@defun Command.__init__ (name, @var{command_class} @r{[}, @var{completer_class} @r{[}, @var{prefix}@r{]]})
d8906c6f
TJB
24157The object initializer for @code{Command} registers the new command
24158with @value{GDBN}. This initializer is normally invoked from the
24159subclass' own @code{__init__} method.
24160
24161@var{name} is the name of the command. If @var{name} consists of
24162multiple words, then the initial words are looked for as prefix
24163commands. In this case, if one of the prefix commands does not exist,
24164an exception is raised.
24165
24166There is no support for multi-line commands.
24167
cc924cad 24168@var{command_class} should be one of the @samp{COMMAND_} constants
d8906c6f
TJB
24169defined below. This argument tells @value{GDBN} how to categorize the
24170new command in the help system.
24171
cc924cad 24172@var{completer_class} is an optional argument. If given, it should be
d8906c6f
TJB
24173one of the @samp{COMPLETE_} constants defined below. This argument
24174tells @value{GDBN} how to perform completion for this command. If not
24175given, @value{GDBN} will attempt to complete using the object's
24176@code{complete} method (see below); if no such method is found, an
24177error will occur when completion is attempted.
24178
24179@var{prefix} is an optional argument. If @code{True}, then the new
24180command is a prefix command; sub-commands of this command may be
24181registered.
24182
24183The help text for the new command is taken from the Python
24184documentation string for the command's class, if there is one. If no
24185documentation string is provided, the default value ``This command is
24186not documented.'' is used.
d812018b 24187@end defun
d8906c6f 24188
a0c36267 24189@cindex don't repeat Python command
d812018b 24190@defun Command.dont_repeat ()
d8906c6f
TJB
24191By default, a @value{GDBN} command is repeated when the user enters a
24192blank line at the command prompt. A command can suppress this
24193behavior by invoking the @code{dont_repeat} method. This is similar
24194to the user command @code{dont-repeat}, see @ref{Define, dont-repeat}.
d812018b 24195@end defun
d8906c6f 24196
d812018b 24197@defun Command.invoke (argument, from_tty)
d8906c6f
TJB
24198This method is called by @value{GDBN} when this command is invoked.
24199
24200@var{argument} is a string. It is the argument to the command, after
24201leading and trailing whitespace has been stripped.
24202
24203@var{from_tty} is a boolean argument. When true, this means that the
24204command was entered by the user at the terminal; when false it means
24205that the command came from elsewhere.
24206
24207If this method throws an exception, it is turned into a @value{GDBN}
24208@code{error} call. Otherwise, the return value is ignored.
07ca107c
DE
24209
24210@findex gdb.string_to_argv
24211To break @var{argument} up into an argv-like string use
24212@code{gdb.string_to_argv}. This function behaves identically to
24213@value{GDBN}'s internal argument lexer @code{buildargv}.
24214It is recommended to use this for consistency.
24215Arguments are separated by spaces and may be quoted.
24216Example:
24217
24218@smallexample
24219print gdb.string_to_argv ("1 2\ \\\"3 '4 \"5' \"6 '7\"")
24220['1', '2 "3', '4 "5', "6 '7"]
24221@end smallexample
24222
d812018b 24223@end defun
d8906c6f 24224
a0c36267 24225@cindex completion of Python commands
d812018b 24226@defun Command.complete (text, word)
d8906c6f
TJB
24227This method is called by @value{GDBN} when the user attempts
24228completion on this command. All forms of completion are handled by
a0c36267
EZ
24229this method, that is, the @key{TAB} and @key{M-?} key bindings
24230(@pxref{Completion}), and the @code{complete} command (@pxref{Help,
24231complete}).
d8906c6f
TJB
24232
24233The arguments @var{text} and @var{word} are both strings. @var{text}
24234holds the complete command line up to the cursor's location.
24235@var{word} holds the last word of the command line; this is computed
24236using a word-breaking heuristic.
24237
24238The @code{complete} method can return several values:
24239@itemize @bullet
24240@item
24241If the return value is a sequence, the contents of the sequence are
24242used as the completions. It is up to @code{complete} to ensure that the
24243contents actually do complete the word. A zero-length sequence is
24244allowed, it means that there were no completions available. Only
24245string elements of the sequence are used; other elements in the
24246sequence are ignored.
24247
24248@item
24249If the return value is one of the @samp{COMPLETE_} constants defined
24250below, then the corresponding @value{GDBN}-internal completion
24251function is invoked, and its result is used.
24252
24253@item
24254All other results are treated as though there were no available
24255completions.
24256@end itemize
d812018b 24257@end defun
d8906c6f 24258
d8906c6f
TJB
24259When a new command is registered, it must be declared as a member of
24260some general class of commands. This is used to classify top-level
24261commands in the on-line help system; note that prefix commands are not
24262listed under their own category but rather that of their top-level
24263command. The available classifications are represented by constants
24264defined in the @code{gdb} module:
24265
24266@table @code
24267@findex COMMAND_NONE
24268@findex gdb.COMMAND_NONE
d812018b 24269@item gdb.COMMAND_NONE
d8906c6f
TJB
24270The command does not belong to any particular class. A command in
24271this category will not be displayed in any of the help categories.
24272
24273@findex COMMAND_RUNNING
24274@findex gdb.COMMAND_RUNNING
d812018b 24275@item gdb.COMMAND_RUNNING
d8906c6f
TJB
24276The command is related to running the inferior. For example,
24277@code{start}, @code{step}, and @code{continue} are in this category.
a0c36267 24278Type @kbd{help running} at the @value{GDBN} prompt to see a list of
d8906c6f
TJB
24279commands in this category.
24280
24281@findex COMMAND_DATA
24282@findex gdb.COMMAND_DATA
d812018b 24283@item gdb.COMMAND_DATA
d8906c6f
TJB
24284The command is related to data or variables. For example,
24285@code{call}, @code{find}, and @code{print} are in this category. Type
a0c36267 24286@kbd{help data} at the @value{GDBN} prompt to see a list of commands
d8906c6f
TJB
24287in this category.
24288
24289@findex COMMAND_STACK
24290@findex gdb.COMMAND_STACK
d812018b 24291@item gdb.COMMAND_STACK
d8906c6f
TJB
24292The command has to do with manipulation of the stack. For example,
24293@code{backtrace}, @code{frame}, and @code{return} are in this
a0c36267 24294category. Type @kbd{help stack} at the @value{GDBN} prompt to see a
d8906c6f
TJB
24295list of commands in this category.
24296
24297@findex COMMAND_FILES
24298@findex gdb.COMMAND_FILES
d812018b 24299@item gdb.COMMAND_FILES
d8906c6f
TJB
24300This class is used for file-related commands. For example,
24301@code{file}, @code{list} and @code{section} are in this category.
a0c36267 24302Type @kbd{help files} at the @value{GDBN} prompt to see a list of
d8906c6f
TJB
24303commands in this category.
24304
24305@findex COMMAND_SUPPORT
24306@findex gdb.COMMAND_SUPPORT
d812018b 24307@item gdb.COMMAND_SUPPORT
d8906c6f
TJB
24308This should be used for ``support facilities'', generally meaning
24309things that are useful to the user when interacting with @value{GDBN},
24310but not related to the state of the inferior. For example,
24311@code{help}, @code{make}, and @code{shell} are in this category. Type
a0c36267 24312@kbd{help support} at the @value{GDBN} prompt to see a list of
d8906c6f
TJB
24313commands in this category.
24314
24315@findex COMMAND_STATUS
24316@findex gdb.COMMAND_STATUS
d812018b 24317@item gdb.COMMAND_STATUS
d8906c6f
TJB
24318The command is an @samp{info}-related command, that is, related to the
24319state of @value{GDBN} itself. For example, @code{info}, @code{macro},
a0c36267 24320and @code{show} are in this category. Type @kbd{help status} at the
d8906c6f
TJB
24321@value{GDBN} prompt to see a list of commands in this category.
24322
24323@findex COMMAND_BREAKPOINTS
24324@findex gdb.COMMAND_BREAKPOINTS
d812018b 24325@item gdb.COMMAND_BREAKPOINTS
d8906c6f 24326The command has to do with breakpoints. For example, @code{break},
a0c36267 24327@code{clear}, and @code{delete} are in this category. Type @kbd{help
d8906c6f
TJB
24328breakpoints} at the @value{GDBN} prompt to see a list of commands in
24329this category.
24330
24331@findex COMMAND_TRACEPOINTS
24332@findex gdb.COMMAND_TRACEPOINTS
d812018b 24333@item gdb.COMMAND_TRACEPOINTS
d8906c6f
TJB
24334The command has to do with tracepoints. For example, @code{trace},
24335@code{actions}, and @code{tfind} are in this category. Type
a0c36267 24336@kbd{help tracepoints} at the @value{GDBN} prompt to see a list of
d8906c6f
TJB
24337commands in this category.
24338
7d74f244
DE
24339@findex COMMAND_USER
24340@findex gdb.COMMAND_USER
24341@item gdb.COMMAND_USER
24342The command is a general purpose command for the user, and typically
24343does not fit in one of the other categories.
24344Type @kbd{help user-defined} at the @value{GDBN} prompt to see
24345a list of commands in this category, as well as the list of gdb macros
24346(@pxref{Sequences}).
24347
d8906c6f
TJB
24348@findex COMMAND_OBSCURE
24349@findex gdb.COMMAND_OBSCURE
d812018b 24350@item gdb.COMMAND_OBSCURE
d8906c6f
TJB
24351The command is only used in unusual circumstances, or is not of
24352general interest to users. For example, @code{checkpoint},
a0c36267 24353@code{fork}, and @code{stop} are in this category. Type @kbd{help
d8906c6f
TJB
24354obscure} at the @value{GDBN} prompt to see a list of commands in this
24355category.
24356
24357@findex COMMAND_MAINTENANCE
24358@findex gdb.COMMAND_MAINTENANCE
d812018b 24359@item gdb.COMMAND_MAINTENANCE
d8906c6f
TJB
24360The command is only useful to @value{GDBN} maintainers. The
24361@code{maintenance} and @code{flushregs} commands are in this category.
a0c36267 24362Type @kbd{help internals} at the @value{GDBN} prompt to see a list of
d8906c6f
TJB
24363commands in this category.
24364@end table
24365
d8906c6f
TJB
24366A new command can use a predefined completion function, either by
24367specifying it via an argument at initialization, or by returning it
24368from the @code{complete} method. These predefined completion
24369constants are all defined in the @code{gdb} module:
24370
24371@table @code
24372@findex COMPLETE_NONE
24373@findex gdb.COMPLETE_NONE
d812018b 24374@item gdb.COMPLETE_NONE
d8906c6f
TJB
24375This constant means that no completion should be done.
24376
24377@findex COMPLETE_FILENAME
24378@findex gdb.COMPLETE_FILENAME
d812018b 24379@item gdb.COMPLETE_FILENAME
d8906c6f
TJB
24380This constant means that filename completion should be performed.
24381
24382@findex COMPLETE_LOCATION
24383@findex gdb.COMPLETE_LOCATION
d812018b 24384@item gdb.COMPLETE_LOCATION
d8906c6f
TJB
24385This constant means that location completion should be done.
24386@xref{Specify Location}.
24387
24388@findex COMPLETE_COMMAND
24389@findex gdb.COMPLETE_COMMAND
d812018b 24390@item gdb.COMPLETE_COMMAND
d8906c6f
TJB
24391This constant means that completion should examine @value{GDBN}
24392command names.
24393
24394@findex COMPLETE_SYMBOL
24395@findex gdb.COMPLETE_SYMBOL
d812018b 24396@item gdb.COMPLETE_SYMBOL
d8906c6f
TJB
24397This constant means that completion should be done using symbol names
24398as the source.
24399@end table
24400
24401The following code snippet shows how a trivial CLI command can be
24402implemented in Python:
24403
24404@smallexample
24405class HelloWorld (gdb.Command):
24406 """Greet the whole world."""
24407
24408 def __init__ (self):
7d74f244 24409 super (HelloWorld, self).__init__ ("hello-world", gdb.COMMAND_USER)
d8906c6f
TJB
24410
24411 def invoke (self, arg, from_tty):
24412 print "Hello, World!"
24413
24414HelloWorld ()
24415@end smallexample
24416
24417The last line instantiates the class, and is necessary to trigger the
24418registration of the command with @value{GDBN}. Depending on how the
24419Python code is read into @value{GDBN}, you may need to import the
24420@code{gdb} module explicitly.
24421
d7b32ed3
PM
24422@node Parameters In Python
24423@subsubsection Parameters In Python
24424
24425@cindex parameters in python
24426@cindex python parameters
24427@tindex gdb.Parameter
24428@tindex Parameter
24429You can implement new @value{GDBN} parameters using Python. A new
24430parameter is implemented as an instance of the @code{gdb.Parameter}
24431class.
24432
24433Parameters are exposed to the user via the @code{set} and
24434@code{show} commands. @xref{Help}.
24435
24436There are many parameters that already exist and can be set in
24437@value{GDBN}. Two examples are: @code{set follow fork} and
24438@code{set charset}. Setting these parameters influences certain
24439behavior in @value{GDBN}. Similarly, you can define parameters that
24440can be used to influence behavior in custom Python scripts and commands.
24441
d812018b 24442@defun Parameter.__init__ (name, @var{command-class}, @var{parameter-class} @r{[}, @var{enum-sequence}@r{]})
d7b32ed3
PM
24443The object initializer for @code{Parameter} registers the new
24444parameter with @value{GDBN}. This initializer is normally invoked
24445from the subclass' own @code{__init__} method.
24446
24447@var{name} is the name of the new parameter. If @var{name} consists
24448of multiple words, then the initial words are looked for as prefix
24449parameters. An example of this can be illustrated with the
24450@code{set print} set of parameters. If @var{name} is
24451@code{print foo}, then @code{print} will be searched as the prefix
24452parameter. In this case the parameter can subsequently be accessed in
24453@value{GDBN} as @code{set print foo}.
24454
24455If @var{name} consists of multiple words, and no prefix parameter group
24456can be found, an exception is raised.
24457
24458@var{command-class} should be one of the @samp{COMMAND_} constants
24459(@pxref{Commands In Python}). This argument tells @value{GDBN} how to
24460categorize the new parameter in the help system.
24461
24462@var{parameter-class} should be one of the @samp{PARAM_} constants
24463defined below. This argument tells @value{GDBN} the type of the new
24464parameter; this information is used for input validation and
24465completion.
24466
24467If @var{parameter-class} is @code{PARAM_ENUM}, then
24468@var{enum-sequence} must be a sequence of strings. These strings
24469represent the possible values for the parameter.
24470
24471If @var{parameter-class} is not @code{PARAM_ENUM}, then the presence
24472of a fourth argument will cause an exception to be thrown.
24473
24474The help text for the new parameter is taken from the Python
24475documentation string for the parameter's class, if there is one. If
24476there is no documentation string, a default value is used.
d812018b 24477@end defun
d7b32ed3 24478
d812018b 24479@defvar Parameter.set_doc
d7b32ed3
PM
24480If this attribute exists, and is a string, then its value is used as
24481the help text for this parameter's @code{set} command. The value is
24482examined when @code{Parameter.__init__} is invoked; subsequent changes
24483have no effect.
d812018b 24484@end defvar
d7b32ed3 24485
d812018b 24486@defvar Parameter.show_doc
d7b32ed3
PM
24487If this attribute exists, and is a string, then its value is used as
24488the help text for this parameter's @code{show} command. The value is
24489examined when @code{Parameter.__init__} is invoked; subsequent changes
24490have no effect.
d812018b 24491@end defvar
d7b32ed3 24492
d812018b 24493@defvar Parameter.value
d7b32ed3
PM
24494The @code{value} attribute holds the underlying value of the
24495parameter. It can be read and assigned to just as any other
24496attribute. @value{GDBN} does validation when assignments are made.
d812018b 24497@end defvar
d7b32ed3 24498
ecec24e6
PM
24499There are two methods that should be implemented in any
24500@code{Parameter} class. These are:
24501
d812018b 24502@defun Parameter.get_set_string (self)
ecec24e6
PM
24503@value{GDBN} will call this method when a @var{parameter}'s value has
24504been changed via the @code{set} API (for example, @kbd{set foo off}).
24505The @code{value} attribute has already been populated with the new
24506value and may be used in output. This method must return a string.
d812018b 24507@end defun
ecec24e6 24508
d812018b 24509@defun Parameter.get_show_string (self, svalue)
ecec24e6
PM
24510@value{GDBN} will call this method when a @var{parameter}'s
24511@code{show} API has been invoked (for example, @kbd{show foo}). The
24512argument @code{svalue} receives the string representation of the
24513current value. This method must return a string.
d812018b 24514@end defun
d7b32ed3
PM
24515
24516When a new parameter is defined, its type must be specified. The
24517available types are represented by constants defined in the @code{gdb}
24518module:
24519
24520@table @code
24521@findex PARAM_BOOLEAN
24522@findex gdb.PARAM_BOOLEAN
d812018b 24523@item gdb.PARAM_BOOLEAN
d7b32ed3
PM
24524The value is a plain boolean. The Python boolean values, @code{True}
24525and @code{False} are the only valid values.
24526
24527@findex PARAM_AUTO_BOOLEAN
24528@findex gdb.PARAM_AUTO_BOOLEAN
d812018b 24529@item gdb.PARAM_AUTO_BOOLEAN
d7b32ed3
PM
24530The value has three possible states: true, false, and @samp{auto}. In
24531Python, true and false are represented using boolean constants, and
24532@samp{auto} is represented using @code{None}.
24533
24534@findex PARAM_UINTEGER
24535@findex gdb.PARAM_UINTEGER
d812018b 24536@item gdb.PARAM_UINTEGER
d7b32ed3
PM
24537The value is an unsigned integer. The value of 0 should be
24538interpreted to mean ``unlimited''.
24539
24540@findex PARAM_INTEGER
24541@findex gdb.PARAM_INTEGER
d812018b 24542@item gdb.PARAM_INTEGER
d7b32ed3
PM
24543The value is a signed integer. The value of 0 should be interpreted
24544to mean ``unlimited''.
24545
24546@findex PARAM_STRING
24547@findex gdb.PARAM_STRING
d812018b 24548@item gdb.PARAM_STRING
d7b32ed3
PM
24549The value is a string. When the user modifies the string, any escape
24550sequences, such as @samp{\t}, @samp{\f}, and octal escapes, are
24551translated into corresponding characters and encoded into the current
24552host charset.
24553
24554@findex PARAM_STRING_NOESCAPE
24555@findex gdb.PARAM_STRING_NOESCAPE
d812018b 24556@item gdb.PARAM_STRING_NOESCAPE
d7b32ed3
PM
24557The value is a string. When the user modifies the string, escapes are
24558passed through untranslated.
24559
24560@findex PARAM_OPTIONAL_FILENAME
24561@findex gdb.PARAM_OPTIONAL_FILENAME
d812018b 24562@item gdb.PARAM_OPTIONAL_FILENAME
d7b32ed3
PM
24563The value is a either a filename (a string), or @code{None}.
24564
24565@findex PARAM_FILENAME
24566@findex gdb.PARAM_FILENAME
d812018b 24567@item gdb.PARAM_FILENAME
d7b32ed3
PM
24568The value is a filename. This is just like
24569@code{PARAM_STRING_NOESCAPE}, but uses file names for completion.
24570
24571@findex PARAM_ZINTEGER
24572@findex gdb.PARAM_ZINTEGER
d812018b 24573@item gdb.PARAM_ZINTEGER
d7b32ed3
PM
24574The value is an integer. This is like @code{PARAM_INTEGER}, except 0
24575is interpreted as itself.
24576
24577@findex PARAM_ENUM
24578@findex gdb.PARAM_ENUM
d812018b 24579@item gdb.PARAM_ENUM
d7b32ed3
PM
24580The value is a string, which must be one of a collection string
24581constants provided when the parameter is created.
24582@end table
24583
bc3b79fd
TJB
24584@node Functions In Python
24585@subsubsection Writing new convenience functions
24586
24587@cindex writing convenience functions
24588@cindex convenience functions in python
24589@cindex python convenience functions
24590@tindex gdb.Function
24591@tindex Function
24592You can implement new convenience functions (@pxref{Convenience Vars})
24593in Python. A convenience function is an instance of a subclass of the
24594class @code{gdb.Function}.
24595
d812018b 24596@defun Function.__init__ (name)
bc3b79fd
TJB
24597The initializer for @code{Function} registers the new function with
24598@value{GDBN}. The argument @var{name} is the name of the function,
24599a string. The function will be visible to the user as a convenience
24600variable of type @code{internal function}, whose name is the same as
24601the given @var{name}.
24602
24603The documentation for the new function is taken from the documentation
24604string for the new class.
d812018b 24605@end defun
bc3b79fd 24606
d812018b 24607@defun Function.invoke (@var{*args})
bc3b79fd
TJB
24608When a convenience function is evaluated, its arguments are converted
24609to instances of @code{gdb.Value}, and then the function's
24610@code{invoke} method is called. Note that @value{GDBN} does not
24611predetermine the arity of convenience functions. Instead, all
24612available arguments are passed to @code{invoke}, following the
24613standard Python calling convention. In particular, a convenience
24614function can have default values for parameters without ill effect.
24615
24616The return value of this method is used as its value in the enclosing
24617expression. If an ordinary Python value is returned, it is converted
24618to a @code{gdb.Value} following the usual rules.
d812018b 24619@end defun
bc3b79fd
TJB
24620
24621The following code snippet shows how a trivial convenience function can
24622be implemented in Python:
24623
24624@smallexample
24625class Greet (gdb.Function):
24626 """Return string to greet someone.
24627Takes a name as argument."""
24628
24629 def __init__ (self):
24630 super (Greet, self).__init__ ("greet")
24631
24632 def invoke (self, name):
24633 return "Hello, %s!" % name.string ()
24634
24635Greet ()
24636@end smallexample
24637
24638The last line instantiates the class, and is necessary to trigger the
24639registration of the function with @value{GDBN}. Depending on how the
24640Python code is read into @value{GDBN}, you may need to import the
24641@code{gdb} module explicitly.
24642
fa33c3cd
DE
24643@node Progspaces In Python
24644@subsubsection Program Spaces In Python
24645
24646@cindex progspaces in python
24647@tindex gdb.Progspace
24648@tindex Progspace
24649A program space, or @dfn{progspace}, represents a symbolic view
24650of an address space.
24651It consists of all of the objfiles of the program.
24652@xref{Objfiles In Python}.
24653@xref{Inferiors and Programs, program spaces}, for more details
24654about program spaces.
24655
24656The following progspace-related functions are available in the
24657@code{gdb} module:
24658
24659@findex gdb.current_progspace
d812018b 24660@defun gdb.current_progspace ()
fa33c3cd
DE
24661This function returns the program space of the currently selected inferior.
24662@xref{Inferiors and Programs}.
24663@end defun
24664
24665@findex gdb.progspaces
d812018b 24666@defun gdb.progspaces ()
fa33c3cd
DE
24667Return a sequence of all the progspaces currently known to @value{GDBN}.
24668@end defun
24669
24670Each progspace is represented by an instance of the @code{gdb.Progspace}
24671class.
24672
d812018b 24673@defvar Progspace.filename
fa33c3cd 24674The file name of the progspace as a string.
d812018b 24675@end defvar
fa33c3cd 24676
d812018b 24677@defvar Progspace.pretty_printers
fa33c3cd
DE
24678The @code{pretty_printers} attribute is a list of functions. It is
24679used to look up pretty-printers. A @code{Value} is passed to each
24680function in order; if the function returns @code{None}, then the
24681search continues. Otherwise, the return value should be an object
4c374409 24682which is used to format the value. @xref{Pretty Printing API}, for more
fa33c3cd 24683information.
d812018b 24684@end defvar
fa33c3cd 24685
89c73ade
TT
24686@node Objfiles In Python
24687@subsubsection Objfiles In Python
24688
24689@cindex objfiles in python
24690@tindex gdb.Objfile
24691@tindex Objfile
24692@value{GDBN} loads symbols for an inferior from various
24693symbol-containing files (@pxref{Files}). These include the primary
24694executable file, any shared libraries used by the inferior, and any
24695separate debug info files (@pxref{Separate Debug Files}).
24696@value{GDBN} calls these symbol-containing files @dfn{objfiles}.
24697
24698The following objfile-related functions are available in the
24699@code{gdb} module:
24700
24701@findex gdb.current_objfile
d812018b 24702@defun gdb.current_objfile ()
bf88dd68 24703When auto-loading a Python script (@pxref{Python Auto-loading}), @value{GDBN}
89c73ade
TT
24704sets the ``current objfile'' to the corresponding objfile. This
24705function returns the current objfile. If there is no current objfile,
24706this function returns @code{None}.
24707@end defun
24708
24709@findex gdb.objfiles
d812018b 24710@defun gdb.objfiles ()
89c73ade
TT
24711Return a sequence of all the objfiles current known to @value{GDBN}.
24712@xref{Objfiles In Python}.
24713@end defun
24714
24715Each objfile is represented by an instance of the @code{gdb.Objfile}
24716class.
24717
d812018b 24718@defvar Objfile.filename
89c73ade 24719The file name of the objfile as a string.
d812018b 24720@end defvar
89c73ade 24721
d812018b 24722@defvar Objfile.pretty_printers
89c73ade
TT
24723The @code{pretty_printers} attribute is a list of functions. It is
24724used to look up pretty-printers. A @code{Value} is passed to each
24725function in order; if the function returns @code{None}, then the
24726search continues. Otherwise, the return value should be an object
4c374409 24727which is used to format the value. @xref{Pretty Printing API}, for more
a6bac58e 24728information.
d812018b 24729@end defvar
89c73ade 24730
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24731A @code{gdb.Objfile} object has the following methods:
24732
d812018b 24733@defun Objfile.is_valid ()
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24734Returns @code{True} if the @code{gdb.Objfile} object is valid,
24735@code{False} if not. A @code{gdb.Objfile} object can become invalid
24736if the object file it refers to is not loaded in @value{GDBN} any
24737longer. All other @code{gdb.Objfile} methods will throw an exception
24738if it is invalid at the time the method is called.
d812018b 24739@end defun
29703da4 24740
f8f6f20b 24741@node Frames In Python
f3e9a817 24742@subsubsection Accessing inferior stack frames from Python.
f8f6f20b
TJB
24743
24744@cindex frames in python
24745When the debugged program stops, @value{GDBN} is able to analyze its call
24746stack (@pxref{Frames,,Stack frames}). The @code{gdb.Frame} class
24747represents a frame in the stack. A @code{gdb.Frame} object is only valid
24748while its corresponding frame exists in the inferior's stack. If you try
621c8364
TT
24749to use an invalid frame object, @value{GDBN} will throw a @code{gdb.error}
24750exception (@pxref{Exception Handling}).
f8f6f20b
TJB
24751
24752Two @code{gdb.Frame} objects can be compared for equality with the @code{==}
24753operator, like:
24754
24755@smallexample
24756(@value{GDBP}) python print gdb.newest_frame() == gdb.selected_frame ()
24757True
24758@end smallexample
24759
24760The following frame-related functions are available in the @code{gdb} module:
24761
24762@findex gdb.selected_frame
d812018b 24763@defun gdb.selected_frame ()
f8f6f20b
TJB
24764Return the selected frame object. (@pxref{Selection,,Selecting a Frame}).
24765@end defun
24766
d8e22779 24767@findex gdb.newest_frame
d812018b 24768@defun gdb.newest_frame ()
d8e22779
TT
24769Return the newest frame object for the selected thread.
24770@end defun
24771
d812018b 24772@defun gdb.frame_stop_reason_string (reason)
f8f6f20b
TJB
24773Return a string explaining the reason why @value{GDBN} stopped unwinding
24774frames, as expressed by the given @var{reason} code (an integer, see the
24775@code{unwind_stop_reason} method further down in this section).
24776@end defun
24777
24778A @code{gdb.Frame} object has the following methods:
24779
24780@table @code
d812018b 24781@defun Frame.is_valid ()
f8f6f20b
TJB
24782Returns true if the @code{gdb.Frame} object is valid, false if not.
24783A frame object can become invalid if the frame it refers to doesn't
24784exist anymore in the inferior. All @code{gdb.Frame} methods will throw
24785an exception if it is invalid at the time the method is called.
d812018b 24786@end defun
f8f6f20b 24787
d812018b 24788@defun Frame.name ()
f8f6f20b
TJB
24789Returns the function name of the frame, or @code{None} if it can't be
24790obtained.
d812018b 24791@end defun
f8f6f20b 24792
d812018b 24793@defun Frame.type ()
ccfc3d6e
TT
24794Returns the type of the frame. The value can be one of:
24795@table @code
24796@item gdb.NORMAL_FRAME
24797An ordinary stack frame.
24798
24799@item gdb.DUMMY_FRAME
24800A fake stack frame that was created by @value{GDBN} when performing an
24801inferior function call.
24802
24803@item gdb.INLINE_FRAME
24804A frame representing an inlined function. The function was inlined
24805into a @code{gdb.NORMAL_FRAME} that is older than this one.
24806
111c6489
JK
24807@item gdb.TAILCALL_FRAME
24808A frame representing a tail call. @xref{Tail Call Frames}.
24809
ccfc3d6e
TT
24810@item gdb.SIGTRAMP_FRAME
24811A signal trampoline frame. This is the frame created by the OS when
24812it calls into a signal handler.
24813
24814@item gdb.ARCH_FRAME
24815A fake stack frame representing a cross-architecture call.
24816
24817@item gdb.SENTINEL_FRAME
24818This is like @code{gdb.NORMAL_FRAME}, but it is only used for the
24819newest frame.
24820@end table
d812018b 24821@end defun
f8f6f20b 24822
d812018b 24823@defun Frame.unwind_stop_reason ()
f8f6f20b
TJB
24824Return an integer representing the reason why it's not possible to find
24825more frames toward the outermost frame. Use
24826@code{gdb.frame_stop_reason_string} to convert the value returned by this
a7fc3f37
KP
24827function to a string. The value can be one of:
24828
24829@table @code
24830@item gdb.FRAME_UNWIND_NO_REASON
24831No particular reason (older frames should be available).
24832
24833@item gdb.FRAME_UNWIND_NULL_ID
24834The previous frame's analyzer returns an invalid result.
24835
24836@item gdb.FRAME_UNWIND_OUTERMOST
24837This frame is the outermost.
24838
24839@item gdb.FRAME_UNWIND_UNAVAILABLE
24840Cannot unwind further, because that would require knowing the
24841values of registers or memory that have not been collected.
24842
24843@item gdb.FRAME_UNWIND_INNER_ID
24844This frame ID looks like it ought to belong to a NEXT frame,
24845but we got it for a PREV frame. Normally, this is a sign of
24846unwinder failure. It could also indicate stack corruption.
24847
24848@item gdb.FRAME_UNWIND_SAME_ID
24849This frame has the same ID as the previous one. That means
24850that unwinding further would almost certainly give us another
24851frame with exactly the same ID, so break the chain. Normally,
24852this is a sign of unwinder failure. It could also indicate
24853stack corruption.
24854
24855@item gdb.FRAME_UNWIND_NO_SAVED_PC
24856The frame unwinder did not find any saved PC, but we needed
24857one to unwind further.
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KP
24858
24859@item gdb.FRAME_UNWIND_FIRST_ERROR
24860Any stop reason greater or equal to this value indicates some kind
24861of error. This special value facilitates writing code that tests
24862for errors in unwinding in a way that will work correctly even if
24863the list of the other values is modified in future @value{GDBN}
24864versions. Using it, you could write:
24865@smallexample
24866reason = gdb.selected_frame().unwind_stop_reason ()
24867reason_str = gdb.frame_stop_reason_string (reason)
24868if reason >= gdb.FRAME_UNWIND_FIRST_ERROR:
24869 print "An error occured: %s" % reason_str
24870@end smallexample
a7fc3f37
KP
24871@end table
24872
d812018b 24873@end defun
f8f6f20b 24874
d812018b 24875@defun Frame.pc ()
f8f6f20b 24876Returns the frame's resume address.
d812018b 24877@end defun
f8f6f20b 24878
d812018b 24879@defun Frame.block ()
f3e9a817 24880Return the frame's code block. @xref{Blocks In Python}.
d812018b 24881@end defun
f3e9a817 24882
d812018b 24883@defun Frame.function ()
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24884Return the symbol for the function corresponding to this frame.
24885@xref{Symbols In Python}.
d812018b 24886@end defun
f3e9a817 24887
d812018b 24888@defun Frame.older ()
f8f6f20b 24889Return the frame that called this frame.
d812018b 24890@end defun
f8f6f20b 24891
d812018b 24892@defun Frame.newer ()
f8f6f20b 24893Return the frame called by this frame.
d812018b 24894@end defun
f8f6f20b 24895
d812018b 24896@defun Frame.find_sal ()
f3e9a817
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24897Return the frame's symtab and line object.
24898@xref{Symbol Tables In Python}.
d812018b 24899@end defun
f3e9a817 24900
d812018b 24901@defun Frame.read_var (variable @r{[}, block@r{]})
dc00d89f
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24902Return the value of @var{variable} in this frame. If the optional
24903argument @var{block} is provided, search for the variable from that
24904block; otherwise start at the frame's current block (which is
24905determined by the frame's current program counter). @var{variable}
24906must be a string or a @code{gdb.Symbol} object. @var{block} must be a
24907@code{gdb.Block} object.
d812018b 24908@end defun
f3e9a817 24909
d812018b 24910@defun Frame.select ()
f3e9a817
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24911Set this frame to be the selected frame. @xref{Stack, ,Examining the
24912Stack}.
d812018b 24913@end defun
f3e9a817
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24914@end table
24915
24916@node Blocks In Python
24917@subsubsection Accessing frame blocks from Python.
24918
24919@cindex blocks in python
24920@tindex gdb.Block
24921
24922Within each frame, @value{GDBN} maintains information on each block
24923stored in that frame. These blocks are organized hierarchically, and
24924are represented individually in Python as a @code{gdb.Block}.
24925Please see @ref{Frames In Python}, for a more in-depth discussion on
24926frames. Furthermore, see @ref{Stack, ,Examining the Stack}, for more
24927detailed technical information on @value{GDBN}'s book-keeping of the
24928stack.
24929
bdb1994d 24930A @code{gdb.Block} is iterable. The iterator returns the symbols
56af09aa
SCR
24931(@pxref{Symbols In Python}) local to the block. Python programs
24932should not assume that a specific block object will always contain a
24933given symbol, since changes in @value{GDBN} features and
24934infrastructure may cause symbols move across blocks in a symbol
24935table.
bdb1994d 24936
f3e9a817
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24937The following block-related functions are available in the @code{gdb}
24938module:
24939
24940@findex gdb.block_for_pc
d812018b 24941@defun gdb.block_for_pc (pc)
f3e9a817
PM
24942Return the @code{gdb.Block} containing the given @var{pc} value. If the
24943block cannot be found for the @var{pc} value specified, the function
24944will return @code{None}.
24945@end defun
24946
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24947A @code{gdb.Block} object has the following methods:
24948
24949@table @code
d812018b 24950@defun Block.is_valid ()
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PM
24951Returns @code{True} if the @code{gdb.Block} object is valid,
24952@code{False} if not. A block object can become invalid if the block it
24953refers to doesn't exist anymore in the inferior. All other
24954@code{gdb.Block} methods will throw an exception if it is invalid at
bdb1994d
TT
24955the time the method is called. The block's validity is also checked
24956during iteration over symbols of the block.
d812018b 24957@end defun
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24958@end table
24959
f3e9a817
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24960A @code{gdb.Block} object has the following attributes:
24961
24962@table @code
d812018b 24963@defvar Block.start
f3e9a817 24964The start address of the block. This attribute is not writable.
d812018b 24965@end defvar
f3e9a817 24966
d812018b 24967@defvar Block.end
f3e9a817 24968The end address of the block. This attribute is not writable.
d812018b 24969@end defvar
f3e9a817 24970
d812018b 24971@defvar Block.function
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24972The name of the block represented as a @code{gdb.Symbol}. If the
24973block is not named, then this attribute holds @code{None}. This
24974attribute is not writable.
d812018b 24975@end defvar
f3e9a817 24976
d812018b 24977@defvar Block.superblock
f3e9a817
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24978The block containing this block. If this parent block does not exist,
24979this attribute holds @code{None}. This attribute is not writable.
d812018b 24980@end defvar
9df2fbc4
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24981
24982@defvar Block.global_block
24983The global block associated with this block. This attribute is not
24984writable.
24985@end defvar
24986
24987@defvar Block.static_block
24988The static block associated with this block. This attribute is not
24989writable.
24990@end defvar
24991
24992@defvar Block.is_global
24993@code{True} if the @code{gdb.Block} object is a global block,
24994@code{False} if not. This attribute is not
24995writable.
24996@end defvar
24997
24998@defvar Block.is_static
24999@code{True} if the @code{gdb.Block} object is a static block,
25000@code{False} if not. This attribute is not writable.
25001@end defvar
f3e9a817
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25002@end table
25003
25004@node Symbols In Python
25005@subsubsection Python representation of Symbols.
25006
25007@cindex symbols in python
25008@tindex gdb.Symbol
25009
25010@value{GDBN} represents every variable, function and type as an
25011entry in a symbol table. @xref{Symbols, ,Examining the Symbol Table}.
25012Similarly, Python represents these symbols in @value{GDBN} with the
25013@code{gdb.Symbol} object.
25014
25015The following symbol-related functions are available in the @code{gdb}
25016module:
25017
25018@findex gdb.lookup_symbol
d812018b 25019@defun gdb.lookup_symbol (name @r{[}, block @r{[}, domain@r{]]})
f3e9a817
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25020This function searches for a symbol by name. The search scope can be
25021restricted to the parameters defined in the optional domain and block
25022arguments.
25023
25024@var{name} is the name of the symbol. It must be a string. The
25025optional @var{block} argument restricts the search to symbols visible
25026in that @var{block}. The @var{block} argument must be a
6e6fbe60
DE
25027@code{gdb.Block} object. If omitted, the block for the current frame
25028is used. The optional @var{domain} argument restricts
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25029the search to the domain type. The @var{domain} argument must be a
25030domain constant defined in the @code{gdb} module and described later
25031in this chapter.
6e6fbe60
DE
25032
25033The result is a tuple of two elements.
25034The first element is a @code{gdb.Symbol} object or @code{None} if the symbol
25035is not found.
25036If the symbol is found, the second element is @code{True} if the symbol
82809774 25037is a field of a method's object (e.g., @code{this} in C@t{++}),
6e6fbe60
DE
25038otherwise it is @code{False}.
25039If the symbol is not found, the second element is @code{False}.
25040@end defun
25041
25042@findex gdb.lookup_global_symbol
d812018b 25043@defun gdb.lookup_global_symbol (name @r{[}, domain@r{]})
6e6fbe60
DE
25044This function searches for a global symbol by name.
25045The search scope can be restricted to by the domain argument.
25046
25047@var{name} is the name of the symbol. It must be a string.
25048The optional @var{domain} argument restricts the search to the domain type.
25049The @var{domain} argument must be a domain constant defined in the @code{gdb}
25050module and described later in this chapter.
25051
25052The result is a @code{gdb.Symbol} object or @code{None} if the symbol
25053is not found.
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25054@end defun
25055
25056A @code{gdb.Symbol} object has the following attributes:
25057
25058@table @code
d812018b 25059@defvar Symbol.type
457e09f0
DE
25060The type of the symbol or @code{None} if no type is recorded.
25061This attribute is represented as a @code{gdb.Type} object.
25062@xref{Types In Python}. This attribute is not writable.
d812018b 25063@end defvar
457e09f0 25064
d812018b 25065@defvar Symbol.symtab
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25066The symbol table in which the symbol appears. This attribute is
25067represented as a @code{gdb.Symtab} object. @xref{Symbol Tables In
25068Python}. This attribute is not writable.
d812018b 25069@end defvar
f3e9a817 25070
64e7d9dd
TT
25071@defvar Symbol.line
25072The line number in the source code at which the symbol was defined.
25073This is an integer.
25074@end defvar
25075
d812018b 25076@defvar Symbol.name
f3e9a817 25077The name of the symbol as a string. This attribute is not writable.
d812018b 25078@end defvar
f3e9a817 25079
d812018b 25080@defvar Symbol.linkage_name
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25081The name of the symbol, as used by the linker (i.e., may be mangled).
25082This attribute is not writable.
d812018b 25083@end defvar
f3e9a817 25084
d812018b 25085@defvar Symbol.print_name
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25086The name of the symbol in a form suitable for output. This is either
25087@code{name} or @code{linkage_name}, depending on whether the user
25088asked @value{GDBN} to display demangled or mangled names.
d812018b 25089@end defvar
f3e9a817 25090
d812018b 25091@defvar Symbol.addr_class
f3e9a817
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25092The address class of the symbol. This classifies how to find the value
25093of a symbol. Each address class is a constant defined in the
25094@code{gdb} module and described later in this chapter.
d812018b 25095@end defvar
f3e9a817 25096
f0823d2c
TT
25097@defvar Symbol.needs_frame
25098This is @code{True} if evaluating this symbol's value requires a frame
25099(@pxref{Frames In Python}) and @code{False} otherwise. Typically,
25100local variables will require a frame, but other symbols will not.
035d1e5b 25101@end defvar
f0823d2c 25102
d812018b 25103@defvar Symbol.is_argument
f3e9a817 25104@code{True} if the symbol is an argument of a function.
d812018b 25105@end defvar
f3e9a817 25106
d812018b 25107@defvar Symbol.is_constant
f3e9a817 25108@code{True} if the symbol is a constant.
d812018b 25109@end defvar
f3e9a817 25110
d812018b 25111@defvar Symbol.is_function
f3e9a817 25112@code{True} if the symbol is a function or a method.
d812018b 25113@end defvar
f3e9a817 25114
d812018b 25115@defvar Symbol.is_variable
f3e9a817 25116@code{True} if the symbol is a variable.
d812018b 25117@end defvar
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25118@end table
25119
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25120A @code{gdb.Symbol} object has the following methods:
25121
25122@table @code
d812018b 25123@defun Symbol.is_valid ()
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25124Returns @code{True} if the @code{gdb.Symbol} object is valid,
25125@code{False} if not. A @code{gdb.Symbol} object can become invalid if
25126the symbol it refers to does not exist in @value{GDBN} any longer.
25127All other @code{gdb.Symbol} methods will throw an exception if it is
25128invalid at the time the method is called.
d812018b 25129@end defun
f0823d2c
TT
25130
25131@defun Symbol.value (@r{[}frame@r{]})
25132Compute the value of the symbol, as a @code{gdb.Value}. For
25133functions, this computes the address of the function, cast to the
25134appropriate type. If the symbol requires a frame in order to compute
25135its value, then @var{frame} must be given. If @var{frame} is not
25136given, or if @var{frame} is invalid, then this method will throw an
25137exception.
25138@end defun
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25139@end table
25140
f3e9a817
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25141The available domain categories in @code{gdb.Symbol} are represented
25142as constants in the @code{gdb} module:
25143
25144@table @code
25145@findex SYMBOL_UNDEF_DOMAIN
25146@findex gdb.SYMBOL_UNDEF_DOMAIN
d812018b 25147@item gdb.SYMBOL_UNDEF_DOMAIN
f3e9a817
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25148This is used when a domain has not been discovered or none of the
25149following domains apply. This usually indicates an error either
25150in the symbol information or in @value{GDBN}'s handling of symbols.
25151@findex SYMBOL_VAR_DOMAIN
25152@findex gdb.SYMBOL_VAR_DOMAIN
d812018b 25153@item gdb.SYMBOL_VAR_DOMAIN
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25154This domain contains variables, function names, typedef names and enum
25155type values.
25156@findex SYMBOL_STRUCT_DOMAIN
25157@findex gdb.SYMBOL_STRUCT_DOMAIN
d812018b 25158@item gdb.SYMBOL_STRUCT_DOMAIN
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25159This domain holds struct, union and enum type names.
25160@findex SYMBOL_LABEL_DOMAIN
25161@findex gdb.SYMBOL_LABEL_DOMAIN
d812018b 25162@item gdb.SYMBOL_LABEL_DOMAIN
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25163This domain contains names of labels (for gotos).
25164@findex SYMBOL_VARIABLES_DOMAIN
25165@findex gdb.SYMBOL_VARIABLES_DOMAIN
d812018b 25166@item gdb.SYMBOL_VARIABLES_DOMAIN
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25167This domain holds a subset of the @code{SYMBOLS_VAR_DOMAIN}; it
25168contains everything minus functions and types.
25169@findex SYMBOL_FUNCTIONS_DOMAIN
25170@findex gdb.SYMBOL_FUNCTIONS_DOMAIN
d812018b 25171@item gdb.SYMBOL_FUNCTION_DOMAIN
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25172This domain contains all functions.
25173@findex SYMBOL_TYPES_DOMAIN
25174@findex gdb.SYMBOL_TYPES_DOMAIN
d812018b 25175@item gdb.SYMBOL_TYPES_DOMAIN
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25176This domain contains all types.
25177@end table
25178
25179The available address class categories in @code{gdb.Symbol} are represented
25180as constants in the @code{gdb} module:
25181
25182@table @code
25183@findex SYMBOL_LOC_UNDEF
25184@findex gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_UNDEF
d812018b 25185@item gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_UNDEF
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25186If this is returned by address class, it indicates an error either in
25187the symbol information or in @value{GDBN}'s handling of symbols.
25188@findex SYMBOL_LOC_CONST
25189@findex gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_CONST
d812018b 25190@item gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_CONST
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25191Value is constant int.
25192@findex SYMBOL_LOC_STATIC
25193@findex gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_STATIC
d812018b 25194@item gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_STATIC
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25195Value is at a fixed address.
25196@findex SYMBOL_LOC_REGISTER
25197@findex gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_REGISTER
d812018b 25198@item gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_REGISTER
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25199Value is in a register.
25200@findex SYMBOL_LOC_ARG
25201@findex gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_ARG
d812018b 25202@item gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_ARG
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25203Value is an argument. This value is at the offset stored within the
25204symbol inside the frame's argument list.
25205@findex SYMBOL_LOC_REF_ARG
25206@findex gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_REF_ARG
d812018b 25207@item gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_REF_ARG
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25208Value address is stored in the frame's argument list. Just like
25209@code{LOC_ARG} except that the value's address is stored at the
25210offset, not the value itself.
25211@findex SYMBOL_LOC_REGPARM_ADDR
25212@findex gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_REGPARM_ADDR
d812018b 25213@item gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_REGPARM_ADDR
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25214Value is a specified register. Just like @code{LOC_REGISTER} except
25215the register holds the address of the argument instead of the argument
25216itself.
25217@findex SYMBOL_LOC_LOCAL
25218@findex gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_LOCAL
d812018b 25219@item gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_LOCAL
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25220Value is a local variable.
25221@findex SYMBOL_LOC_TYPEDEF
25222@findex gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_TYPEDEF
d812018b 25223@item gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_TYPEDEF
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25224Value not used. Symbols in the domain @code{SYMBOL_STRUCT_DOMAIN} all
25225have this class.
25226@findex SYMBOL_LOC_BLOCK
25227@findex gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_BLOCK
d812018b 25228@item gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_BLOCK
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25229Value is a block.
25230@findex SYMBOL_LOC_CONST_BYTES
25231@findex gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_CONST_BYTES
d812018b 25232@item gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_CONST_BYTES
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25233Value is a byte-sequence.
25234@findex SYMBOL_LOC_UNRESOLVED
25235@findex gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_UNRESOLVED
d812018b 25236@item gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_UNRESOLVED
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25237Value is at a fixed address, but the address of the variable has to be
25238determined from the minimal symbol table whenever the variable is
25239referenced.
25240@findex SYMBOL_LOC_OPTIMIZED_OUT
25241@findex gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_OPTIMIZED_OUT
d812018b 25242@item gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_OPTIMIZED_OUT
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25243The value does not actually exist in the program.
25244@findex SYMBOL_LOC_COMPUTED
25245@findex gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_COMPUTED
d812018b 25246@item gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_COMPUTED
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25247The value's address is a computed location.
25248@end table
25249
25250@node Symbol Tables In Python
25251@subsubsection Symbol table representation in Python.
25252
25253@cindex symbol tables in python
25254@tindex gdb.Symtab
25255@tindex gdb.Symtab_and_line
25256
25257Access to symbol table data maintained by @value{GDBN} on the inferior
25258is exposed to Python via two objects: @code{gdb.Symtab_and_line} and
25259@code{gdb.Symtab}. Symbol table and line data for a frame is returned
25260from the @code{find_sal} method in @code{gdb.Frame} object.
25261@xref{Frames In Python}.
25262
25263For more information on @value{GDBN}'s symbol table management, see
25264@ref{Symbols, ,Examining the Symbol Table}, for more information.
25265
25266A @code{gdb.Symtab_and_line} object has the following attributes:
25267
25268@table @code
d812018b 25269@defvar Symtab_and_line.symtab
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25270The symbol table object (@code{gdb.Symtab}) for this frame.
25271This attribute is not writable.
d812018b 25272@end defvar
f3e9a817 25273
d812018b 25274@defvar Symtab_and_line.pc
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25275Indicates the current program counter address. This attribute is not
25276writable.
d812018b 25277@end defvar
f3e9a817 25278
d812018b 25279@defvar Symtab_and_line.line
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25280Indicates the current line number for this object. This
25281attribute is not writable.
d812018b 25282@end defvar
f3e9a817
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25283@end table
25284
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25285A @code{gdb.Symtab_and_line} object has the following methods:
25286
25287@table @code
d812018b 25288@defun Symtab_and_line.is_valid ()
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25289Returns @code{True} if the @code{gdb.Symtab_and_line} object is valid,
25290@code{False} if not. A @code{gdb.Symtab_and_line} object can become
25291invalid if the Symbol table and line object it refers to does not
25292exist in @value{GDBN} any longer. All other
25293@code{gdb.Symtab_and_line} methods will throw an exception if it is
25294invalid at the time the method is called.
d812018b 25295@end defun
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25296@end table
25297
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25298A @code{gdb.Symtab} object has the following attributes:
25299
25300@table @code
d812018b 25301@defvar Symtab.filename
f3e9a817 25302The symbol table's source filename. This attribute is not writable.
d812018b 25303@end defvar
f3e9a817 25304
d812018b 25305@defvar Symtab.objfile
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25306The symbol table's backing object file. @xref{Objfiles In Python}.
25307This attribute is not writable.
d812018b 25308@end defvar
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25309@end table
25310
29703da4 25311A @code{gdb.Symtab} object has the following methods:
f3e9a817
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25312
25313@table @code
d812018b 25314@defun Symtab.is_valid ()
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25315Returns @code{True} if the @code{gdb.Symtab} object is valid,
25316@code{False} if not. A @code{gdb.Symtab} object can become invalid if
25317the symbol table it refers to does not exist in @value{GDBN} any
25318longer. All other @code{gdb.Symtab} methods will throw an exception
25319if it is invalid at the time the method is called.
d812018b 25320@end defun
29703da4 25321
d812018b 25322@defun Symtab.fullname ()
f3e9a817 25323Return the symbol table's source absolute file name.
d812018b 25324@end defun
a20ee7a4
SCR
25325
25326@defun Symtab.global_block ()
25327Return the global block of the underlying symbol table.
25328@xref{Blocks In Python}.
25329@end defun
25330
25331@defun Symtab.static_block ()
25332Return the static block of the underlying symbol table.
25333@xref{Blocks In Python}.
25334@end defun
f8f6f20b
TJB
25335@end table
25336
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25337@node Breakpoints In Python
25338@subsubsection Manipulating breakpoints using Python
25339
25340@cindex breakpoints in python
25341@tindex gdb.Breakpoint
25342
25343Python code can manipulate breakpoints via the @code{gdb.Breakpoint}
25344class.
25345
d812018b 25346@defun Breakpoint.__init__ (spec @r{[}, type @r{[}, wp_class @r{[},internal@r{]]]})
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25347Create a new breakpoint. @var{spec} is a string naming the
25348location of the breakpoint, or an expression that defines a
25349watchpoint. The contents can be any location recognized by the
25350@code{break} command, or in the case of a watchpoint, by the @code{watch}
25351command. The optional @var{type} denotes the breakpoint to create
25352from the types defined later in this chapter. This argument can be
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25353either: @code{gdb.BP_BREAKPOINT} or @code{gdb.BP_WATCHPOINT}. @var{type}
25354defaults to @code{gdb.BP_BREAKPOINT}. The optional @var{internal} argument
84f4c1fe
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25355allows the breakpoint to become invisible to the user. The breakpoint
25356will neither be reported when created, nor will it be listed in the
25357output from @code{info breakpoints} (but will be listed with the
25358@code{maint info breakpoints} command). The optional @var{wp_class}
adc36818 25359argument defines the class of watchpoint to create, if @var{type} is
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25360@code{gdb.BP_WATCHPOINT}. If a watchpoint class is not provided, it is
25361assumed to be a @code{gdb.WP_WRITE} class.
25362@end defun
adc36818 25363
d812018b 25364@defun Breakpoint.stop (self)
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25365The @code{gdb.Breakpoint} class can be sub-classed and, in
25366particular, you may choose to implement the @code{stop} method.
25367If this method is defined as a sub-class of @code{gdb.Breakpoint},
25368it will be called when the inferior reaches any location of a
25369breakpoint which instantiates that sub-class. If the method returns
25370@code{True}, the inferior will be stopped at the location of the
25371breakpoint, otherwise the inferior will continue.
25372
25373If there are multiple breakpoints at the same location with a
25374@code{stop} method, each one will be called regardless of the
25375return status of the previous. This ensures that all @code{stop}
25376methods have a chance to execute at that location. In this scenario
25377if one of the methods returns @code{True} but the others return
25378@code{False}, the inferior will still be stopped.
25379
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25380You should not alter the execution state of the inferior (i.e.@:, step,
25381next, etc.), alter the current frame context (i.e.@:, change the current
25382active frame), or alter, add or delete any breakpoint. As a general
25383rule, you should not alter any data within @value{GDBN} or the inferior
25384at this time.
25385
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25386Example @code{stop} implementation:
25387
25388@smallexample
25389class MyBreakpoint (gdb.Breakpoint):
25390 def stop (self):
25391 inf_val = gdb.parse_and_eval("foo")
25392 if inf_val == 3:
25393 return True
25394 return False
25395@end smallexample
d812018b 25396@end defun
7371cf6d 25397
adc36818
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25398The available watchpoint types represented by constants are defined in the
25399@code{gdb} module:
25400
25401@table @code
25402@findex WP_READ
25403@findex gdb.WP_READ
d812018b 25404@item gdb.WP_READ
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25405Read only watchpoint.
25406
25407@findex WP_WRITE
25408@findex gdb.WP_WRITE
d812018b 25409@item gdb.WP_WRITE
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25410Write only watchpoint.
25411
25412@findex WP_ACCESS
25413@findex gdb.WP_ACCESS
d812018b 25414@item gdb.WP_ACCESS
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25415Read/Write watchpoint.
25416@end table
25417
d812018b 25418@defun Breakpoint.is_valid ()
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25419Return @code{True} if this @code{Breakpoint} object is valid,
25420@code{False} otherwise. A @code{Breakpoint} object can become invalid
25421if the user deletes the breakpoint. In this case, the object still
25422exists, but the underlying breakpoint does not. In the cases of
25423watchpoint scope, the watchpoint remains valid even if execution of the
25424inferior leaves the scope of that watchpoint.
d812018b 25425@end defun
adc36818 25426
d812018b 25427@defun Breakpoint.delete
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25428Permanently deletes the @value{GDBN} breakpoint. This also
25429invalidates the Python @code{Breakpoint} object. Any further access
25430to this object's attributes or methods will raise an error.
d812018b 25431@end defun
94b6973e 25432
d812018b 25433@defvar Breakpoint.enabled
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25434This attribute is @code{True} if the breakpoint is enabled, and
25435@code{False} otherwise. This attribute is writable.
d812018b 25436@end defvar
adc36818 25437
d812018b 25438@defvar Breakpoint.silent
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25439This attribute is @code{True} if the breakpoint is silent, and
25440@code{False} otherwise. This attribute is writable.
25441
25442Note that a breakpoint can also be silent if it has commands and the
25443first command is @code{silent}. This is not reported by the
25444@code{silent} attribute.
d812018b 25445@end defvar
adc36818 25446
d812018b 25447@defvar Breakpoint.thread
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25448If the breakpoint is thread-specific, this attribute holds the thread
25449id. If the breakpoint is not thread-specific, this attribute is
25450@code{None}. This attribute is writable.
d812018b 25451@end defvar
adc36818 25452
d812018b 25453@defvar Breakpoint.task
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25454If the breakpoint is Ada task-specific, this attribute holds the Ada task
25455id. If the breakpoint is not task-specific (or the underlying
25456language is not Ada), this attribute is @code{None}. This attribute
25457is writable.
d812018b 25458@end defvar
adc36818 25459
d812018b 25460@defvar Breakpoint.ignore_count
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25461This attribute holds the ignore count for the breakpoint, an integer.
25462This attribute is writable.
d812018b 25463@end defvar
adc36818 25464
d812018b 25465@defvar Breakpoint.number
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25466This attribute holds the breakpoint's number --- the identifier used by
25467the user to manipulate the breakpoint. This attribute is not writable.
d812018b 25468@end defvar
adc36818 25469
d812018b 25470@defvar Breakpoint.type
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25471This attribute holds the breakpoint's type --- the identifier used to
25472determine the actual breakpoint type or use-case. This attribute is not
25473writable.
d812018b 25474@end defvar
adc36818 25475
d812018b 25476@defvar Breakpoint.visible
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25477This attribute tells whether the breakpoint is visible to the user
25478when set, or when the @samp{info breakpoints} command is run. This
25479attribute is not writable.
d812018b 25480@end defvar
84f4c1fe 25481
adc36818
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25482The available types are represented by constants defined in the @code{gdb}
25483module:
25484
25485@table @code
25486@findex BP_BREAKPOINT
25487@findex gdb.BP_BREAKPOINT
d812018b 25488@item gdb.BP_BREAKPOINT
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25489Normal code breakpoint.
25490
25491@findex BP_WATCHPOINT
25492@findex gdb.BP_WATCHPOINT
d812018b 25493@item gdb.BP_WATCHPOINT
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25494Watchpoint breakpoint.
25495
25496@findex BP_HARDWARE_WATCHPOINT
25497@findex gdb.BP_HARDWARE_WATCHPOINT
d812018b 25498@item gdb.BP_HARDWARE_WATCHPOINT
adc36818
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25499Hardware assisted watchpoint.
25500
25501@findex BP_READ_WATCHPOINT
25502@findex gdb.BP_READ_WATCHPOINT
d812018b 25503@item gdb.BP_READ_WATCHPOINT
adc36818
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25504Hardware assisted read watchpoint.
25505
25506@findex BP_ACCESS_WATCHPOINT
25507@findex gdb.BP_ACCESS_WATCHPOINT
d812018b 25508@item gdb.BP_ACCESS_WATCHPOINT
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25509Hardware assisted access watchpoint.
25510@end table
25511
d812018b 25512@defvar Breakpoint.hit_count
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25513This attribute holds the hit count for the breakpoint, an integer.
25514This attribute is writable, but currently it can only be set to zero.
d812018b 25515@end defvar
adc36818 25516
d812018b 25517@defvar Breakpoint.location
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25518This attribute holds the location of the breakpoint, as specified by
25519the user. It is a string. If the breakpoint does not have a location
25520(that is, it is a watchpoint) the attribute's value is @code{None}. This
25521attribute is not writable.
d812018b 25522@end defvar
adc36818 25523
d812018b 25524@defvar Breakpoint.expression
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25525This attribute holds a breakpoint expression, as specified by
25526the user. It is a string. If the breakpoint does not have an
25527expression (the breakpoint is not a watchpoint) the attribute's value
25528is @code{None}. This attribute is not writable.
d812018b 25529@end defvar
adc36818 25530
d812018b 25531@defvar Breakpoint.condition
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25532This attribute holds the condition of the breakpoint, as specified by
25533the user. It is a string. If there is no condition, this attribute's
25534value is @code{None}. This attribute is writable.
d812018b 25535@end defvar
adc36818 25536
d812018b 25537@defvar Breakpoint.commands
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25538This attribute holds the commands attached to the breakpoint. If
25539there are commands, this attribute's value is a string holding all the
25540commands, separated by newlines. If there are no commands, this
25541attribute is @code{None}. This attribute is not writable.
d812018b 25542@end defvar
adc36818 25543
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KP
25544@node Finish Breakpoints in Python
25545@subsubsection Finish Breakpoints
25546
25547@cindex python finish breakpoints
25548@tindex gdb.FinishBreakpoint
25549
25550A finish breakpoint is a temporary breakpoint set at the return address of
25551a frame, based on the @code{finish} command. @code{gdb.FinishBreakpoint}
25552extends @code{gdb.Breakpoint}. The underlying breakpoint will be disabled
25553and deleted when the execution will run out of the breakpoint scope (i.e.@:
25554@code{Breakpoint.stop} or @code{FinishBreakpoint.out_of_scope} triggered).
25555Finish breakpoints are thread specific and must be create with the right
25556thread selected.
25557
25558@defun FinishBreakpoint.__init__ (@r{[}frame@r{]} @r{[}, internal@r{]})
25559Create a finish breakpoint at the return address of the @code{gdb.Frame}
25560object @var{frame}. If @var{frame} is not provided, this defaults to the
25561newest frame. The optional @var{internal} argument allows the breakpoint to
25562become invisible to the user. @xref{Breakpoints In Python}, for further
25563details about this argument.
25564@end defun
25565
25566@defun FinishBreakpoint.out_of_scope (self)
25567In some circumstances (e.g.@: @code{longjmp}, C@t{++} exceptions, @value{GDBN}
25568@code{return} command, @dots{}), a function may not properly terminate, and
25569thus never hit the finish breakpoint. When @value{GDBN} notices such a
25570situation, the @code{out_of_scope} callback will be triggered.
25571
25572You may want to sub-class @code{gdb.FinishBreakpoint} and override this
25573method:
25574
25575@smallexample
25576class MyFinishBreakpoint (gdb.FinishBreakpoint)
25577 def stop (self):
25578 print "normal finish"
25579 return True
25580
25581 def out_of_scope ():
25582 print "abnormal finish"
25583@end smallexample
25584@end defun
25585
25586@defvar FinishBreakpoint.return_value
25587When @value{GDBN} is stopped at a finish breakpoint and the frame
25588used to build the @code{gdb.FinishBreakpoint} object had debug symbols, this
25589attribute will contain a @code{gdb.Value} object corresponding to the return
25590value of the function. The value will be @code{None} if the function return
25591type is @code{void} or if the return value was not computable. This attribute
25592is not writable.
25593@end defvar
25594
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25595@node Lazy Strings In Python
25596@subsubsection Python representation of lazy strings.
25597
25598@cindex lazy strings in python
25599@tindex gdb.LazyString
25600
25601A @dfn{lazy string} is a string whose contents is not retrieved or
25602encoded until it is needed.
25603
25604A @code{gdb.LazyString} is represented in @value{GDBN} as an
25605@code{address} that points to a region of memory, an @code{encoding}
25606that will be used to encode that region of memory, and a @code{length}
25607to delimit the region of memory that represents the string. The
25608difference between a @code{gdb.LazyString} and a string wrapped within
25609a @code{gdb.Value} is that a @code{gdb.LazyString} will be treated
25610differently by @value{GDBN} when printing. A @code{gdb.LazyString} is
25611retrieved and encoded during printing, while a @code{gdb.Value}
25612wrapping a string is immediately retrieved and encoded on creation.
25613
25614A @code{gdb.LazyString} object has the following functions:
25615
d812018b 25616@defun LazyString.value ()
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25617Convert the @code{gdb.LazyString} to a @code{gdb.Value}. This value
25618will point to the string in memory, but will lose all the delayed
25619retrieval, encoding and handling that @value{GDBN} applies to a
25620@code{gdb.LazyString}.
d812018b 25621@end defun
be759fcf 25622
d812018b 25623@defvar LazyString.address
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25624This attribute holds the address of the string. This attribute is not
25625writable.
d812018b 25626@end defvar
be759fcf 25627
d812018b 25628@defvar LazyString.length
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25629This attribute holds the length of the string in characters. If the
25630length is -1, then the string will be fetched and encoded up to the
25631first null of appropriate width. This attribute is not writable.
d812018b 25632@end defvar
be759fcf 25633
d812018b 25634@defvar LazyString.encoding
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25635This attribute holds the encoding that will be applied to the string
25636when the string is printed by @value{GDBN}. If the encoding is not
25637set, or contains an empty string, then @value{GDBN} will select the
25638most appropriate encoding when the string is printed. This attribute
25639is not writable.
d812018b 25640@end defvar
be759fcf 25641
d812018b 25642@defvar LazyString.type
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25643This attribute holds the type that is represented by the lazy string's
25644type. For a lazy string this will always be a pointer type. To
25645resolve this to the lazy string's character type, use the type's
25646@code{target} method. @xref{Types In Python}. This attribute is not
25647writable.
d812018b 25648@end defvar
be759fcf 25649
bf88dd68
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25650@node Python Auto-loading
25651@subsection Python Auto-loading
25652@cindex Python auto-loading
8a1ea21f
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25653
25654When a new object file is read (for example, due to the @code{file}
25655command, or because the inferior has loaded a shared library),
25656@value{GDBN} will look for Python support scripts in several ways:
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25657@file{@var{objfile}-gdb.py} (@pxref{objfile-gdb.py file})
25658and @code{.debug_gdb_scripts} section
25659(@pxref{dotdebug_gdb_scripts section}).
8a1ea21f
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25660
25661The auto-loading feature is useful for supplying application-specific
25662debugging commands and scripts.
25663
dbaefcf7
DE
25664Auto-loading can be enabled or disabled,
25665and the list of auto-loaded scripts can be printed.
8a1ea21f
DE
25666
25667@table @code
bf88dd68
JK
25668@anchor{set auto-load python-scripts}
25669@kindex set auto-load python-scripts
25670@item set auto-load python-scripts [on|off]
a86caf66 25671Enable or disable the auto-loading of Python scripts.
8a1ea21f 25672
bf88dd68
JK
25673@anchor{show auto-load python-scripts}
25674@kindex show auto-load python-scripts
25675@item show auto-load python-scripts
a86caf66 25676Show whether auto-loading of Python scripts is enabled or disabled.
dbaefcf7 25677
bf88dd68
JK
25678@anchor{info auto-load python-scripts}
25679@kindex info auto-load python-scripts
25680@cindex print list of auto-loaded Python scripts
25681@item info auto-load python-scripts [@var{regexp}]
25682Print the list of all Python scripts that @value{GDBN} auto-loaded.
75fc9810 25683
bf88dd68 25684Also printed is the list of Python scripts that were mentioned in
75fc9810 25685the @code{.debug_gdb_scripts} section and were not found
8e0583c8 25686(@pxref{dotdebug_gdb_scripts section}).
75fc9810
DE
25687This is useful because their names are not printed when @value{GDBN}
25688tries to load them and fails. There may be many of them, and printing
25689an error message for each one is problematic.
25690
bf88dd68 25691If @var{regexp} is supplied only Python scripts with matching names are printed.
dbaefcf7 25692
75fc9810
DE
25693Example:
25694
dbaefcf7 25695@smallexample
bf88dd68 25696(gdb) info auto-load python-scripts
bccbefd2
JK
25697Loaded Script
25698Yes py-section-script.py
25699 full name: /tmp/py-section-script.py
25700No my-foo-pretty-printers.py
dbaefcf7 25701@end smallexample
8a1ea21f
DE
25702@end table
25703
25704When reading an auto-loaded file, @value{GDBN} sets the
25705@dfn{current objfile}. This is available via the @code{gdb.current_objfile}
25706function (@pxref{Objfiles In Python}). This can be useful for
25707registering objfile-specific pretty-printers.
25708
3708f05e
JK
25709@menu
25710* objfile-gdb.py file:: The @file{@var{objfile}-gdb.py} file
25711* dotdebug_gdb_scripts section:: The @code{.debug_gdb_scripts} section
25712* Which flavor to choose?::
25713@end menu
25714
8a1ea21f
DE
25715@node objfile-gdb.py file
25716@subsubsection The @file{@var{objfile}-gdb.py} file
25717@cindex @file{@var{objfile}-gdb.py}
25718
25719When a new object file is read, @value{GDBN} looks for
7349ff92 25720a file named @file{@var{objfile}-gdb.py} (we call it @var{script-name} below),
8a1ea21f
DE
25721where @var{objfile} is the object file's real name, formed by ensuring
25722that the file name is absolute, following all symlinks, and resolving
25723@code{.} and @code{..} components. If this file exists and is
25724readable, @value{GDBN} will evaluate it as a Python script.
25725
1564a261 25726If this file does not exist, then @value{GDBN} will look for
c1668e4e
JK
25727@var{script-name} file in all of the directories as specified below.
25728
25729Note that loading of this script file also requires accordingly configured
25730@code{auto-load safe-path} (@pxref{Auto-loading safe path}).
7349ff92
JK
25731
25732@table @code
25733@anchor{set auto-load scripts-directory}
25734@kindex set auto-load scripts-directory
25735@item set auto-load scripts-directory @r{[}@var{directories}@r{]}
25736Control @value{GDBN} auto-loaded scripts location. Multiple directory entries
25737may be delimited by the host platform path separator in use
25738(@samp{:} on Unix, @samp{;} on MS-Windows and MS-DOS).
25739
25740Each entry here needs to be covered also by the security setting
25741@code{set auto-load safe-path} (@pxref{set auto-load safe-path}).
25742
25743@anchor{with-auto-load-dir}
1564a261
JK
25744This variable defaults to @file{$debugdir:$datadir/auto-load}. The default
25745@code{set auto-load safe-path} value can be also overriden by @value{GDBN}
25746configuration option @option{--with-auto-load-dir}.
25747
25748Any reference to @file{$debugdir} will get replaced by
25749@var{debug-file-directory} value (@pxref{Separate Debug Files}) and any
25750reference to @file{$datadir} will get replaced by @var{data-directory} which is
25751determined at @value{GDBN} startup (@pxref{Data Files}). @file{$debugdir} and
25752@file{$datadir} must be placed as a directory component --- either alone or
25753delimited by @file{/} or @file{\} directory separators, depending on the host
25754platform.
7349ff92
JK
25755
25756The list of directories uses path separator (@samp{:} on GNU and Unix
25757systems, @samp{;} on MS-Windows and MS-DOS) to separate directories, similarly
25758to the @env{PATH} environment variable.
25759
25760@anchor{show auto-load scripts-directory}
25761@kindex show auto-load scripts-directory
25762@item show auto-load scripts-directory
25763Show @value{GDBN} auto-loaded scripts location.
25764@end table
8a1ea21f
DE
25765
25766@value{GDBN} does not track which files it has already auto-loaded this way.
25767@value{GDBN} will load the associated script every time the corresponding
25768@var{objfile} is opened.
25769So your @file{-gdb.py} file should be careful to avoid errors if it
25770is evaluated more than once.
25771
8e0583c8 25772@node dotdebug_gdb_scripts section
8a1ea21f
DE
25773@subsubsection The @code{.debug_gdb_scripts} section
25774@cindex @code{.debug_gdb_scripts} section
25775
25776For systems using file formats like ELF and COFF,
25777when @value{GDBN} loads a new object file
25778it will look for a special section named @samp{.debug_gdb_scripts}.
25779If this section exists, its contents is a list of names of scripts to load.
25780
25781@value{GDBN} will look for each specified script file first in the
25782current directory and then along the source search path
25783(@pxref{Source Path, ,Specifying Source Directories}),
25784except that @file{$cdir} is not searched, since the compilation
25785directory is not relevant to scripts.
25786
25787Entries can be placed in section @code{.debug_gdb_scripts} with,
25788for example, this GCC macro:
25789
25790@example
a3a7127e 25791/* Note: The "MS" section flags are to remove duplicates. */
8a1ea21f
DE
25792#define DEFINE_GDB_SCRIPT(script_name) \
25793 asm("\
25794.pushsection \".debug_gdb_scripts\", \"MS\",@@progbits,1\n\
25795.byte 1\n\
25796.asciz \"" script_name "\"\n\
25797.popsection \n\
25798");
25799@end example
25800
25801@noindent
25802Then one can reference the macro in a header or source file like this:
25803
25804@example
25805DEFINE_GDB_SCRIPT ("my-app-scripts.py")
25806@end example
25807
25808The script name may include directories if desired.
25809
c1668e4e
JK
25810Note that loading of this script file also requires accordingly configured
25811@code{auto-load safe-path} (@pxref{Auto-loading safe path}).
25812
8a1ea21f
DE
25813If the macro is put in a header, any application or library
25814using this header will get a reference to the specified script.
25815
25816@node Which flavor to choose?
25817@subsubsection Which flavor to choose?
25818
25819Given the multiple ways of auto-loading Python scripts, it might not always
25820be clear which one to choose. This section provides some guidance.
25821
25822Benefits of the @file{-gdb.py} way:
25823
25824@itemize @bullet
25825@item
25826Can be used with file formats that don't support multiple sections.
25827
25828@item
25829Ease of finding scripts for public libraries.
25830
25831Scripts specified in the @code{.debug_gdb_scripts} section are searched for
25832in the source search path.
25833For publicly installed libraries, e.g., @file{libstdc++}, there typically
25834isn't a source directory in which to find the script.
25835
25836@item
25837Doesn't require source code additions.
25838@end itemize
25839
25840Benefits of the @code{.debug_gdb_scripts} way:
25841
25842@itemize @bullet
25843@item
25844Works with static linking.
25845
25846Scripts for libraries done the @file{-gdb.py} way require an objfile to
25847trigger their loading. When an application is statically linked the only
25848objfile available is the executable, and it is cumbersome to attach all the
25849scripts from all the input libraries to the executable's @file{-gdb.py} script.
25850
25851@item
25852Works with classes that are entirely inlined.
25853
25854Some classes can be entirely inlined, and thus there may not be an associated
25855shared library to attach a @file{-gdb.py} script to.
25856
25857@item
25858Scripts needn't be copied out of the source tree.
25859
25860In some circumstances, apps can be built out of large collections of internal
25861libraries, and the build infrastructure necessary to install the
25862@file{-gdb.py} scripts in a place where @value{GDBN} can find them is
25863cumbersome. It may be easier to specify the scripts in the
25864@code{.debug_gdb_scripts} section as relative paths, and add a path to the
25865top of the source tree to the source search path.
25866@end itemize
25867
0e3509db
DE
25868@node Python modules
25869@subsection Python modules
25870@cindex python modules
25871
fa3a4f15 25872@value{GDBN} comes with several modules to assist writing Python code.
0e3509db
DE
25873
25874@menu
7b51bc51 25875* gdb.printing:: Building and registering pretty-printers.
0e3509db 25876* gdb.types:: Utilities for working with types.
fa3a4f15 25877* gdb.prompt:: Utilities for prompt value substitution.
0e3509db
DE
25878@end menu
25879
7b51bc51
DE
25880@node gdb.printing
25881@subsubsection gdb.printing
25882@cindex gdb.printing
25883
25884This module provides a collection of utilities for working with
25885pretty-printers.
25886
25887@table @code
25888@item PrettyPrinter (@var{name}, @var{subprinters}=None)
25889This class specifies the API that makes @samp{info pretty-printer},
25890@samp{enable pretty-printer} and @samp{disable pretty-printer} work.
25891Pretty-printers should generally inherit from this class.
25892
25893@item SubPrettyPrinter (@var{name})
25894For printers that handle multiple types, this class specifies the
25895corresponding API for the subprinters.
25896
25897@item RegexpCollectionPrettyPrinter (@var{name})
25898Utility class for handling multiple printers, all recognized via
25899regular expressions.
25900@xref{Writing a Pretty-Printer}, for an example.
25901
cafec441
TT
25902@item FlagEnumerationPrinter (@var{name})
25903A pretty-printer which handles printing of @code{enum} values. Unlike
25904@value{GDBN}'s built-in @code{enum} printing, this printer attempts to
25905work properly when there is some overlap between the enumeration
25906constants. @var{name} is the name of the printer and also the name of
25907the @code{enum} type to look up.
25908
9c15afc4 25909@item register_pretty_printer (@var{obj}, @var{printer}, @var{replace}=False)
7b51bc51 25910Register @var{printer} with the pretty-printer list of @var{obj}.
9c15afc4
DE
25911If @var{replace} is @code{True} then any existing copy of the printer
25912is replaced. Otherwise a @code{RuntimeError} exception is raised
25913if a printer with the same name already exists.
7b51bc51
DE
25914@end table
25915
0e3509db
DE
25916@node gdb.types
25917@subsubsection gdb.types
7b51bc51 25918@cindex gdb.types
0e3509db
DE
25919
25920This module provides a collection of utilities for working with
25921@code{gdb.Types} objects.
25922
25923@table @code
25924@item get_basic_type (@var{type})
25925Return @var{type} with const and volatile qualifiers stripped,
25926and with typedefs and C@t{++} references converted to the underlying type.
25927
25928C@t{++} example:
25929
25930@smallexample
25931typedef const int const_int;
25932const_int foo (3);
25933const_int& foo_ref (foo);
25934int main () @{ return 0; @}
25935@end smallexample
25936
25937Then in gdb:
25938
25939@smallexample
25940(gdb) start
25941(gdb) python import gdb.types
25942(gdb) python foo_ref = gdb.parse_and_eval("foo_ref")
25943(gdb) python print gdb.types.get_basic_type(foo_ref.type)
25944int
25945@end smallexample
25946
25947@item has_field (@var{type}, @var{field})
25948Return @code{True} if @var{type}, assumed to be a type with fields
25949(e.g., a structure or union), has field @var{field}.
25950
25951@item make_enum_dict (@var{enum_type})
25952Return a Python @code{dictionary} type produced from @var{enum_type}.
5110b5df 25953
0aaaf063 25954@item deep_items (@var{type})
5110b5df
PK
25955Returns a Python iterator similar to the standard
25956@code{gdb.Type.iteritems} method, except that the iterator returned
0aaaf063 25957by @code{deep_items} will recursively traverse anonymous struct or
5110b5df
PK
25958union fields. For example:
25959
25960@smallexample
25961struct A
25962@{
25963 int a;
25964 union @{
25965 int b0;
25966 int b1;
25967 @};
25968@};
25969@end smallexample
25970
25971@noindent
25972Then in @value{GDBN}:
25973@smallexample
25974(@value{GDBP}) python import gdb.types
25975(@value{GDBP}) python struct_a = gdb.lookup_type("struct A")
25976(@value{GDBP}) python print struct_a.keys ()
25977@{['a', '']@}
0aaaf063 25978(@value{GDBP}) python print [k for k,v in gdb.types.deep_items(struct_a)]
5110b5df
PK
25979@{['a', 'b0', 'b1']@}
25980@end smallexample
25981
0e3509db 25982@end table
fa3a4f15
PM
25983
25984@node gdb.prompt
25985@subsubsection gdb.prompt
25986@cindex gdb.prompt
25987
25988This module provides a method for prompt value-substitution.
25989
25990@table @code
25991@item substitute_prompt (@var{string})
25992Return @var{string} with escape sequences substituted by values. Some
25993escape sequences take arguments. You can specify arguments inside
25994``@{@}'' immediately following the escape sequence.
25995
25996The escape sequences you can pass to this function are:
25997
25998@table @code
25999@item \\
26000Substitute a backslash.
26001@item \e
26002Substitute an ESC character.
26003@item \f
26004Substitute the selected frame; an argument names a frame parameter.
26005@item \n
26006Substitute a newline.
26007@item \p
26008Substitute a parameter's value; the argument names the parameter.
26009@item \r
26010Substitute a carriage return.
26011@item \t
26012Substitute the selected thread; an argument names a thread parameter.
26013@item \v
26014Substitute the version of GDB.
26015@item \w
26016Substitute the current working directory.
26017@item \[
26018Begin a sequence of non-printing characters. These sequences are
26019typically used with the ESC character, and are not counted in the string
26020length. Example: ``\[\e[0;34m\](gdb)\[\e[0m\]'' will return a
26021blue-colored ``(gdb)'' prompt where the length is five.
26022@item \]
26023End a sequence of non-printing characters.
26024@end table
26025
26026For example:
26027
26028@smallexample
26029substitute_prompt (``frame: \f,
26030 print arguments: \p@{print frame-arguments@}'')
26031@end smallexample
26032
26033@exdent will return the string:
26034
26035@smallexample
26036"frame: main, print arguments: scalars"
26037@end smallexample
26038@end table
0e3509db 26039
5a56e9c5
DE
26040@node Aliases
26041@section Creating new spellings of existing commands
26042@cindex aliases for commands
26043
26044It is often useful to define alternate spellings of existing commands.
26045For example, if a new @value{GDBN} command defined in Python has
26046a long name to type, it is handy to have an abbreviated version of it
26047that involves less typing.
26048
26049@value{GDBN} itself uses aliases. For example @samp{s} is an alias
26050of the @samp{step} command even though it is otherwise an ambiguous
26051abbreviation of other commands like @samp{set} and @samp{show}.
26052
26053Aliases are also used to provide shortened or more common versions
26054of multi-word commands. For example, @value{GDBN} provides the
26055@samp{tty} alias of the @samp{set inferior-tty} command.
26056
26057You can define a new alias with the @samp{alias} command.
26058
26059@table @code
26060
26061@kindex alias
26062@item alias [-a] [--] @var{ALIAS} = @var{COMMAND}
26063
26064@end table
26065
26066@var{ALIAS} specifies the name of the new alias.
26067Each word of @var{ALIAS} must consist of letters, numbers, dashes and
26068underscores.
26069
26070@var{COMMAND} specifies the name of an existing command
26071that is being aliased.
26072
26073The @samp{-a} option specifies that the new alias is an abbreviation
26074of the command. Abbreviations are not shown in command
26075lists displayed by the @samp{help} command.
26076
26077The @samp{--} option specifies the end of options,
26078and is useful when @var{ALIAS} begins with a dash.
26079
26080Here is a simple example showing how to make an abbreviation
26081of a command so that there is less to type.
26082Suppose you were tired of typing @samp{disas}, the current
26083shortest unambiguous abbreviation of the @samp{disassemble} command
26084and you wanted an even shorter version named @samp{di}.
26085The following will accomplish this.
26086
26087@smallexample
26088(gdb) alias -a di = disas
26089@end smallexample
26090
26091Note that aliases are different from user-defined commands.
26092With a user-defined command, you also need to write documentation
26093for it with the @samp{document} command.
26094An alias automatically picks up the documentation of the existing command.
26095
26096Here is an example where we make @samp{elms} an abbreviation of
26097@samp{elements} in the @samp{set print elements} command.
26098This is to show that you can make an abbreviation of any part
26099of a command.
26100
26101@smallexample
26102(gdb) alias -a set print elms = set print elements
26103(gdb) alias -a show print elms = show print elements
26104(gdb) set p elms 20
26105(gdb) show p elms
26106Limit on string chars or array elements to print is 200.
26107@end smallexample
26108
26109Note that if you are defining an alias of a @samp{set} command,
26110and you want to have an alias for the corresponding @samp{show}
26111command, then you need to define the latter separately.
26112
26113Unambiguously abbreviated commands are allowed in @var{COMMAND} and
26114@var{ALIAS}, just as they are normally.
26115
26116@smallexample
26117(gdb) alias -a set pr elms = set p ele
26118@end smallexample
26119
26120Finally, here is an example showing the creation of a one word
26121alias for a more complex command.
26122This creates alias @samp{spe} of the command @samp{set print elements}.
26123
26124@smallexample
26125(gdb) alias spe = set print elements
26126(gdb) spe 20
26127@end smallexample
26128
21c294e6
AC
26129@node Interpreters
26130@chapter Command Interpreters
26131@cindex command interpreters
26132
26133@value{GDBN} supports multiple command interpreters, and some command
26134infrastructure to allow users or user interface writers to switch
26135between interpreters or run commands in other interpreters.
26136
26137@value{GDBN} currently supports two command interpreters, the console
26138interpreter (sometimes called the command-line interpreter or @sc{cli})
26139and the machine interface interpreter (or @sc{gdb/mi}). This manual
26140describes both of these interfaces in great detail.
26141
26142By default, @value{GDBN} will start with the console interpreter.
26143However, the user may choose to start @value{GDBN} with another
26144interpreter by specifying the @option{-i} or @option{--interpreter}
26145startup options. Defined interpreters include:
26146
26147@table @code
26148@item console
26149@cindex console interpreter
26150The traditional console or command-line interpreter. This is the most often
26151used interpreter with @value{GDBN}. With no interpreter specified at runtime,
26152@value{GDBN} will use this interpreter.
26153
26154@item mi
26155@cindex mi interpreter
26156The newest @sc{gdb/mi} interface (currently @code{mi2}). Used primarily
26157by programs wishing to use @value{GDBN} as a backend for a debugger GUI
26158or an IDE. For more information, see @ref{GDB/MI, ,The @sc{gdb/mi}
26159Interface}.
26160
26161@item mi2
26162@cindex mi2 interpreter
26163The current @sc{gdb/mi} interface.
26164
26165@item mi1
26166@cindex mi1 interpreter
26167The @sc{gdb/mi} interface included in @value{GDBN} 5.1, 5.2, and 5.3.
26168
26169@end table
26170
26171@cindex invoke another interpreter
26172The interpreter being used by @value{GDBN} may not be dynamically
26173switched at runtime. Although possible, this could lead to a very
26174precarious situation. Consider an IDE using @sc{gdb/mi}. If a user
26175enters the command "interpreter-set console" in a console view,
26176@value{GDBN} would switch to using the console interpreter, rendering
26177the IDE inoperable!
26178
26179@kindex interpreter-exec
26180Although you may only choose a single interpreter at startup, you may execute
26181commands in any interpreter from the current interpreter using the appropriate
26182command. If you are running the console interpreter, simply use the
26183@code{interpreter-exec} command:
26184
26185@smallexample
26186interpreter-exec mi "-data-list-register-names"
26187@end smallexample
26188
26189@sc{gdb/mi} has a similar command, although it is only available in versions of
26190@value{GDBN} which support @sc{gdb/mi} version 2 (or greater).
26191
8e04817f
AC
26192@node TUI
26193@chapter @value{GDBN} Text User Interface
26194@cindex TUI
d0d5df6f 26195@cindex Text User Interface
c906108c 26196
8e04817f
AC
26197@menu
26198* TUI Overview:: TUI overview
26199* TUI Keys:: TUI key bindings
7cf36c78 26200* TUI Single Key Mode:: TUI single key mode
db2e3e2e 26201* TUI Commands:: TUI-specific commands
8e04817f
AC
26202* TUI Configuration:: TUI configuration variables
26203@end menu
c906108c 26204
46ba6afa 26205The @value{GDBN} Text User Interface (TUI) is a terminal
d0d5df6f
AC
26206interface which uses the @code{curses} library to show the source
26207file, the assembly output, the program registers and @value{GDBN}
46ba6afa
BW
26208commands in separate text windows. The TUI mode is supported only
26209on platforms where a suitable version of the @code{curses} library
26210is available.
d0d5df6f 26211
46ba6afa 26212The TUI mode is enabled by default when you invoke @value{GDBN} as
217bff3e 26213@samp{@value{GDBP} -tui}.
46ba6afa
BW
26214You can also switch in and out of TUI mode while @value{GDBN} runs by
26215using various TUI commands and key bindings, such as @kbd{C-x C-a}.
26216@xref{TUI Keys, ,TUI Key Bindings}.
c906108c 26217
8e04817f 26218@node TUI Overview
79a6e687 26219@section TUI Overview
c906108c 26220
46ba6afa 26221In TUI mode, @value{GDBN} can display several text windows:
c906108c 26222
8e04817f
AC
26223@table @emph
26224@item command
26225This window is the @value{GDBN} command window with the @value{GDBN}
46ba6afa
BW
26226prompt and the @value{GDBN} output. The @value{GDBN} input is still
26227managed using readline.
c906108c 26228
8e04817f
AC
26229@item source
26230The source window shows the source file of the program. The current
46ba6afa 26231line and active breakpoints are displayed in this window.
c906108c 26232
8e04817f
AC
26233@item assembly
26234The assembly window shows the disassembly output of the program.
c906108c 26235
8e04817f 26236@item register
46ba6afa
BW
26237This window shows the processor registers. Registers are highlighted
26238when their values change.
c906108c
SS
26239@end table
26240
269c21fe 26241The source and assembly windows show the current program position
46ba6afa
BW
26242by highlighting the current line and marking it with a @samp{>} marker.
26243Breakpoints are indicated with two markers. The first marker
269c21fe
SC
26244indicates the breakpoint type:
26245
26246@table @code
26247@item B
26248Breakpoint which was hit at least once.
26249
26250@item b
26251Breakpoint which was never hit.
26252
26253@item H
26254Hardware breakpoint which was hit at least once.
26255
26256@item h
26257Hardware breakpoint which was never hit.
269c21fe
SC
26258@end table
26259
26260The second marker indicates whether the breakpoint is enabled or not:
26261
26262@table @code
26263@item +
26264Breakpoint is enabled.
26265
26266@item -
26267Breakpoint is disabled.
269c21fe
SC
26268@end table
26269
46ba6afa
BW
26270The source, assembly and register windows are updated when the current
26271thread changes, when the frame changes, or when the program counter
26272changes.
26273
26274These windows are not all visible at the same time. The command
26275window is always visible. The others can be arranged in several
26276layouts:
c906108c 26277
8e04817f
AC
26278@itemize @bullet
26279@item
46ba6afa 26280source only,
2df3850c 26281
8e04817f 26282@item
46ba6afa 26283assembly only,
8e04817f
AC
26284
26285@item
46ba6afa 26286source and assembly,
8e04817f
AC
26287
26288@item
46ba6afa 26289source and registers, or
c906108c 26290
8e04817f 26291@item
46ba6afa 26292assembly and registers.
8e04817f 26293@end itemize
c906108c 26294
46ba6afa 26295A status line above the command window shows the following information:
b7bb15bc
SC
26296
26297@table @emph
26298@item target
46ba6afa 26299Indicates the current @value{GDBN} target.
b7bb15bc
SC
26300(@pxref{Targets, ,Specifying a Debugging Target}).
26301
26302@item process
46ba6afa 26303Gives the current process or thread number.
b7bb15bc
SC
26304When no process is being debugged, this field is set to @code{No process}.
26305
26306@item function
26307Gives the current function name for the selected frame.
26308The name is demangled if demangling is turned on (@pxref{Print Settings}).
46ba6afa 26309When there is no symbol corresponding to the current program counter,
b7bb15bc
SC
26310the string @code{??} is displayed.
26311
26312@item line
26313Indicates the current line number for the selected frame.
46ba6afa 26314When the current line number is not known, the string @code{??} is displayed.
b7bb15bc
SC
26315
26316@item pc
26317Indicates the current program counter address.
b7bb15bc
SC
26318@end table
26319
8e04817f
AC
26320@node TUI Keys
26321@section TUI Key Bindings
26322@cindex TUI key bindings
c906108c 26323
8e04817f 26324The TUI installs several key bindings in the readline keymaps
39037522
TT
26325@ifset SYSTEM_READLINE
26326(@pxref{Command Line Editing, , , rluserman, GNU Readline Library}).
26327@end ifset
26328@ifclear SYSTEM_READLINE
26329(@pxref{Command Line Editing}).
26330@end ifclear
26331The following key bindings are installed for both TUI mode and the
26332@value{GDBN} standard mode.
c906108c 26333
8e04817f
AC
26334@table @kbd
26335@kindex C-x C-a
26336@item C-x C-a
26337@kindex C-x a
26338@itemx C-x a
26339@kindex C-x A
26340@itemx C-x A
46ba6afa
BW
26341Enter or leave the TUI mode. When leaving the TUI mode,
26342the curses window management stops and @value{GDBN} operates using
26343its standard mode, writing on the terminal directly. When reentering
26344the TUI mode, control is given back to the curses windows.
8e04817f 26345The screen is then refreshed.
c906108c 26346
8e04817f
AC
26347@kindex C-x 1
26348@item C-x 1
26349Use a TUI layout with only one window. The layout will
26350either be @samp{source} or @samp{assembly}. When the TUI mode
26351is not active, it will switch to the TUI mode.
2df3850c 26352
8e04817f 26353Think of this key binding as the Emacs @kbd{C-x 1} binding.
c906108c 26354
8e04817f
AC
26355@kindex C-x 2
26356@item C-x 2
26357Use a TUI layout with at least two windows. When the current
46ba6afa 26358layout already has two windows, the next layout with two windows is used.
8e04817f
AC
26359When a new layout is chosen, one window will always be common to the
26360previous layout and the new one.
c906108c 26361
8e04817f 26362Think of it as the Emacs @kbd{C-x 2} binding.
2df3850c 26363
72ffddc9
SC
26364@kindex C-x o
26365@item C-x o
26366Change the active window. The TUI associates several key bindings
46ba6afa 26367(like scrolling and arrow keys) with the active window. This command
72ffddc9
SC
26368gives the focus to the next TUI window.
26369
26370Think of it as the Emacs @kbd{C-x o} binding.
26371
7cf36c78
SC
26372@kindex C-x s
26373@item C-x s
46ba6afa
BW
26374Switch in and out of the TUI SingleKey mode that binds single
26375keys to @value{GDBN} commands (@pxref{TUI Single Key Mode}).
c906108c
SS
26376@end table
26377
46ba6afa 26378The following key bindings only work in the TUI mode:
5d161b24 26379
46ba6afa 26380@table @asis
8e04817f 26381@kindex PgUp
46ba6afa 26382@item @key{PgUp}
8e04817f 26383Scroll the active window one page up.
c906108c 26384
8e04817f 26385@kindex PgDn
46ba6afa 26386@item @key{PgDn}
8e04817f 26387Scroll the active window one page down.
c906108c 26388
8e04817f 26389@kindex Up
46ba6afa 26390@item @key{Up}
8e04817f 26391Scroll the active window one line up.
c906108c 26392
8e04817f 26393@kindex Down
46ba6afa 26394@item @key{Down}
8e04817f 26395Scroll the active window one line down.
c906108c 26396
8e04817f 26397@kindex Left
46ba6afa 26398@item @key{Left}
8e04817f 26399Scroll the active window one column left.
c906108c 26400
8e04817f 26401@kindex Right
46ba6afa 26402@item @key{Right}
8e04817f 26403Scroll the active window one column right.
c906108c 26404
8e04817f 26405@kindex C-L
46ba6afa 26406@item @kbd{C-L}
8e04817f 26407Refresh the screen.
8e04817f 26408@end table
c906108c 26409
46ba6afa
BW
26410Because the arrow keys scroll the active window in the TUI mode, they
26411are not available for their normal use by readline unless the command
26412window has the focus. When another window is active, you must use
26413other readline key bindings such as @kbd{C-p}, @kbd{C-n}, @kbd{C-b}
26414and @kbd{C-f} to control the command window.
8e04817f 26415
7cf36c78
SC
26416@node TUI Single Key Mode
26417@section TUI Single Key Mode
26418@cindex TUI single key mode
26419
46ba6afa
BW
26420The TUI also provides a @dfn{SingleKey} mode, which binds several
26421frequently used @value{GDBN} commands to single keys. Type @kbd{C-x s} to
26422switch into this mode, where the following key bindings are used:
7cf36c78
SC
26423
26424@table @kbd
26425@kindex c @r{(SingleKey TUI key)}
26426@item c
26427continue
26428
26429@kindex d @r{(SingleKey TUI key)}
26430@item d
26431down
26432
26433@kindex f @r{(SingleKey TUI key)}
26434@item f
26435finish
26436
26437@kindex n @r{(SingleKey TUI key)}
26438@item n
26439next
26440
26441@kindex q @r{(SingleKey TUI key)}
26442@item q
46ba6afa 26443exit the SingleKey mode.
7cf36c78
SC
26444
26445@kindex r @r{(SingleKey TUI key)}
26446@item r
26447run
26448
26449@kindex s @r{(SingleKey TUI key)}
26450@item s
26451step
26452
26453@kindex u @r{(SingleKey TUI key)}
26454@item u
26455up
26456
26457@kindex v @r{(SingleKey TUI key)}
26458@item v
26459info locals
26460
26461@kindex w @r{(SingleKey TUI key)}
26462@item w
26463where
7cf36c78
SC
26464@end table
26465
26466Other keys temporarily switch to the @value{GDBN} command prompt.
26467The key that was pressed is inserted in the editing buffer so that
26468it is possible to type most @value{GDBN} commands without interaction
46ba6afa
BW
26469with the TUI SingleKey mode. Once the command is entered the TUI
26470SingleKey mode is restored. The only way to permanently leave
7f9087cb 26471this mode is by typing @kbd{q} or @kbd{C-x s}.
7cf36c78
SC
26472
26473
8e04817f 26474@node TUI Commands
db2e3e2e 26475@section TUI-specific Commands
8e04817f
AC
26476@cindex TUI commands
26477
26478The TUI has specific commands to control the text windows.
46ba6afa
BW
26479These commands are always available, even when @value{GDBN} is not in
26480the TUI mode. When @value{GDBN} is in the standard mode, most
26481of these commands will automatically switch to the TUI mode.
c906108c 26482
ff12863f
PA
26483Note that if @value{GDBN}'s @code{stdout} is not connected to a
26484terminal, or @value{GDBN} has been started with the machine interface
26485interpreter (@pxref{GDB/MI, ,The @sc{gdb/mi} Interface}), most of
26486these commands will fail with an error, because it would not be
26487possible or desirable to enable curses window management.
26488
c906108c 26489@table @code
3d757584
SC
26490@item info win
26491@kindex info win
26492List and give the size of all displayed windows.
26493
8e04817f 26494@item layout next
4644b6e3 26495@kindex layout
8e04817f 26496Display the next layout.
2df3850c 26497
8e04817f 26498@item layout prev
8e04817f 26499Display the previous layout.
c906108c 26500
8e04817f 26501@item layout src
8e04817f 26502Display the source window only.
c906108c 26503
8e04817f 26504@item layout asm
8e04817f 26505Display the assembly window only.
c906108c 26506
8e04817f 26507@item layout split
8e04817f 26508Display the source and assembly window.
c906108c 26509
8e04817f 26510@item layout regs
8e04817f
AC
26511Display the register window together with the source or assembly window.
26512
46ba6afa 26513@item focus next
8e04817f 26514@kindex focus
46ba6afa
BW
26515Make the next window active for scrolling.
26516
26517@item focus prev
26518Make the previous window active for scrolling.
26519
26520@item focus src
26521Make the source window active for scrolling.
26522
26523@item focus asm
26524Make the assembly window active for scrolling.
26525
26526@item focus regs
26527Make the register window active for scrolling.
26528
26529@item focus cmd
26530Make the command window active for scrolling.
c906108c 26531
8e04817f
AC
26532@item refresh
26533@kindex refresh
7f9087cb 26534Refresh the screen. This is similar to typing @kbd{C-L}.
c906108c 26535
6a1b180d
SC
26536@item tui reg float
26537@kindex tui reg
26538Show the floating point registers in the register window.
26539
26540@item tui reg general
26541Show the general registers in the register window.
26542
26543@item tui reg next
26544Show the next register group. The list of register groups as well as
26545their order is target specific. The predefined register groups are the
26546following: @code{general}, @code{float}, @code{system}, @code{vector},
26547@code{all}, @code{save}, @code{restore}.
26548
26549@item tui reg system
26550Show the system registers in the register window.
26551
8e04817f
AC
26552@item update
26553@kindex update
26554Update the source window and the current execution point.
c906108c 26555
8e04817f
AC
26556@item winheight @var{name} +@var{count}
26557@itemx winheight @var{name} -@var{count}
26558@kindex winheight
26559Change the height of the window @var{name} by @var{count}
26560lines. Positive counts increase the height, while negative counts
26561decrease it.
2df3850c 26562
46ba6afa
BW
26563@item tabset @var{nchars}
26564@kindex tabset
c45da7e6 26565Set the width of tab stops to be @var{nchars} characters.
c906108c
SS
26566@end table
26567
8e04817f 26568@node TUI Configuration
79a6e687 26569@section TUI Configuration Variables
8e04817f 26570@cindex TUI configuration variables
c906108c 26571
46ba6afa 26572Several configuration variables control the appearance of TUI windows.
c906108c 26573
8e04817f
AC
26574@table @code
26575@item set tui border-kind @var{kind}
26576@kindex set tui border-kind
26577Select the border appearance for the source, assembly and register windows.
26578The possible values are the following:
26579@table @code
26580@item space
26581Use a space character to draw the border.
c906108c 26582
8e04817f 26583@item ascii
46ba6afa 26584Use @sc{ascii} characters @samp{+}, @samp{-} and @samp{|} to draw the border.
c906108c 26585
8e04817f
AC
26586@item acs
26587Use the Alternate Character Set to draw the border. The border is
26588drawn using character line graphics if the terminal supports them.
8e04817f 26589@end table
c78b4128 26590
8e04817f
AC
26591@item set tui border-mode @var{mode}
26592@kindex set tui border-mode
46ba6afa
BW
26593@itemx set tui active-border-mode @var{mode}
26594@kindex set tui active-border-mode
26595Select the display attributes for the borders of the inactive windows
26596or the active window. The @var{mode} can be one of the following:
8e04817f
AC
26597@table @code
26598@item normal
26599Use normal attributes to display the border.
c906108c 26600
8e04817f
AC
26601@item standout
26602Use standout mode.
c906108c 26603
8e04817f
AC
26604@item reverse
26605Use reverse video mode.
c906108c 26606
8e04817f
AC
26607@item half
26608Use half bright mode.
c906108c 26609
8e04817f
AC
26610@item half-standout
26611Use half bright and standout mode.
c906108c 26612
8e04817f
AC
26613@item bold
26614Use extra bright or bold mode.
c78b4128 26615
8e04817f
AC
26616@item bold-standout
26617Use extra bright or bold and standout mode.
8e04817f 26618@end table
8e04817f 26619@end table
c78b4128 26620
8e04817f
AC
26621@node Emacs
26622@chapter Using @value{GDBN} under @sc{gnu} Emacs
c78b4128 26623
8e04817f
AC
26624@cindex Emacs
26625@cindex @sc{gnu} Emacs
26626A special interface allows you to use @sc{gnu} Emacs to view (and
26627edit) the source files for the program you are debugging with
26628@value{GDBN}.
c906108c 26629
8e04817f
AC
26630To use this interface, use the command @kbd{M-x gdb} in Emacs. Give the
26631executable file you want to debug as an argument. This command starts
26632@value{GDBN} as a subprocess of Emacs, with input and output through a newly
26633created Emacs buffer.
26634@c (Do not use the @code{-tui} option to run @value{GDBN} from Emacs.)
c906108c 26635
5e252a2e 26636Running @value{GDBN} under Emacs can be just like running @value{GDBN} normally except for two
8e04817f 26637things:
c906108c 26638
8e04817f
AC
26639@itemize @bullet
26640@item
5e252a2e
NR
26641All ``terminal'' input and output goes through an Emacs buffer, called
26642the GUD buffer.
c906108c 26643
8e04817f
AC
26644This applies both to @value{GDBN} commands and their output, and to the input
26645and output done by the program you are debugging.
bf0184be 26646
8e04817f
AC
26647This is useful because it means that you can copy the text of previous
26648commands and input them again; you can even use parts of the output
26649in this way.
bf0184be 26650
8e04817f
AC
26651All the facilities of Emacs' Shell mode are available for interacting
26652with your program. In particular, you can send signals the usual
26653way---for example, @kbd{C-c C-c} for an interrupt, @kbd{C-c C-z} for a
26654stop.
bf0184be
ND
26655
26656@item
8e04817f 26657@value{GDBN} displays source code through Emacs.
bf0184be 26658
8e04817f
AC
26659Each time @value{GDBN} displays a stack frame, Emacs automatically finds the
26660source file for that frame and puts an arrow (@samp{=>}) at the
26661left margin of the current line. Emacs uses a separate buffer for
26662source display, and splits the screen to show both your @value{GDBN} session
26663and the source.
bf0184be 26664
8e04817f
AC
26665Explicit @value{GDBN} @code{list} or search commands still produce output as
26666usual, but you probably have no reason to use them from Emacs.
5e252a2e
NR
26667@end itemize
26668
26669We call this @dfn{text command mode}. Emacs 22.1, and later, also uses
26670a graphical mode, enabled by default, which provides further buffers
26671that can control the execution and describe the state of your program.
26672@xref{GDB Graphical Interface,,, Emacs, The @sc{gnu} Emacs Manual}.
c906108c 26673
64fabec2
AC
26674If you specify an absolute file name when prompted for the @kbd{M-x
26675gdb} argument, then Emacs sets your current working directory to where
26676your program resides. If you only specify the file name, then Emacs
7a9dd1b2 26677sets your current working directory to the directory associated
64fabec2
AC
26678with the previous buffer. In this case, @value{GDBN} may find your
26679program by searching your environment's @code{PATH} variable, but on
26680some operating systems it might not find the source. So, although the
26681@value{GDBN} input and output session proceeds normally, the auxiliary
26682buffer does not display the current source and line of execution.
26683
26684The initial working directory of @value{GDBN} is printed on the top
5e252a2e
NR
26685line of the GUD buffer and this serves as a default for the commands
26686that specify files for @value{GDBN} to operate on. @xref{Files,
26687,Commands to Specify Files}.
64fabec2
AC
26688
26689By default, @kbd{M-x gdb} calls the program called @file{gdb}. If you
26690need to call @value{GDBN} by a different name (for example, if you
26691keep several configurations around, with different names) you can
26692customize the Emacs variable @code{gud-gdb-command-name} to run the
26693one you want.
8e04817f 26694
5e252a2e 26695In the GUD buffer, you can use these special Emacs commands in
8e04817f 26696addition to the standard Shell mode commands:
c906108c 26697
8e04817f
AC
26698@table @kbd
26699@item C-h m
5e252a2e 26700Describe the features of Emacs' GUD Mode.
c906108c 26701
64fabec2 26702@item C-c C-s
8e04817f
AC
26703Execute to another source line, like the @value{GDBN} @code{step} command; also
26704update the display window to show the current file and location.
c906108c 26705
64fabec2 26706@item C-c C-n
8e04817f
AC
26707Execute to next source line in this function, skipping all function
26708calls, like the @value{GDBN} @code{next} command. Then update the display window
26709to show the current file and location.
c906108c 26710
64fabec2 26711@item C-c C-i
8e04817f
AC
26712Execute one instruction, like the @value{GDBN} @code{stepi} command; update
26713display window accordingly.
c906108c 26714
8e04817f
AC
26715@item C-c C-f
26716Execute until exit from the selected stack frame, like the @value{GDBN}
26717@code{finish} command.
c906108c 26718
64fabec2 26719@item C-c C-r
8e04817f
AC
26720Continue execution of your program, like the @value{GDBN} @code{continue}
26721command.
b433d00b 26722
64fabec2 26723@item C-c <
8e04817f
AC
26724Go up the number of frames indicated by the numeric argument
26725(@pxref{Arguments, , Numeric Arguments, Emacs, The @sc{gnu} Emacs Manual}),
26726like the @value{GDBN} @code{up} command.
b433d00b 26727
64fabec2 26728@item C-c >
8e04817f
AC
26729Go down the number of frames indicated by the numeric argument, like the
26730@value{GDBN} @code{down} command.
8e04817f 26731@end table
c906108c 26732
7f9087cb 26733In any source file, the Emacs command @kbd{C-x @key{SPC}} (@code{gud-break})
8e04817f 26734tells @value{GDBN} to set a breakpoint on the source line point is on.
c906108c 26735
5e252a2e
NR
26736In text command mode, if you type @kbd{M-x speedbar}, Emacs displays a
26737separate frame which shows a backtrace when the GUD buffer is current.
26738Move point to any frame in the stack and type @key{RET} to make it
26739become the current frame and display the associated source in the
26740source buffer. Alternatively, click @kbd{Mouse-2} to make the
26741selected frame become the current one. In graphical mode, the
26742speedbar displays watch expressions.
64fabec2 26743
8e04817f
AC
26744If you accidentally delete the source-display buffer, an easy way to get
26745it back is to type the command @code{f} in the @value{GDBN} buffer, to
26746request a frame display; when you run under Emacs, this recreates
26747the source buffer if necessary to show you the context of the current
26748frame.
c906108c 26749
8e04817f
AC
26750The source files displayed in Emacs are in ordinary Emacs buffers
26751which are visiting the source files in the usual way. You can edit
26752the files with these buffers if you wish; but keep in mind that @value{GDBN}
26753communicates with Emacs in terms of line numbers. If you add or
26754delete lines from the text, the line numbers that @value{GDBN} knows cease
26755to correspond properly with the code.
b383017d 26756
5e252a2e
NR
26757A more detailed description of Emacs' interaction with @value{GDBN} is
26758given in the Emacs manual (@pxref{Debuggers,,, Emacs, The @sc{gnu}
26759Emacs Manual}).
c906108c 26760
8e04817f
AC
26761@c The following dropped because Epoch is nonstandard. Reactivate
26762@c if/when v19 does something similar. ---doc@cygnus.com 19dec1990
26763@ignore
26764@kindex Emacs Epoch environment
26765@kindex Epoch
26766@kindex inspect
c906108c 26767
8e04817f
AC
26768Version 18 of @sc{gnu} Emacs has a built-in window system
26769called the @code{epoch}
26770environment. Users of this environment can use a new command,
26771@code{inspect} which performs identically to @code{print} except that
26772each value is printed in its own window.
26773@end ignore
c906108c 26774
922fbb7b
AC
26775
26776@node GDB/MI
26777@chapter The @sc{gdb/mi} Interface
26778
26779@unnumberedsec Function and Purpose
26780
26781@cindex @sc{gdb/mi}, its purpose
6b5e8c01
NR
26782@sc{gdb/mi} is a line based machine oriented text interface to
26783@value{GDBN} and is activated by specifying using the
26784@option{--interpreter} command line option (@pxref{Mode Options}). It
26785is specifically intended to support the development of systems which
26786use the debugger as just one small component of a larger system.
922fbb7b
AC
26787
26788This chapter is a specification of the @sc{gdb/mi} interface. It is written
26789in the form of a reference manual.
26790
26791Note that @sc{gdb/mi} is still under construction, so some of the
af6eff6f
NR
26792features described below are incomplete and subject to change
26793(@pxref{GDB/MI Development and Front Ends, , @sc{gdb/mi} Development and Front Ends}).
922fbb7b
AC
26794
26795@unnumberedsec Notation and Terminology
26796
26797@cindex notational conventions, for @sc{gdb/mi}
26798This chapter uses the following notation:
26799
26800@itemize @bullet
26801@item
26802@code{|} separates two alternatives.
26803
26804@item
26805@code{[ @var{something} ]} indicates that @var{something} is optional:
26806it may or may not be given.
26807
26808@item
26809@code{( @var{group} )*} means that @var{group} inside the parentheses
26810may repeat zero or more times.
26811
26812@item
26813@code{( @var{group} )+} means that @var{group} inside the parentheses
26814may repeat one or more times.
26815
26816@item
26817@code{"@var{string}"} means a literal @var{string}.
26818@end itemize
26819
26820@ignore
26821@heading Dependencies
26822@end ignore
26823
922fbb7b 26824@menu
c3b108f7 26825* GDB/MI General Design::
922fbb7b
AC
26826* GDB/MI Command Syntax::
26827* GDB/MI Compatibility with CLI::
af6eff6f 26828* GDB/MI Development and Front Ends::
922fbb7b 26829* GDB/MI Output Records::
ef21caaf 26830* GDB/MI Simple Examples::
922fbb7b 26831* GDB/MI Command Description Format::
ef21caaf 26832* GDB/MI Breakpoint Commands::
a2c02241
NR
26833* GDB/MI Program Context::
26834* GDB/MI Thread Commands::
5d77fe44 26835* GDB/MI Ada Tasking Commands::
a2c02241
NR
26836* GDB/MI Program Execution::
26837* GDB/MI Stack Manipulation::
26838* GDB/MI Variable Objects::
922fbb7b 26839* GDB/MI Data Manipulation::
a2c02241
NR
26840* GDB/MI Tracepoint Commands::
26841* GDB/MI Symbol Query::
351ff01a 26842* GDB/MI File Commands::
922fbb7b
AC
26843@ignore
26844* GDB/MI Kod Commands::
26845* GDB/MI Memory Overlay Commands::
26846* GDB/MI Signal Handling Commands::
26847@end ignore
922fbb7b 26848* GDB/MI Target Manipulation::
a6b151f1 26849* GDB/MI File Transfer Commands::
ef21caaf 26850* GDB/MI Miscellaneous Commands::
922fbb7b
AC
26851@end menu
26852
c3b108f7
VP
26853@c %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% SECTION %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
26854@node GDB/MI General Design
26855@section @sc{gdb/mi} General Design
26856@cindex GDB/MI General Design
26857
26858Interaction of a @sc{GDB/MI} frontend with @value{GDBN} involves three
26859parts---commands sent to @value{GDBN}, responses to those commands
26860and notifications. Each command results in exactly one response,
26861indicating either successful completion of the command, or an error.
26862For the commands that do not resume the target, the response contains the
26863requested information. For the commands that resume the target, the
26864response only indicates whether the target was successfully resumed.
26865Notifications is the mechanism for reporting changes in the state of the
26866target, or in @value{GDBN} state, that cannot conveniently be associated with
26867a command and reported as part of that command response.
26868
26869The important examples of notifications are:
26870@itemize @bullet
26871
26872@item
26873Exec notifications. These are used to report changes in
26874target state---when a target is resumed, or stopped. It would not
26875be feasible to include this information in response of resuming
26876commands, because one resume commands can result in multiple events in
26877different threads. Also, quite some time may pass before any event
26878happens in the target, while a frontend needs to know whether the resuming
26879command itself was successfully executed.
26880
26881@item
26882Console output, and status notifications. Console output
26883notifications are used to report output of CLI commands, as well as
26884diagnostics for other commands. Status notifications are used to
26885report the progress of a long-running operation. Naturally, including
26886this information in command response would mean no output is produced
26887until the command is finished, which is undesirable.
26888
26889@item
26890General notifications. Commands may have various side effects on
26891the @value{GDBN} or target state beyond their official purpose. For example,
26892a command may change the selected thread. Although such changes can
26893be included in command response, using notification allows for more
26894orthogonal frontend design.
26895
26896@end itemize
26897
26898There's no guarantee that whenever an MI command reports an error,
26899@value{GDBN} or the target are in any specific state, and especially,
26900the state is not reverted to the state before the MI command was
26901processed. Therefore, whenever an MI command results in an error,
26902we recommend that the frontend refreshes all the information shown in
26903the user interface.
26904
508094de
NR
26905
26906@menu
26907* Context management::
26908* Asynchronous and non-stop modes::
26909* Thread groups::
26910@end menu
26911
26912@node Context management
c3b108f7
VP
26913@subsection Context management
26914
26915In most cases when @value{GDBN} accesses the target, this access is
26916done in context of a specific thread and frame (@pxref{Frames}).
26917Often, even when accessing global data, the target requires that a thread
26918be specified. The CLI interface maintains the selected thread and frame,
26919and supplies them to target on each command. This is convenient,
26920because a command line user would not want to specify that information
26921explicitly on each command, and because user interacts with
26922@value{GDBN} via a single terminal, so no confusion is possible as
26923to what thread and frame are the current ones.
26924
26925In the case of MI, the concept of selected thread and frame is less
26926useful. First, a frontend can easily remember this information
26927itself. Second, a graphical frontend can have more than one window,
26928each one used for debugging a different thread, and the frontend might
26929want to access additional threads for internal purposes. This
26930increases the risk that by relying on implicitly selected thread, the
26931frontend may be operating on a wrong one. Therefore, each MI command
26932should explicitly specify which thread and frame to operate on. To
26933make it possible, each MI command accepts the @samp{--thread} and
26934@samp{--frame} options, the value to each is @value{GDBN} identifier
26935for thread and frame to operate on.
26936
26937Usually, each top-level window in a frontend allows the user to select
26938a thread and a frame, and remembers the user selection for further
26939operations. However, in some cases @value{GDBN} may suggest that the
26940current thread be changed. For example, when stopping on a breakpoint
26941it is reasonable to switch to the thread where breakpoint is hit. For
26942another example, if the user issues the CLI @samp{thread} command via
26943the frontend, it is desirable to change the frontend's selected thread to the
26944one specified by user. @value{GDBN} communicates the suggestion to
26945change current thread using the @samp{=thread-selected} notification.
26946No such notification is available for the selected frame at the moment.
26947
26948Note that historically, MI shares the selected thread with CLI, so
26949frontends used the @code{-thread-select} to execute commands in the
26950right context. However, getting this to work right is cumbersome. The
26951simplest way is for frontend to emit @code{-thread-select} command
26952before every command. This doubles the number of commands that need
26953to be sent. The alternative approach is to suppress @code{-thread-select}
26954if the selected thread in @value{GDBN} is supposed to be identical to the
26955thread the frontend wants to operate on. However, getting this
26956optimization right can be tricky. In particular, if the frontend
26957sends several commands to @value{GDBN}, and one of the commands changes the
26958selected thread, then the behaviour of subsequent commands will
26959change. So, a frontend should either wait for response from such
26960problematic commands, or explicitly add @code{-thread-select} for
26961all subsequent commands. No frontend is known to do this exactly
26962right, so it is suggested to just always pass the @samp{--thread} and
26963@samp{--frame} options.
26964
508094de 26965@node Asynchronous and non-stop modes
c3b108f7
VP
26966@subsection Asynchronous command execution and non-stop mode
26967
26968On some targets, @value{GDBN} is capable of processing MI commands
26969even while the target is running. This is called @dfn{asynchronous
26970command execution} (@pxref{Background Execution}). The frontend may
26971specify a preferrence for asynchronous execution using the
26972@code{-gdb-set target-async 1} command, which should be emitted before
26973either running the executable or attaching to the target. After the
26974frontend has started the executable or attached to the target, it can
26975find if asynchronous execution is enabled using the
26976@code{-list-target-features} command.
26977
26978Even if @value{GDBN} can accept a command while target is running,
26979many commands that access the target do not work when the target is
26980running. Therefore, asynchronous command execution is most useful
26981when combined with non-stop mode (@pxref{Non-Stop Mode}). Then,
26982it is possible to examine the state of one thread, while other threads
26983are running.
26984
26985When a given thread is running, MI commands that try to access the
26986target in the context of that thread may not work, or may work only on
26987some targets. In particular, commands that try to operate on thread's
26988stack will not work, on any target. Commands that read memory, or
26989modify breakpoints, may work or not work, depending on the target. Note
26990that even commands that operate on global state, such as @code{print},
26991@code{set}, and breakpoint commands, still access the target in the
26992context of a specific thread, so frontend should try to find a
26993stopped thread and perform the operation on that thread (using the
26994@samp{--thread} option).
26995
26996Which commands will work in the context of a running thread is
26997highly target dependent. However, the two commands
26998@code{-exec-interrupt}, to stop a thread, and @code{-thread-info},
26999to find the state of a thread, will always work.
27000
508094de 27001@node Thread groups
c3b108f7
VP
27002@subsection Thread groups
27003@value{GDBN} may be used to debug several processes at the same time.
27004On some platfroms, @value{GDBN} may support debugging of several
27005hardware systems, each one having several cores with several different
27006processes running on each core. This section describes the MI
27007mechanism to support such debugging scenarios.
27008
27009The key observation is that regardless of the structure of the
27010target, MI can have a global list of threads, because most commands that
27011accept the @samp{--thread} option do not need to know what process that
27012thread belongs to. Therefore, it is not necessary to introduce
27013neither additional @samp{--process} option, nor an notion of the
27014current process in the MI interface. The only strictly new feature
27015that is required is the ability to find how the threads are grouped
27016into processes.
27017
27018To allow the user to discover such grouping, and to support arbitrary
27019hierarchy of machines/cores/processes, MI introduces the concept of a
27020@dfn{thread group}. Thread group is a collection of threads and other
27021thread groups. A thread group always has a string identifier, a type,
27022and may have additional attributes specific to the type. A new
27023command, @code{-list-thread-groups}, returns the list of top-level
27024thread groups, which correspond to processes that @value{GDBN} is
27025debugging at the moment. By passing an identifier of a thread group
27026to the @code{-list-thread-groups} command, it is possible to obtain
27027the members of specific thread group.
27028
27029To allow the user to easily discover processes, and other objects, he
27030wishes to debug, a concept of @dfn{available thread group} is
27031introduced. Available thread group is an thread group that
27032@value{GDBN} is not debugging, but that can be attached to, using the
27033@code{-target-attach} command. The list of available top-level thread
27034groups can be obtained using @samp{-list-thread-groups --available}.
27035In general, the content of a thread group may be only retrieved only
27036after attaching to that thread group.
27037
a79b8f6e
VP
27038Thread groups are related to inferiors (@pxref{Inferiors and
27039Programs}). Each inferior corresponds to a thread group of a special
27040type @samp{process}, and some additional operations are permitted on
27041such thread groups.
27042
922fbb7b
AC
27043@c %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% SECTION %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
27044@node GDB/MI Command Syntax
27045@section @sc{gdb/mi} Command Syntax
27046
27047@menu
27048* GDB/MI Input Syntax::
27049* GDB/MI Output Syntax::
922fbb7b
AC
27050@end menu
27051
27052@node GDB/MI Input Syntax
27053@subsection @sc{gdb/mi} Input Syntax
27054
27055@cindex input syntax for @sc{gdb/mi}
27056@cindex @sc{gdb/mi}, input syntax
27057@table @code
27058@item @var{command} @expansion{}
27059@code{@var{cli-command} | @var{mi-command}}
27060
27061@item @var{cli-command} @expansion{}
27062@code{[ @var{token} ] @var{cli-command} @var{nl}}, where
27063@var{cli-command} is any existing @value{GDBN} CLI command.
27064
27065@item @var{mi-command} @expansion{}
27066@code{[ @var{token} ] "-" @var{operation} ( " " @var{option} )*
27067@code{[} " --" @code{]} ( " " @var{parameter} )* @var{nl}}
27068
27069@item @var{token} @expansion{}
27070"any sequence of digits"
27071
27072@item @var{option} @expansion{}
27073@code{"-" @var{parameter} [ " " @var{parameter} ]}
27074
27075@item @var{parameter} @expansion{}
27076@code{@var{non-blank-sequence} | @var{c-string}}
27077
27078@item @var{operation} @expansion{}
27079@emph{any of the operations described in this chapter}
27080
27081@item @var{non-blank-sequence} @expansion{}
27082@emph{anything, provided it doesn't contain special characters such as
27083"-", @var{nl}, """ and of course " "}
27084
27085@item @var{c-string} @expansion{}
27086@code{""" @var{seven-bit-iso-c-string-content} """}
27087
27088@item @var{nl} @expansion{}
27089@code{CR | CR-LF}
27090@end table
27091
27092@noindent
27093Notes:
27094
27095@itemize @bullet
27096@item
27097The CLI commands are still handled by the @sc{mi} interpreter; their
27098output is described below.
27099
27100@item
27101The @code{@var{token}}, when present, is passed back when the command
27102finishes.
27103
27104@item
27105Some @sc{mi} commands accept optional arguments as part of the parameter
27106list. Each option is identified by a leading @samp{-} (dash) and may be
27107followed by an optional argument parameter. Options occur first in the
27108parameter list and can be delimited from normal parameters using
27109@samp{--} (this is useful when some parameters begin with a dash).
27110@end itemize
27111
27112Pragmatics:
27113
27114@itemize @bullet
27115@item
27116We want easy access to the existing CLI syntax (for debugging).
27117
27118@item
27119We want it to be easy to spot a @sc{mi} operation.
27120@end itemize
27121
27122@node GDB/MI Output Syntax
27123@subsection @sc{gdb/mi} Output Syntax
27124
27125@cindex output syntax of @sc{gdb/mi}
27126@cindex @sc{gdb/mi}, output syntax
27127The output from @sc{gdb/mi} consists of zero or more out-of-band records
27128followed, optionally, by a single result record. This result record
27129is for the most recent command. The sequence of output records is
594fe323 27130terminated by @samp{(gdb)}.
922fbb7b
AC
27131
27132If an input command was prefixed with a @code{@var{token}} then the
27133corresponding output for that command will also be prefixed by that same
27134@var{token}.
27135
27136@table @code
27137@item @var{output} @expansion{}
594fe323 27138@code{( @var{out-of-band-record} )* [ @var{result-record} ] "(gdb)" @var{nl}}
922fbb7b
AC
27139
27140@item @var{result-record} @expansion{}
27141@code{ [ @var{token} ] "^" @var{result-class} ( "," @var{result} )* @var{nl}}
27142
27143@item @var{out-of-band-record} @expansion{}
27144@code{@var{async-record} | @var{stream-record}}
27145
27146@item @var{async-record} @expansion{}
27147@code{@var{exec-async-output} | @var{status-async-output} | @var{notify-async-output}}
27148
27149@item @var{exec-async-output} @expansion{}
27150@code{[ @var{token} ] "*" @var{async-output}}
27151
27152@item @var{status-async-output} @expansion{}
27153@code{[ @var{token} ] "+" @var{async-output}}
27154
27155@item @var{notify-async-output} @expansion{}
27156@code{[ @var{token} ] "=" @var{async-output}}
27157
27158@item @var{async-output} @expansion{}
27159@code{@var{async-class} ( "," @var{result} )* @var{nl}}
27160
27161@item @var{result-class} @expansion{}
27162@code{"done" | "running" | "connected" | "error" | "exit"}
27163
27164@item @var{async-class} @expansion{}
27165@code{"stopped" | @var{others}} (where @var{others} will be added
27166depending on the needs---this is still in development).
27167
27168@item @var{result} @expansion{}
27169@code{ @var{variable} "=" @var{value}}
27170
27171@item @var{variable} @expansion{}
27172@code{ @var{string} }
27173
27174@item @var{value} @expansion{}
27175@code{ @var{const} | @var{tuple} | @var{list} }
27176
27177@item @var{const} @expansion{}
27178@code{@var{c-string}}
27179
27180@item @var{tuple} @expansion{}
27181@code{ "@{@}" | "@{" @var{result} ( "," @var{result} )* "@}" }
27182
27183@item @var{list} @expansion{}
27184@code{ "[]" | "[" @var{value} ( "," @var{value} )* "]" | "["
27185@var{result} ( "," @var{result} )* "]" }
27186
27187@item @var{stream-record} @expansion{}
27188@code{@var{console-stream-output} | @var{target-stream-output} | @var{log-stream-output}}
27189
27190@item @var{console-stream-output} @expansion{}
27191@code{"~" @var{c-string}}
27192
27193@item @var{target-stream-output} @expansion{}
27194@code{"@@" @var{c-string}}
27195
27196@item @var{log-stream-output} @expansion{}
27197@code{"&" @var{c-string}}
27198
27199@item @var{nl} @expansion{}
27200@code{CR | CR-LF}
27201
27202@item @var{token} @expansion{}
27203@emph{any sequence of digits}.
27204@end table
27205
27206@noindent
27207Notes:
27208
27209@itemize @bullet
27210@item
27211All output sequences end in a single line containing a period.
27212
27213@item
721c02de
VP
27214The @code{@var{token}} is from the corresponding request. Note that
27215for all async output, while the token is allowed by the grammar and
27216may be output by future versions of @value{GDBN} for select async
27217output messages, it is generally omitted. Frontends should treat
27218all async output as reporting general changes in the state of the
27219target and there should be no need to associate async output to any
27220prior command.
922fbb7b
AC
27221
27222@item
27223@cindex status output in @sc{gdb/mi}
27224@var{status-async-output} contains on-going status information about the
27225progress of a slow operation. It can be discarded. All status output is
27226prefixed by @samp{+}.
27227
27228@item
27229@cindex async output in @sc{gdb/mi}
27230@var{exec-async-output} contains asynchronous state change on the target
27231(stopped, started, disappeared). All async output is prefixed by
27232@samp{*}.
27233
27234@item
27235@cindex notify output in @sc{gdb/mi}
27236@var{notify-async-output} contains supplementary information that the
27237client should handle (e.g., a new breakpoint information). All notify
27238output is prefixed by @samp{=}.
27239
27240@item
27241@cindex console output in @sc{gdb/mi}
27242@var{console-stream-output} is output that should be displayed as is in the
27243console. It is the textual response to a CLI command. All the console
27244output is prefixed by @samp{~}.
27245
27246@item
27247@cindex target output in @sc{gdb/mi}
27248@var{target-stream-output} is the output produced by the target program.
27249All the target output is prefixed by @samp{@@}.
27250
27251@item
27252@cindex log output in @sc{gdb/mi}
27253@var{log-stream-output} is output text coming from @value{GDBN}'s internals, for
27254instance messages that should be displayed as part of an error log. All
27255the log output is prefixed by @samp{&}.
27256
27257@item
27258@cindex list output in @sc{gdb/mi}
27259New @sc{gdb/mi} commands should only output @var{lists} containing
27260@var{values}.
27261
27262
27263@end itemize
27264
27265@xref{GDB/MI Stream Records, , @sc{gdb/mi} Stream Records}, for more
27266details about the various output records.
27267
922fbb7b
AC
27268@c %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% SECTION %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
27269@node GDB/MI Compatibility with CLI
27270@section @sc{gdb/mi} Compatibility with CLI
27271
27272@cindex compatibility, @sc{gdb/mi} and CLI
27273@cindex @sc{gdb/mi}, compatibility with CLI
922fbb7b 27274
a2c02241
NR
27275For the developers convenience CLI commands can be entered directly,
27276but there may be some unexpected behaviour. For example, commands
27277that query the user will behave as if the user replied yes, breakpoint
27278command lists are not executed and some CLI commands, such as
27279@code{if}, @code{when} and @code{define}, prompt for further input with
27280@samp{>}, which is not valid MI output.
ef21caaf
NR
27281
27282This feature may be removed at some stage in the future and it is
a2c02241
NR
27283recommended that front ends use the @code{-interpreter-exec} command
27284(@pxref{-interpreter-exec}).
922fbb7b 27285
af6eff6f
NR
27286@c %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% SECTION %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
27287@node GDB/MI Development and Front Ends
27288@section @sc{gdb/mi} Development and Front Ends
27289@cindex @sc{gdb/mi} development
27290
27291The application which takes the MI output and presents the state of the
27292program being debugged to the user is called a @dfn{front end}.
27293
27294Although @sc{gdb/mi} is still incomplete, it is currently being used
27295by a variety of front ends to @value{GDBN}. This makes it difficult
27296to introduce new functionality without breaking existing usage. This
27297section tries to minimize the problems by describing how the protocol
27298might change.
27299
27300Some changes in MI need not break a carefully designed front end, and
27301for these the MI version will remain unchanged. The following is a
27302list of changes that may occur within one level, so front ends should
27303parse MI output in a way that can handle them:
27304
27305@itemize @bullet
27306@item
27307New MI commands may be added.
27308
27309@item
27310New fields may be added to the output of any MI command.
27311
36ece8b3
NR
27312@item
27313The range of values for fields with specified values, e.g.,
9f708cb2 27314@code{in_scope} (@pxref{-var-update}) may be extended.
36ece8b3 27315
af6eff6f
NR
27316@c The format of field's content e.g type prefix, may change so parse it
27317@c at your own risk. Yes, in general?
27318
27319@c The order of fields may change? Shouldn't really matter but it might
27320@c resolve inconsistencies.
27321@end itemize
27322
27323If the changes are likely to break front ends, the MI version level
27324will be increased by one. This will allow the front end to parse the
27325output according to the MI version. Apart from mi0, new versions of
27326@value{GDBN} will not support old versions of MI and it will be the
27327responsibility of the front end to work with the new one.
27328
27329@c Starting with mi3, add a new command -mi-version that prints the MI
27330@c version?
27331
27332The best way to avoid unexpected changes in MI that might break your front
27333end is to make your project known to @value{GDBN} developers and
7a9a6b69 27334follow development on @email{gdb@@sourceware.org} and
fa0f268d 27335@email{gdb-patches@@sourceware.org}.
af6eff6f
NR
27336@cindex mailing lists
27337
922fbb7b
AC
27338@c %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% SECTION %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
27339@node GDB/MI Output Records
27340@section @sc{gdb/mi} Output Records
27341
27342@menu
27343* GDB/MI Result Records::
27344* GDB/MI Stream Records::
82f68b1c 27345* GDB/MI Async Records::
c3b108f7 27346* GDB/MI Frame Information::
dc146f7c 27347* GDB/MI Thread Information::
4368ebeb 27348* GDB/MI Ada Exception Information::
922fbb7b
AC
27349@end menu
27350
27351@node GDB/MI Result Records
27352@subsection @sc{gdb/mi} Result Records
27353
27354@cindex result records in @sc{gdb/mi}
27355@cindex @sc{gdb/mi}, result records
27356In addition to a number of out-of-band notifications, the response to a
27357@sc{gdb/mi} command includes one of the following result indications:
27358
27359@table @code
27360@findex ^done
27361@item "^done" [ "," @var{results} ]
27362The synchronous operation was successful, @code{@var{results}} are the return
27363values.
27364
27365@item "^running"
27366@findex ^running
8e9c5e02
VP
27367This result record is equivalent to @samp{^done}. Historically, it
27368was output instead of @samp{^done} if the command has resumed the
27369target. This behaviour is maintained for backward compatibility, but
27370all frontends should treat @samp{^done} and @samp{^running}
27371identically and rely on the @samp{*running} output record to determine
27372which threads are resumed.
922fbb7b 27373
ef21caaf
NR
27374@item "^connected"
27375@findex ^connected
3f94c067 27376@value{GDBN} has connected to a remote target.
ef21caaf 27377
922fbb7b
AC
27378@item "^error" "," @var{c-string}
27379@findex ^error
27380The operation failed. The @code{@var{c-string}} contains the corresponding
27381error message.
ef21caaf
NR
27382
27383@item "^exit"
27384@findex ^exit
3f94c067 27385@value{GDBN} has terminated.
ef21caaf 27386
922fbb7b
AC
27387@end table
27388
27389@node GDB/MI Stream Records
27390@subsection @sc{gdb/mi} Stream Records
27391
27392@cindex @sc{gdb/mi}, stream records
27393@cindex stream records in @sc{gdb/mi}
27394@value{GDBN} internally maintains a number of output streams: the console, the
27395target, and the log. The output intended for each of these streams is
27396funneled through the @sc{gdb/mi} interface using @dfn{stream records}.
27397
27398Each stream record begins with a unique @dfn{prefix character} which
27399identifies its stream (@pxref{GDB/MI Output Syntax, , @sc{gdb/mi} Output
27400Syntax}). In addition to the prefix, each stream record contains a
27401@code{@var{string-output}}. This is either raw text (with an implicit new
27402line) or a quoted C string (which does not contain an implicit newline).
27403
27404@table @code
27405@item "~" @var{string-output}
27406The console output stream contains text that should be displayed in the
27407CLI console window. It contains the textual responses to CLI commands.
27408
27409@item "@@" @var{string-output}
27410The target output stream contains any textual output from the running
ef21caaf
NR
27411target. This is only present when GDB's event loop is truly
27412asynchronous, which is currently only the case for remote targets.
922fbb7b
AC
27413
27414@item "&" @var{string-output}
27415The log stream contains debugging messages being produced by @value{GDBN}'s
27416internals.
27417@end table
27418
82f68b1c
VP
27419@node GDB/MI Async Records
27420@subsection @sc{gdb/mi} Async Records
922fbb7b 27421
82f68b1c
VP
27422@cindex async records in @sc{gdb/mi}
27423@cindex @sc{gdb/mi}, async records
27424@dfn{Async} records are used to notify the @sc{gdb/mi} client of
922fbb7b 27425additional changes that have occurred. Those changes can either be a
82f68b1c 27426consequence of @sc{gdb/mi} commands (e.g., a breakpoint modified) or a result of
922fbb7b
AC
27427target activity (e.g., target stopped).
27428
8eb41542 27429The following is the list of possible async records:
922fbb7b
AC
27430
27431@table @code
034dad6f 27432
e1ac3328
VP
27433@item *running,thread-id="@var{thread}"
27434The target is now running. The @var{thread} field tells which
27435specific thread is now running, and can be @samp{all} if all threads
27436are running. The frontend should assume that no interaction with a
27437running thread is possible after this notification is produced.
27438The frontend should not assume that this notification is output
27439only once for any command. @value{GDBN} may emit this notification
27440several times, either for different threads, because it cannot resume
27441all threads together, or even for a single thread, if the thread must
27442be stepped though some code before letting it run freely.
27443
dc146f7c 27444@item *stopped,reason="@var{reason}",thread-id="@var{id}",stopped-threads="@var{stopped}",core="@var{core}"
82f68b1c
VP
27445The target has stopped. The @var{reason} field can have one of the
27446following values:
034dad6f
BR
27447
27448@table @code
27449@item breakpoint-hit
27450A breakpoint was reached.
27451@item watchpoint-trigger
27452A watchpoint was triggered.
27453@item read-watchpoint-trigger
27454A read watchpoint was triggered.
27455@item access-watchpoint-trigger
27456An access watchpoint was triggered.
27457@item function-finished
27458An -exec-finish or similar CLI command was accomplished.
27459@item location-reached
27460An -exec-until or similar CLI command was accomplished.
27461@item watchpoint-scope
27462A watchpoint has gone out of scope.
27463@item end-stepping-range
27464An -exec-next, -exec-next-instruction, -exec-step, -exec-step-instruction or
27465similar CLI command was accomplished.
27466@item exited-signalled
27467The inferior exited because of a signal.
27468@item exited
27469The inferior exited.
27470@item exited-normally
27471The inferior exited normally.
27472@item signal-received
27473A signal was received by the inferior.
36dfb11c
TT
27474@item solib-event
27475The inferior has stopped due to a library being loaded or unloaded.
edcc5120
TT
27476This can happen when @code{stop-on-solib-events} (@pxref{Files}) is
27477set or when a @code{catch load} or @code{catch unload} catchpoint is
27478in use (@pxref{Set Catchpoints}).
36dfb11c
TT
27479@item fork
27480The inferior has forked. This is reported when @code{catch fork}
27481(@pxref{Set Catchpoints}) has been used.
27482@item vfork
27483The inferior has vforked. This is reported in when @code{catch vfork}
27484(@pxref{Set Catchpoints}) has been used.
27485@item syscall-entry
27486The inferior entered a system call. This is reported when @code{catch
27487syscall} (@pxref{Set Catchpoints}) has been used.
27488@item syscall-entry
27489The inferior returned from a system call. This is reported when
27490@code{catch syscall} (@pxref{Set Catchpoints}) has been used.
27491@item exec
27492The inferior called @code{exec}. This is reported when @code{catch exec}
27493(@pxref{Set Catchpoints}) has been used.
922fbb7b
AC
27494@end table
27495
c3b108f7
VP
27496The @var{id} field identifies the thread that directly caused the stop
27497-- for example by hitting a breakpoint. Depending on whether all-stop
27498mode is in effect (@pxref{All-Stop Mode}), @value{GDBN} may either
27499stop all threads, or only the thread that directly triggered the stop.
27500If all threads are stopped, the @var{stopped} field will have the
27501value of @code{"all"}. Otherwise, the value of the @var{stopped}
27502field will be a list of thread identifiers. Presently, this list will
27503always include a single thread, but frontend should be prepared to see
dc146f7c
VP
27504several threads in the list. The @var{core} field reports the
27505processor core on which the stop event has happened. This field may be absent
27506if such information is not available.
c3b108f7 27507
a79b8f6e
VP
27508@item =thread-group-added,id="@var{id}"
27509@itemx =thread-group-removed,id="@var{id}"
27510A thread group was either added or removed. The @var{id} field
27511contains the @value{GDBN} identifier of the thread group. When a thread
27512group is added, it generally might not be associated with a running
27513process. When a thread group is removed, its id becomes invalid and
27514cannot be used in any way.
27515
27516@item =thread-group-started,id="@var{id}",pid="@var{pid}"
27517A thread group became associated with a running program,
27518either because the program was just started or the thread group
27519was attached to a program. The @var{id} field contains the
27520@value{GDBN} identifier of the thread group. The @var{pid} field
27521contains process identifier, specific to the operating system.
27522
8cf64490 27523@item =thread-group-exited,id="@var{id}"[,exit-code="@var{code}"]
a79b8f6e
VP
27524A thread group is no longer associated with a running program,
27525either because the program has exited, or because it was detached
c3b108f7 27526from. The @var{id} field contains the @value{GDBN} identifier of the
8cf64490
TT
27527thread group. @var{code} is the exit code of the inferior; it exists
27528only when the inferior exited with some code.
c3b108f7
VP
27529
27530@item =thread-created,id="@var{id}",group-id="@var{gid}"
27531@itemx =thread-exited,id="@var{id}",group-id="@var{gid}"
82f68b1c 27532A thread either was created, or has exited. The @var{id} field
c3b108f7
VP
27533contains the @value{GDBN} identifier of the thread. The @var{gid}
27534field identifies the thread group this thread belongs to.
66bb093b
VP
27535
27536@item =thread-selected,id="@var{id}"
27537Informs that the selected thread was changed as result of the last
27538command. This notification is not emitted as result of @code{-thread-select}
27539command but is emitted whenever an MI command that is not documented
27540to change the selected thread actually changes it. In particular,
27541invoking, directly or indirectly (via user-defined command), the CLI
27542@code{thread} command, will generate this notification.
27543
27544We suggest that in response to this notification, front ends
27545highlight the selected thread and cause subsequent commands to apply to
27546that thread.
27547
c86cf029
VP
27548@item =library-loaded,...
27549Reports that a new library file was loaded by the program. This
27550notification has 4 fields---@var{id}, @var{target-name},
134eb42c 27551@var{host-name}, and @var{symbols-loaded}. The @var{id} field is an
c86cf029
VP
27552opaque identifier of the library. For remote debugging case,
27553@var{target-name} and @var{host-name} fields give the name of the
134eb42c
VP
27554library file on the target, and on the host respectively. For native
27555debugging, both those fields have the same value. The
f1cbe1d3
TT
27556@var{symbols-loaded} field is emitted only for backward compatibility
27557and should not be relied on to convey any useful information. The
27558@var{thread-group} field, if present, specifies the id of the thread
27559group in whose context the library was loaded. If the field is
27560absent, it means the library was loaded in the context of all present
27561thread groups.
c86cf029
VP
27562
27563@item =library-unloaded,...
134eb42c 27564Reports that a library was unloaded by the program. This notification
c86cf029 27565has 3 fields---@var{id}, @var{target-name} and @var{host-name} with
a79b8f6e
VP
27566the same meaning as for the @code{=library-loaded} notification.
27567The @var{thread-group} field, if present, specifies the id of the
27568thread group in whose context the library was unloaded. If the field is
27569absent, it means the library was unloaded in the context of all present
27570thread groups.
c86cf029 27571
8d3788bd
VP
27572@item =breakpoint-created,bkpt=@{...@}
27573@itemx =breakpoint-modified,bkpt=@{...@}
27574@itemx =breakpoint-deleted,bkpt=@{...@}
27575Reports that a breakpoint was created, modified, or deleted,
27576respectively. Only user-visible breakpoints are reported to the MI
27577user.
27578
27579The @var{bkpt} argument is of the same form as returned by the various
27580breakpoint commands; @xref{GDB/MI Breakpoint Commands}.
27581
27582Note that if a breakpoint is emitted in the result record of a
27583command, then it will not also be emitted in an async record.
27584
82f68b1c
VP
27585@end table
27586
c3b108f7
VP
27587@node GDB/MI Frame Information
27588@subsection @sc{gdb/mi} Frame Information
27589
27590Response from many MI commands includes an information about stack
27591frame. This information is a tuple that may have the following
27592fields:
27593
27594@table @code
27595@item level
27596The level of the stack frame. The innermost frame has the level of
27597zero. This field is always present.
27598
27599@item func
27600The name of the function corresponding to the frame. This field may
27601be absent if @value{GDBN} is unable to determine the function name.
27602
27603@item addr
27604The code address for the frame. This field is always present.
27605
27606@item file
27607The name of the source files that correspond to the frame's code
27608address. This field may be absent.
27609
27610@item line
27611The source line corresponding to the frames' code address. This field
27612may be absent.
27613
27614@item from
27615The name of the binary file (either executable or shared library) the
27616corresponds to the frame's code address. This field may be absent.
27617
27618@end table
82f68b1c 27619
dc146f7c
VP
27620@node GDB/MI Thread Information
27621@subsection @sc{gdb/mi} Thread Information
27622
27623Whenever @value{GDBN} has to report an information about a thread, it
27624uses a tuple with the following fields:
27625
27626@table @code
27627@item id
27628The numeric id assigned to the thread by @value{GDBN}. This field is
27629always present.
27630
27631@item target-id
27632Target-specific string identifying the thread. This field is always present.
27633
27634@item details
27635Additional information about the thread provided by the target.
27636It is supposed to be human-readable and not interpreted by the
27637frontend. This field is optional.
27638
27639@item state
27640Either @samp{stopped} or @samp{running}, depending on whether the
27641thread is presently running. This field is always present.
27642
27643@item core
27644The value of this field is an integer number of the processor core the
27645thread was last seen on. This field is optional.
27646@end table
27647
956a9fb9
JB
27648@node GDB/MI Ada Exception Information
27649@subsection @sc{gdb/mi} Ada Exception Information
27650
27651Whenever a @code{*stopped} record is emitted because the program
27652stopped after hitting an exception catchpoint (@pxref{Set Catchpoints}),
27653@value{GDBN} provides the name of the exception that was raised via
27654the @code{exception-name} field.
922fbb7b 27655
ef21caaf
NR
27656@c %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% SECTION %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
27657@node GDB/MI Simple Examples
27658@section Simple Examples of @sc{gdb/mi} Interaction
27659@cindex @sc{gdb/mi}, simple examples
27660
27661This subsection presents several simple examples of interaction using
27662the @sc{gdb/mi} interface. In these examples, @samp{->} means that the
27663following line is passed to @sc{gdb/mi} as input, while @samp{<-} means
27664the output received from @sc{gdb/mi}.
27665
d3e8051b 27666Note the line breaks shown in the examples are here only for
ef21caaf
NR
27667readability, they don't appear in the real output.
27668
79a6e687 27669@subheading Setting a Breakpoint
ef21caaf
NR
27670
27671Setting a breakpoint generates synchronous output which contains detailed
27672information of the breakpoint.
27673
27674@smallexample
27675-> -break-insert main
27676<- ^done,bkpt=@{number="1",type="breakpoint",disp="keep",
27677 enabled="y",addr="0x08048564",func="main",file="myprog.c",
27678 fullname="/home/nickrob/myprog.c",line="68",times="0"@}
27679<- (gdb)
27680@end smallexample
27681
27682@subheading Program Execution
27683
27684Program execution generates asynchronous records and MI gives the
27685reason that execution stopped.
27686
27687@smallexample
27688-> -exec-run
27689<- ^running
27690<- (gdb)
a47ec5fe 27691<- *stopped,reason="breakpoint-hit",disp="keep",bkptno="1",thread-id="0",
ef21caaf
NR
27692 frame=@{addr="0x08048564",func="main",
27693 args=[@{name="argc",value="1"@},@{name="argv",value="0xbfc4d4d4"@}],
27694 file="myprog.c",fullname="/home/nickrob/myprog.c",line="68"@}
27695<- (gdb)
27696-> -exec-continue
27697<- ^running
27698<- (gdb)
27699<- *stopped,reason="exited-normally"
27700<- (gdb)
27701@end smallexample
27702
3f94c067 27703@subheading Quitting @value{GDBN}
ef21caaf 27704
3f94c067 27705Quitting @value{GDBN} just prints the result class @samp{^exit}.
ef21caaf
NR
27706
27707@smallexample
27708-> (gdb)
27709<- -gdb-exit
27710<- ^exit
27711@end smallexample
27712
a6b29f87
VP
27713Please note that @samp{^exit} is printed immediately, but it might
27714take some time for @value{GDBN} to actually exit. During that time, @value{GDBN}
27715performs necessary cleanups, including killing programs being debugged
27716or disconnecting from debug hardware, so the frontend should wait till
27717@value{GDBN} exits and should only forcibly kill @value{GDBN} if it
27718fails to exit in reasonable time.
27719
a2c02241 27720@subheading A Bad Command
ef21caaf
NR
27721
27722Here's what happens if you pass a non-existent command:
27723
27724@smallexample
27725-> -rubbish
27726<- ^error,msg="Undefined MI command: rubbish"
594fe323 27727<- (gdb)
ef21caaf
NR
27728@end smallexample
27729
27730
922fbb7b
AC
27731@c %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% SECTION %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
27732@node GDB/MI Command Description Format
27733@section @sc{gdb/mi} Command Description Format
27734
27735The remaining sections describe blocks of commands. Each block of
27736commands is laid out in a fashion similar to this section.
27737
922fbb7b
AC
27738@subheading Motivation
27739
27740The motivation for this collection of commands.
27741
27742@subheading Introduction
27743
27744A brief introduction to this collection of commands as a whole.
27745
27746@subheading Commands
27747
27748For each command in the block, the following is described:
27749
27750@subsubheading Synopsis
27751
27752@smallexample
27753 -command @var{args}@dots{}
27754@end smallexample
27755
922fbb7b
AC
27756@subsubheading Result
27757
265eeb58 27758@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
922fbb7b 27759
265eeb58 27760The corresponding @value{GDBN} CLI command(s), if any.
922fbb7b
AC
27761
27762@subsubheading Example
27763
ef21caaf
NR
27764Example(s) formatted for readability. Some of the described commands have
27765not been implemented yet and these are labeled N.A.@: (not available).
27766
27767
922fbb7b 27768@c %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% SECTION %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
ef21caaf
NR
27769@node GDB/MI Breakpoint Commands
27770@section @sc{gdb/mi} Breakpoint Commands
922fbb7b
AC
27771
27772@cindex breakpoint commands for @sc{gdb/mi}
27773@cindex @sc{gdb/mi}, breakpoint commands
27774This section documents @sc{gdb/mi} commands for manipulating
27775breakpoints.
27776
27777@subheading The @code{-break-after} Command
27778@findex -break-after
27779
27780@subsubheading Synopsis
27781
27782@smallexample
27783 -break-after @var{number} @var{count}
27784@end smallexample
27785
27786The breakpoint number @var{number} is not in effect until it has been
27787hit @var{count} times. To see how this is reflected in the output of
27788the @samp{-break-list} command, see the description of the
27789@samp{-break-list} command below.
27790
27791@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
27792
27793The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{ignore}.
27794
27795@subsubheading Example
27796
27797@smallexample
594fe323 27798(gdb)
922fbb7b 27799-break-insert main
a47ec5fe
AR
27800^done,bkpt=@{number="1",type="breakpoint",disp="keep",
27801enabled="y",addr="0x000100d0",func="main",file="hello.c",
948d5102 27802fullname="/home/foo/hello.c",line="5",times="0"@}
594fe323 27803(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
27804-break-after 1 3
27805~
27806^done
594fe323 27807(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
27808-break-list
27809^done,BreakpointTable=@{nr_rows="1",nr_cols="6",
27810hdr=[@{width="3",alignment="-1",col_name="number",colhdr="Num"@},
27811@{width="14",alignment="-1",col_name="type",colhdr="Type"@},
27812@{width="4",alignment="-1",col_name="disp",colhdr="Disp"@},
27813@{width="3",alignment="-1",col_name="enabled",colhdr="Enb"@},
27814@{width="10",alignment="-1",col_name="addr",colhdr="Address"@},
27815@{width="40",alignment="2",col_name="what",colhdr="What"@}],
27816body=[bkpt=@{number="1",type="breakpoint",disp="keep",enabled="y",
948d5102
NR
27817addr="0x000100d0",func="main",file="hello.c",fullname="/home/foo/hello.c",
27818line="5",times="0",ignore="3"@}]@}
594fe323 27819(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
27820@end smallexample
27821
27822@ignore
27823@subheading The @code{-break-catch} Command
27824@findex -break-catch
48cb2d85 27825@end ignore
922fbb7b
AC
27826
27827@subheading The @code{-break-commands} Command
27828@findex -break-commands
922fbb7b 27829
48cb2d85
VP
27830@subsubheading Synopsis
27831
27832@smallexample
27833 -break-commands @var{number} [ @var{command1} ... @var{commandN} ]
27834@end smallexample
27835
27836Specifies the CLI commands that should be executed when breakpoint
27837@var{number} is hit. The parameters @var{command1} to @var{commandN}
27838are the commands. If no command is specified, any previously-set
27839commands are cleared. @xref{Break Commands}. Typical use of this
27840functionality is tracing a program, that is, printing of values of
27841some variables whenever breakpoint is hit and then continuing.
27842
27843@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
27844
27845The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{commands}.
27846
27847@subsubheading Example
27848
27849@smallexample
27850(gdb)
27851-break-insert main
27852^done,bkpt=@{number="1",type="breakpoint",disp="keep",
27853enabled="y",addr="0x000100d0",func="main",file="hello.c",
27854fullname="/home/foo/hello.c",line="5",times="0"@}
27855(gdb)
27856-break-commands 1 "print v" "continue"
27857^done
27858(gdb)
27859@end smallexample
922fbb7b
AC
27860
27861@subheading The @code{-break-condition} Command
27862@findex -break-condition
27863
27864@subsubheading Synopsis
27865
27866@smallexample
27867 -break-condition @var{number} @var{expr}
27868@end smallexample
27869
27870Breakpoint @var{number} will stop the program only if the condition in
27871@var{expr} is true. The condition becomes part of the
27872@samp{-break-list} output (see the description of the @samp{-break-list}
27873command below).
27874
27875@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
27876
27877The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{condition}.
27878
27879@subsubheading Example
27880
27881@smallexample
594fe323 27882(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
27883-break-condition 1 1
27884^done
594fe323 27885(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
27886-break-list
27887^done,BreakpointTable=@{nr_rows="1",nr_cols="6",
27888hdr=[@{width="3",alignment="-1",col_name="number",colhdr="Num"@},
27889@{width="14",alignment="-1",col_name="type",colhdr="Type"@},
27890@{width="4",alignment="-1",col_name="disp",colhdr="Disp"@},
27891@{width="3",alignment="-1",col_name="enabled",colhdr="Enb"@},
27892@{width="10",alignment="-1",col_name="addr",colhdr="Address"@},
27893@{width="40",alignment="2",col_name="what",colhdr="What"@}],
27894body=[bkpt=@{number="1",type="breakpoint",disp="keep",enabled="y",
948d5102
NR
27895addr="0x000100d0",func="main",file="hello.c",fullname="/home/foo/hello.c",
27896line="5",cond="1",times="0",ignore="3"@}]@}
594fe323 27897(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
27898@end smallexample
27899
27900@subheading The @code{-break-delete} Command
27901@findex -break-delete
27902
27903@subsubheading Synopsis
27904
27905@smallexample
27906 -break-delete ( @var{breakpoint} )+
27907@end smallexample
27908
27909Delete the breakpoint(s) whose number(s) are specified in the argument
27910list. This is obviously reflected in the breakpoint list.
27911
79a6e687 27912@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
922fbb7b
AC
27913
27914The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{delete}.
27915
27916@subsubheading Example
27917
27918@smallexample
594fe323 27919(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
27920-break-delete 1
27921^done
594fe323 27922(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
27923-break-list
27924^done,BreakpointTable=@{nr_rows="0",nr_cols="6",
27925hdr=[@{width="3",alignment="-1",col_name="number",colhdr="Num"@},
27926@{width="14",alignment="-1",col_name="type",colhdr="Type"@},
27927@{width="4",alignment="-1",col_name="disp",colhdr="Disp"@},
27928@{width="3",alignment="-1",col_name="enabled",colhdr="Enb"@},
27929@{width="10",alignment="-1",col_name="addr",colhdr="Address"@},
27930@{width="40",alignment="2",col_name="what",colhdr="What"@}],
27931body=[]@}
594fe323 27932(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
27933@end smallexample
27934
27935@subheading The @code{-break-disable} Command
27936@findex -break-disable
27937
27938@subsubheading Synopsis
27939
27940@smallexample
27941 -break-disable ( @var{breakpoint} )+
27942@end smallexample
27943
27944Disable the named @var{breakpoint}(s). The field @samp{enabled} in the
27945break list is now set to @samp{n} for the named @var{breakpoint}(s).
27946
27947@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
27948
27949The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{disable}.
27950
27951@subsubheading Example
27952
27953@smallexample
594fe323 27954(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
27955-break-disable 2
27956^done
594fe323 27957(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
27958-break-list
27959^done,BreakpointTable=@{nr_rows="1",nr_cols="6",
27960hdr=[@{width="3",alignment="-1",col_name="number",colhdr="Num"@},
27961@{width="14",alignment="-1",col_name="type",colhdr="Type"@},
27962@{width="4",alignment="-1",col_name="disp",colhdr="Disp"@},
27963@{width="3",alignment="-1",col_name="enabled",colhdr="Enb"@},
27964@{width="10",alignment="-1",col_name="addr",colhdr="Address"@},
27965@{width="40",alignment="2",col_name="what",colhdr="What"@}],
27966body=[bkpt=@{number="2",type="breakpoint",disp="keep",enabled="n",
948d5102
NR
27967addr="0x000100d0",func="main",file="hello.c",fullname="/home/foo/hello.c",
27968line="5",times="0"@}]@}
594fe323 27969(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
27970@end smallexample
27971
27972@subheading The @code{-break-enable} Command
27973@findex -break-enable
27974
27975@subsubheading Synopsis
27976
27977@smallexample
27978 -break-enable ( @var{breakpoint} )+
27979@end smallexample
27980
27981Enable (previously disabled) @var{breakpoint}(s).
27982
27983@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
27984
27985The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{enable}.
27986
27987@subsubheading Example
27988
27989@smallexample
594fe323 27990(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
27991-break-enable 2
27992^done
594fe323 27993(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
27994-break-list
27995^done,BreakpointTable=@{nr_rows="1",nr_cols="6",
27996hdr=[@{width="3",alignment="-1",col_name="number",colhdr="Num"@},
27997@{width="14",alignment="-1",col_name="type",colhdr="Type"@},
27998@{width="4",alignment="-1",col_name="disp",colhdr="Disp"@},
27999@{width="3",alignment="-1",col_name="enabled",colhdr="Enb"@},
28000@{width="10",alignment="-1",col_name="addr",colhdr="Address"@},
28001@{width="40",alignment="2",col_name="what",colhdr="What"@}],
28002body=[bkpt=@{number="2",type="breakpoint",disp="keep",enabled="y",
948d5102
NR
28003addr="0x000100d0",func="main",file="hello.c",fullname="/home/foo/hello.c",
28004line="5",times="0"@}]@}
594fe323 28005(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28006@end smallexample
28007
28008@subheading The @code{-break-info} Command
28009@findex -break-info
28010
28011@subsubheading Synopsis
28012
28013@smallexample
28014 -break-info @var{breakpoint}
28015@end smallexample
28016
28017@c REDUNDANT???
28018Get information about a single breakpoint.
28019
79a6e687 28020@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
922fbb7b
AC
28021
28022The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{info break @var{breakpoint}}.
28023
28024@subsubheading Example
28025N.A.
28026
28027@subheading The @code{-break-insert} Command
28028@findex -break-insert
28029
28030@subsubheading Synopsis
28031
28032@smallexample
18148017 28033 -break-insert [ -t ] [ -h ] [ -f ] [ -d ] [ -a ]
922fbb7b 28034 [ -c @var{condition} ] [ -i @var{ignore-count} ]
472a2379 28035 [ -p @var{thread-id} ] [ @var{location} ]
922fbb7b
AC
28036@end smallexample
28037
28038@noindent
afe8ab22 28039If specified, @var{location}, can be one of:
922fbb7b
AC
28040
28041@itemize @bullet
28042@item function
28043@c @item +offset
28044@c @item -offset
28045@c @item linenum
28046@item filename:linenum
28047@item filename:function
28048@item *address
28049@end itemize
28050
28051The possible optional parameters of this command are:
28052
28053@table @samp
28054@item -t
948d5102 28055Insert a temporary breakpoint.
922fbb7b
AC
28056@item -h
28057Insert a hardware breakpoint.
afe8ab22
VP
28058@item -f
28059If @var{location} cannot be parsed (for example if it
28060refers to unknown files or functions), create a pending
28061breakpoint. Without this flag, @value{GDBN} will report
28062an error, and won't create a breakpoint, if @var{location}
28063cannot be parsed.
41447f92
VP
28064@item -d
28065Create a disabled breakpoint.
18148017
VP
28066@item -a
28067Create a tracepoint. @xref{Tracepoints}. When this parameter
28068is used together with @samp{-h}, a fast tracepoint is created.
472a2379
KS
28069@item -c @var{condition}
28070Make the breakpoint conditional on @var{condition}.
28071@item -i @var{ignore-count}
28072Initialize the @var{ignore-count}.
28073@item -p @var{thread-id}
28074Restrict the breakpoint to the specified @var{thread-id}.
922fbb7b
AC
28075@end table
28076
28077@subsubheading Result
28078
28079The result is in the form:
28080
28081@smallexample
948d5102
NR
28082^done,bkpt=@{number="@var{number}",type="@var{type}",disp="del"|"keep",
28083enabled="y"|"n",addr="@var{hex}",func="@var{funcname}",file="@var{filename}",
ef21caaf
NR
28084fullname="@var{full_filename}",line="@var{lineno}",[thread="@var{threadno},]
28085times="@var{times}"@}
922fbb7b
AC
28086@end smallexample
28087
28088@noindent
948d5102
NR
28089where @var{number} is the @value{GDBN} number for this breakpoint,
28090@var{funcname} is the name of the function where the breakpoint was
28091inserted, @var{filename} is the name of the source file which contains
28092this function, @var{lineno} is the source line number within that file
28093and @var{times} the number of times that the breakpoint has been hit
28094(always 0 for -break-insert but may be greater for -break-info or -break-list
28095which use the same output).
922fbb7b
AC
28096
28097Note: this format is open to change.
28098@c An out-of-band breakpoint instead of part of the result?
28099
28100@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
28101
28102The corresponding @value{GDBN} commands are @samp{break}, @samp{tbreak},
496ee73e 28103@samp{hbreak}, and @samp{thbreak}. @c and @samp{rbreak}.
922fbb7b
AC
28104
28105@subsubheading Example
28106
28107@smallexample
594fe323 28108(gdb)
922fbb7b 28109-break-insert main
948d5102
NR
28110^done,bkpt=@{number="1",addr="0x0001072c",file="recursive2.c",
28111fullname="/home/foo/recursive2.c,line="4",times="0"@}
594fe323 28112(gdb)
922fbb7b 28113-break-insert -t foo
948d5102
NR
28114^done,bkpt=@{number="2",addr="0x00010774",file="recursive2.c",
28115fullname="/home/foo/recursive2.c,line="11",times="0"@}
594fe323 28116(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28117-break-list
28118^done,BreakpointTable=@{nr_rows="2",nr_cols="6",
28119hdr=[@{width="3",alignment="-1",col_name="number",colhdr="Num"@},
28120@{width="14",alignment="-1",col_name="type",colhdr="Type"@},
28121@{width="4",alignment="-1",col_name="disp",colhdr="Disp"@},
28122@{width="3",alignment="-1",col_name="enabled",colhdr="Enb"@},
28123@{width="10",alignment="-1",col_name="addr",colhdr="Address"@},
28124@{width="40",alignment="2",col_name="what",colhdr="What"@}],
28125body=[bkpt=@{number="1",type="breakpoint",disp="keep",enabled="y",
948d5102
NR
28126addr="0x0001072c", func="main",file="recursive2.c",
28127fullname="/home/foo/recursive2.c,"line="4",times="0"@},
922fbb7b 28128bkpt=@{number="2",type="breakpoint",disp="del",enabled="y",
948d5102
NR
28129addr="0x00010774",func="foo",file="recursive2.c",
28130fullname="/home/foo/recursive2.c",line="11",times="0"@}]@}
594fe323 28131(gdb)
496ee73e
KS
28132@c -break-insert -r foo.*
28133@c ~int foo(int, int);
28134@c ^done,bkpt=@{number="3",addr="0x00010774",file="recursive2.c,
28135@c "fullname="/home/foo/recursive2.c",line="11",times="0"@}
28136@c (gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28137@end smallexample
28138
28139@subheading The @code{-break-list} Command
28140@findex -break-list
28141
28142@subsubheading Synopsis
28143
28144@smallexample
28145 -break-list
28146@end smallexample
28147
28148Displays the list of inserted breakpoints, showing the following fields:
28149
28150@table @samp
28151@item Number
28152number of the breakpoint
28153@item Type
28154type of the breakpoint: @samp{breakpoint} or @samp{watchpoint}
28155@item Disposition
28156should the breakpoint be deleted or disabled when it is hit: @samp{keep}
28157or @samp{nokeep}
28158@item Enabled
28159is the breakpoint enabled or no: @samp{y} or @samp{n}
28160@item Address
28161memory location at which the breakpoint is set
28162@item What
28163logical location of the breakpoint, expressed by function name, file
28164name, line number
28165@item Times
28166number of times the breakpoint has been hit
28167@end table
28168
28169If there are no breakpoints or watchpoints, the @code{BreakpointTable}
28170@code{body} field is an empty list.
28171
28172@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
28173
28174The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{info break}.
28175
28176@subsubheading Example
28177
28178@smallexample
594fe323 28179(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28180-break-list
28181^done,BreakpointTable=@{nr_rows="2",nr_cols="6",
28182hdr=[@{width="3",alignment="-1",col_name="number",colhdr="Num"@},
28183@{width="14",alignment="-1",col_name="type",colhdr="Type"@},
28184@{width="4",alignment="-1",col_name="disp",colhdr="Disp"@},
28185@{width="3",alignment="-1",col_name="enabled",colhdr="Enb"@},
28186@{width="10",alignment="-1",col_name="addr",colhdr="Address"@},
28187@{width="40",alignment="2",col_name="what",colhdr="What"@}],
28188body=[bkpt=@{number="1",type="breakpoint",disp="keep",enabled="y",
28189addr="0x000100d0",func="main",file="hello.c",line="5",times="0"@},
28190bkpt=@{number="2",type="breakpoint",disp="keep",enabled="y",
948d5102
NR
28191addr="0x00010114",func="foo",file="hello.c",fullname="/home/foo/hello.c",
28192line="13",times="0"@}]@}
594fe323 28193(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28194@end smallexample
28195
28196Here's an example of the result when there are no breakpoints:
28197
28198@smallexample
594fe323 28199(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28200-break-list
28201^done,BreakpointTable=@{nr_rows="0",nr_cols="6",
28202hdr=[@{width="3",alignment="-1",col_name="number",colhdr="Num"@},
28203@{width="14",alignment="-1",col_name="type",colhdr="Type"@},
28204@{width="4",alignment="-1",col_name="disp",colhdr="Disp"@},
28205@{width="3",alignment="-1",col_name="enabled",colhdr="Enb"@},
28206@{width="10",alignment="-1",col_name="addr",colhdr="Address"@},
28207@{width="40",alignment="2",col_name="what",colhdr="What"@}],
28208body=[]@}
594fe323 28209(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28210@end smallexample
28211
18148017
VP
28212@subheading The @code{-break-passcount} Command
28213@findex -break-passcount
28214
28215@subsubheading Synopsis
28216
28217@smallexample
28218 -break-passcount @var{tracepoint-number} @var{passcount}
28219@end smallexample
28220
28221Set the passcount for tracepoint @var{tracepoint-number} to
28222@var{passcount}. If the breakpoint referred to by @var{tracepoint-number}
28223is not a tracepoint, error is emitted. This corresponds to CLI
28224command @samp{passcount}.
28225
922fbb7b
AC
28226@subheading The @code{-break-watch} Command
28227@findex -break-watch
28228
28229@subsubheading Synopsis
28230
28231@smallexample
28232 -break-watch [ -a | -r ]
28233@end smallexample
28234
28235Create a watchpoint. With the @samp{-a} option it will create an
d3e8051b 28236@dfn{access} watchpoint, i.e., a watchpoint that triggers either on a
922fbb7b 28237read from or on a write to the memory location. With the @samp{-r}
d3e8051b 28238option, the watchpoint created is a @dfn{read} watchpoint, i.e., it will
922fbb7b
AC
28239trigger only when the memory location is accessed for reading. Without
28240either of the options, the watchpoint created is a regular watchpoint,
d3e8051b 28241i.e., it will trigger when the memory location is accessed for writing.
79a6e687 28242@xref{Set Watchpoints, , Setting Watchpoints}.
922fbb7b
AC
28243
28244Note that @samp{-break-list} will report a single list of watchpoints and
28245breakpoints inserted.
28246
28247@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
28248
28249The corresponding @value{GDBN} commands are @samp{watch}, @samp{awatch}, and
28250@samp{rwatch}.
28251
28252@subsubheading Example
28253
28254Setting a watchpoint on a variable in the @code{main} function:
28255
28256@smallexample
594fe323 28257(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28258-break-watch x
28259^done,wpt=@{number="2",exp="x"@}
594fe323 28260(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28261-exec-continue
28262^running
0869d01b
NR
28263(gdb)
28264*stopped,reason="watchpoint-trigger",wpt=@{number="2",exp="x"@},
922fbb7b 28265value=@{old="-268439212",new="55"@},
76ff342d 28266frame=@{func="main",args=[],file="recursive2.c",
948d5102 28267fullname="/home/foo/bar/recursive2.c",line="5"@}
594fe323 28268(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28269@end smallexample
28270
28271Setting a watchpoint on a variable local to a function. @value{GDBN} will stop
28272the program execution twice: first for the variable changing value, then
28273for the watchpoint going out of scope.
28274
28275@smallexample
594fe323 28276(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28277-break-watch C
28278^done,wpt=@{number="5",exp="C"@}
594fe323 28279(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28280-exec-continue
28281^running
0869d01b
NR
28282(gdb)
28283*stopped,reason="watchpoint-trigger",
922fbb7b
AC
28284wpt=@{number="5",exp="C"@},value=@{old="-276895068",new="3"@},
28285frame=@{func="callee4",args=[],
76ff342d
DJ
28286file="../../../devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",
28287fullname="/home/foo/bar/devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",line="13"@}
594fe323 28288(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28289-exec-continue
28290^running
0869d01b
NR
28291(gdb)
28292*stopped,reason="watchpoint-scope",wpnum="5",
922fbb7b
AC
28293frame=@{func="callee3",args=[@{name="strarg",
28294value="0x11940 \"A string argument.\""@}],
76ff342d
DJ
28295file="../../../devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",
28296fullname="/home/foo/bar/devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",line="18"@}
594fe323 28297(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28298@end smallexample
28299
28300Listing breakpoints and watchpoints, at different points in the program
28301execution. Note that once the watchpoint goes out of scope, it is
28302deleted.
28303
28304@smallexample
594fe323 28305(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28306-break-watch C
28307^done,wpt=@{number="2",exp="C"@}
594fe323 28308(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28309-break-list
28310^done,BreakpointTable=@{nr_rows="2",nr_cols="6",
28311hdr=[@{width="3",alignment="-1",col_name="number",colhdr="Num"@},
28312@{width="14",alignment="-1",col_name="type",colhdr="Type"@},
28313@{width="4",alignment="-1",col_name="disp",colhdr="Disp"@},
28314@{width="3",alignment="-1",col_name="enabled",colhdr="Enb"@},
28315@{width="10",alignment="-1",col_name="addr",colhdr="Address"@},
28316@{width="40",alignment="2",col_name="what",colhdr="What"@}],
28317body=[bkpt=@{number="1",type="breakpoint",disp="keep",enabled="y",
28318addr="0x00010734",func="callee4",
948d5102
NR
28319file="../../../devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",
28320fullname="/home/foo/devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c"line="8",times="1"@},
922fbb7b
AC
28321bkpt=@{number="2",type="watchpoint",disp="keep",
28322enabled="y",addr="",what="C",times="0"@}]@}
594fe323 28323(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28324-exec-continue
28325^running
0869d01b
NR
28326(gdb)
28327*stopped,reason="watchpoint-trigger",wpt=@{number="2",exp="C"@},
922fbb7b
AC
28328value=@{old="-276895068",new="3"@},
28329frame=@{func="callee4",args=[],
76ff342d
DJ
28330file="../../../devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",
28331fullname="/home/foo/bar/devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",line="13"@}
594fe323 28332(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28333-break-list
28334^done,BreakpointTable=@{nr_rows="2",nr_cols="6",
28335hdr=[@{width="3",alignment="-1",col_name="number",colhdr="Num"@},
28336@{width="14",alignment="-1",col_name="type",colhdr="Type"@},
28337@{width="4",alignment="-1",col_name="disp",colhdr="Disp"@},
28338@{width="3",alignment="-1",col_name="enabled",colhdr="Enb"@},
28339@{width="10",alignment="-1",col_name="addr",colhdr="Address"@},
28340@{width="40",alignment="2",col_name="what",colhdr="What"@}],
28341body=[bkpt=@{number="1",type="breakpoint",disp="keep",enabled="y",
28342addr="0x00010734",func="callee4",
948d5102
NR
28343file="../../../devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",
28344fullname="/home/foo/devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",line="8",times="1"@},
922fbb7b
AC
28345bkpt=@{number="2",type="watchpoint",disp="keep",
28346enabled="y",addr="",what="C",times="-5"@}]@}
594fe323 28347(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28348-exec-continue
28349^running
28350^done,reason="watchpoint-scope",wpnum="2",
28351frame=@{func="callee3",args=[@{name="strarg",
28352value="0x11940 \"A string argument.\""@}],
76ff342d
DJ
28353file="../../../devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",
28354fullname="/home/foo/bar/devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",line="18"@}
594fe323 28355(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28356-break-list
28357^done,BreakpointTable=@{nr_rows="1",nr_cols="6",
28358hdr=[@{width="3",alignment="-1",col_name="number",colhdr="Num"@},
28359@{width="14",alignment="-1",col_name="type",colhdr="Type"@},
28360@{width="4",alignment="-1",col_name="disp",colhdr="Disp"@},
28361@{width="3",alignment="-1",col_name="enabled",colhdr="Enb"@},
28362@{width="10",alignment="-1",col_name="addr",colhdr="Address"@},
28363@{width="40",alignment="2",col_name="what",colhdr="What"@}],
28364body=[bkpt=@{number="1",type="breakpoint",disp="keep",enabled="y",
28365addr="0x00010734",func="callee4",
948d5102
NR
28366file="../../../devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",
28367fullname="/home/foo/devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",line="8",
28368times="1"@}]@}
594fe323 28369(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28370@end smallexample
28371
28372@c %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% SECTION %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
a2c02241
NR
28373@node GDB/MI Program Context
28374@section @sc{gdb/mi} Program Context
922fbb7b 28375
a2c02241
NR
28376@subheading The @code{-exec-arguments} Command
28377@findex -exec-arguments
922fbb7b 28378
922fbb7b
AC
28379
28380@subsubheading Synopsis
28381
28382@smallexample
a2c02241 28383 -exec-arguments @var{args}
922fbb7b
AC
28384@end smallexample
28385
a2c02241
NR
28386Set the inferior program arguments, to be used in the next
28387@samp{-exec-run}.
922fbb7b 28388
a2c02241 28389@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
922fbb7b 28390
a2c02241 28391The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{set args}.
922fbb7b 28392
a2c02241 28393@subsubheading Example
922fbb7b 28394
fbc5282e
MK
28395@smallexample
28396(gdb)
28397-exec-arguments -v word
28398^done
28399(gdb)
28400@end smallexample
922fbb7b 28401
a2c02241 28402
9901a55b 28403@ignore
a2c02241
NR
28404@subheading The @code{-exec-show-arguments} Command
28405@findex -exec-show-arguments
28406
28407@subsubheading Synopsis
28408
28409@smallexample
28410 -exec-show-arguments
28411@end smallexample
28412
28413Print the arguments of the program.
922fbb7b
AC
28414
28415@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
28416
a2c02241 28417The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{show args}.
922fbb7b
AC
28418
28419@subsubheading Example
a2c02241 28420N.A.
9901a55b 28421@end ignore
922fbb7b 28422
922fbb7b 28423
a2c02241
NR
28424@subheading The @code{-environment-cd} Command
28425@findex -environment-cd
922fbb7b 28426
a2c02241 28427@subsubheading Synopsis
922fbb7b
AC
28428
28429@smallexample
a2c02241 28430 -environment-cd @var{pathdir}
922fbb7b
AC
28431@end smallexample
28432
a2c02241 28433Set @value{GDBN}'s working directory.
922fbb7b 28434
a2c02241 28435@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
922fbb7b 28436
a2c02241
NR
28437The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{cd}.
28438
28439@subsubheading Example
922fbb7b
AC
28440
28441@smallexample
594fe323 28442(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
28443-environment-cd /kwikemart/marge/ezannoni/flathead-dev/devo/gdb
28444^done
594fe323 28445(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28446@end smallexample
28447
28448
a2c02241
NR
28449@subheading The @code{-environment-directory} Command
28450@findex -environment-directory
922fbb7b
AC
28451
28452@subsubheading Synopsis
28453
28454@smallexample
a2c02241 28455 -environment-directory [ -r ] [ @var{pathdir} ]+
922fbb7b
AC
28456@end smallexample
28457
a2c02241
NR
28458Add directories @var{pathdir} to beginning of search path for source files.
28459If the @samp{-r} option is used, the search path is reset to the default
28460search path. If directories @var{pathdir} are supplied in addition to the
28461@samp{-r} option, the search path is first reset and then addition
28462occurs as normal.
28463Multiple directories may be specified, separated by blanks. Specifying
28464multiple directories in a single command
28465results in the directories added to the beginning of the
28466search path in the same order they were presented in the command.
28467If blanks are needed as
28468part of a directory name, double-quotes should be used around
28469the name. In the command output, the path will show up separated
d3e8051b 28470by the system directory-separator character. The directory-separator
a2c02241
NR
28471character must not be used
28472in any directory name.
28473If no directories are specified, the current search path is displayed.
922fbb7b
AC
28474
28475@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
28476
a2c02241 28477The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{dir}.
922fbb7b
AC
28478
28479@subsubheading Example
28480
922fbb7b 28481@smallexample
594fe323 28482(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
28483-environment-directory /kwikemart/marge/ezannoni/flathead-dev/devo/gdb
28484^done,source-path="/kwikemart/marge/ezannoni/flathead-dev/devo/gdb:$cdir:$cwd"
594fe323 28485(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
28486-environment-directory ""
28487^done,source-path="/kwikemart/marge/ezannoni/flathead-dev/devo/gdb:$cdir:$cwd"
594fe323 28488(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
28489-environment-directory -r /home/jjohnstn/src/gdb /usr/src
28490^done,source-path="/home/jjohnstn/src/gdb:/usr/src:$cdir:$cwd"
594fe323 28491(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
28492-environment-directory -r
28493^done,source-path="$cdir:$cwd"
594fe323 28494(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28495@end smallexample
28496
28497
a2c02241
NR
28498@subheading The @code{-environment-path} Command
28499@findex -environment-path
922fbb7b
AC
28500
28501@subsubheading Synopsis
28502
28503@smallexample
a2c02241 28504 -environment-path [ -r ] [ @var{pathdir} ]+
922fbb7b
AC
28505@end smallexample
28506
a2c02241
NR
28507Add directories @var{pathdir} to beginning of search path for object files.
28508If the @samp{-r} option is used, the search path is reset to the original
28509search path that existed at gdb start-up. If directories @var{pathdir} are
28510supplied in addition to the
28511@samp{-r} option, the search path is first reset and then addition
28512occurs as normal.
28513Multiple directories may be specified, separated by blanks. Specifying
28514multiple directories in a single command
28515results in the directories added to the beginning of the
28516search path in the same order they were presented in the command.
28517If blanks are needed as
28518part of a directory name, double-quotes should be used around
28519the name. In the command output, the path will show up separated
d3e8051b 28520by the system directory-separator character. The directory-separator
a2c02241
NR
28521character must not be used
28522in any directory name.
28523If no directories are specified, the current path is displayed.
28524
922fbb7b
AC
28525
28526@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
28527
a2c02241 28528The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{path}.
922fbb7b
AC
28529
28530@subsubheading Example
28531
922fbb7b 28532@smallexample
594fe323 28533(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
28534-environment-path
28535^done,path="/usr/bin"
594fe323 28536(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
28537-environment-path /kwikemart/marge/ezannoni/flathead-dev/ppc-eabi/gdb /bin
28538^done,path="/kwikemart/marge/ezannoni/flathead-dev/ppc-eabi/gdb:/bin:/usr/bin"
594fe323 28539(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
28540-environment-path -r /usr/local/bin
28541^done,path="/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin"
594fe323 28542(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28543@end smallexample
28544
28545
a2c02241
NR
28546@subheading The @code{-environment-pwd} Command
28547@findex -environment-pwd
922fbb7b
AC
28548
28549@subsubheading Synopsis
28550
28551@smallexample
a2c02241 28552 -environment-pwd
922fbb7b
AC
28553@end smallexample
28554
a2c02241 28555Show the current working directory.
922fbb7b 28556
79a6e687 28557@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
922fbb7b 28558
a2c02241 28559The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{pwd}.
922fbb7b
AC
28560
28561@subsubheading Example
28562
922fbb7b 28563@smallexample
594fe323 28564(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
28565-environment-pwd
28566^done,cwd="/kwikemart/marge/ezannoni/flathead-dev/devo/gdb"
594fe323 28567(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28568@end smallexample
28569
a2c02241
NR
28570@c %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% SECTION %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
28571@node GDB/MI Thread Commands
28572@section @sc{gdb/mi} Thread Commands
28573
28574
28575@subheading The @code{-thread-info} Command
28576@findex -thread-info
922fbb7b
AC
28577
28578@subsubheading Synopsis
28579
28580@smallexample
8e8901c5 28581 -thread-info [ @var{thread-id} ]
922fbb7b
AC
28582@end smallexample
28583
8e8901c5
VP
28584Reports information about either a specific thread, if
28585the @var{thread-id} parameter is present, or about all
28586threads. When printing information about all threads,
28587also reports the current thread.
28588
79a6e687 28589@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
922fbb7b 28590
8e8901c5
VP
28591The @samp{info thread} command prints the same information
28592about all threads.
922fbb7b 28593
4694da01 28594@subsubheading Result
922fbb7b 28595
4694da01
TT
28596The result is a list of threads. The following attributes are
28597defined for a given thread:
28598
28599@table @samp
28600@item current
28601This field exists only for the current thread. It has the value @samp{*}.
28602
28603@item id
28604The identifier that @value{GDBN} uses to refer to the thread.
28605
28606@item target-id
28607The identifier that the target uses to refer to the thread.
28608
28609@item details
28610Extra information about the thread, in a target-specific format. This
28611field is optional.
28612
28613@item name
28614The name of the thread. If the user specified a name using the
28615@code{thread name} command, then this name is given. Otherwise, if
28616@value{GDBN} can extract the thread name from the target, then that
28617name is given. If @value{GDBN} cannot find the thread name, then this
28618field is omitted.
28619
28620@item frame
28621The stack frame currently executing in the thread.
922fbb7b 28622
4694da01
TT
28623@item state
28624The thread's state. The @samp{state} field may have the following
28625values:
c3b108f7
VP
28626
28627@table @code
28628@item stopped
28629The thread is stopped. Frame information is available for stopped
28630threads.
28631
28632@item running
28633The thread is running. There's no frame information for running
28634threads.
28635
28636@end table
28637
4694da01
TT
28638@item core
28639If @value{GDBN} can find the CPU core on which this thread is running,
28640then this field is the core identifier. This field is optional.
28641
28642@end table
28643
28644@subsubheading Example
28645
28646@smallexample
28647-thread-info
28648^done,threads=[
28649@{id="2",target-id="Thread 0xb7e14b90 (LWP 21257)",
28650 frame=@{level="0",addr="0xffffe410",func="__kernel_vsyscall",
28651 args=[]@},state="running"@},
28652@{id="1",target-id="Thread 0xb7e156b0 (LWP 21254)",
28653 frame=@{level="0",addr="0x0804891f",func="foo",
28654 args=[@{name="i",value="10"@}],
28655 file="/tmp/a.c",fullname="/tmp/a.c",line="158"@},
28656 state="running"@}],
28657current-thread-id="1"
28658(gdb)
28659@end smallexample
28660
a2c02241
NR
28661@subheading The @code{-thread-list-ids} Command
28662@findex -thread-list-ids
922fbb7b 28663
a2c02241 28664@subsubheading Synopsis
922fbb7b 28665
a2c02241
NR
28666@smallexample
28667 -thread-list-ids
28668@end smallexample
922fbb7b 28669
a2c02241
NR
28670Produces a list of the currently known @value{GDBN} thread ids. At the
28671end of the list it also prints the total number of such threads.
922fbb7b 28672
c3b108f7
VP
28673This command is retained for historical reasons, the
28674@code{-thread-info} command should be used instead.
28675
922fbb7b
AC
28676@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
28677
a2c02241 28678Part of @samp{info threads} supplies the same information.
922fbb7b
AC
28679
28680@subsubheading Example
28681
922fbb7b 28682@smallexample
594fe323 28683(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
28684-thread-list-ids
28685^done,thread-ids=@{thread-id="3",thread-id="2",thread-id="1"@},
592375cd 28686current-thread-id="1",number-of-threads="3"
594fe323 28687(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28688@end smallexample
28689
a2c02241
NR
28690
28691@subheading The @code{-thread-select} Command
28692@findex -thread-select
922fbb7b
AC
28693
28694@subsubheading Synopsis
28695
28696@smallexample
a2c02241 28697 -thread-select @var{threadnum}
922fbb7b
AC
28698@end smallexample
28699
a2c02241
NR
28700Make @var{threadnum} the current thread. It prints the number of the new
28701current thread, and the topmost frame for that thread.
922fbb7b 28702
c3b108f7
VP
28703This command is deprecated in favor of explicitly using the
28704@samp{--thread} option to each command.
28705
922fbb7b
AC
28706@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
28707
a2c02241 28708The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{thread}.
922fbb7b
AC
28709
28710@subsubheading Example
922fbb7b
AC
28711
28712@smallexample
594fe323 28713(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
28714-exec-next
28715^running
594fe323 28716(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
28717*stopped,reason="end-stepping-range",thread-id="2",line="187",
28718file="../../../devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.threads/linux-dp.c"
594fe323 28719(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
28720-thread-list-ids
28721^done,
28722thread-ids=@{thread-id="3",thread-id="2",thread-id="1"@},
28723number-of-threads="3"
594fe323 28724(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
28725-thread-select 3
28726^done,new-thread-id="3",
28727frame=@{level="0",func="vprintf",
28728args=[@{name="format",value="0x8048e9c \"%*s%c %d %c\\n\""@},
28729@{name="arg",value="0x2"@}],file="vprintf.c",line="31"@}
594fe323 28730(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28731@end smallexample
28732
5d77fe44
JB
28733@c %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% SECTION %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
28734@node GDB/MI Ada Tasking Commands
28735@section @sc{gdb/mi} Ada Tasking Commands
28736
28737@subheading The @code{-ada-task-info} Command
28738@findex -ada-task-info
28739
28740@subsubheading Synopsis
28741
28742@smallexample
28743 -ada-task-info [ @var{task-id} ]
28744@end smallexample
28745
28746Reports information about either a specific Ada task, if the
28747@var{task-id} parameter is present, or about all Ada tasks.
28748
28749@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
28750
28751The @samp{info tasks} command prints the same information
28752about all Ada tasks (@pxref{Ada Tasks}).
28753
28754@subsubheading Result
28755
28756The result is a table of Ada tasks. The following columns are
28757defined for each Ada task:
28758
28759@table @samp
28760@item current
28761This field exists only for the current thread. It has the value @samp{*}.
28762
28763@item id
28764The identifier that @value{GDBN} uses to refer to the Ada task.
28765
28766@item task-id
28767The identifier that the target uses to refer to the Ada task.
28768
28769@item thread-id
28770The identifier of the thread corresponding to the Ada task.
28771
28772This field should always exist, as Ada tasks are always implemented
28773on top of a thread. But if @value{GDBN} cannot find this corresponding
28774thread for any reason, the field is omitted.
28775
28776@item parent-id
28777This field exists only when the task was created by another task.
28778In this case, it provides the ID of the parent task.
28779
28780@item priority
28781The base priority of the task.
28782
28783@item state
28784The current state of the task. For a detailed description of the
28785possible states, see @ref{Ada Tasks}.
28786
28787@item name
28788The name of the task.
28789
28790@end table
28791
28792@subsubheading Example
28793
28794@smallexample
28795-ada-task-info
28796^done,tasks=@{nr_rows="3",nr_cols="8",
28797hdr=[@{width="1",alignment="-1",col_name="current",colhdr=""@},
28798@{width="3",alignment="1",col_name="id",colhdr="ID"@},
28799@{width="9",alignment="1",col_name="task-id",colhdr="TID"@},
28800@{width="4",alignment="1",col_name="thread-id",colhdr=""@},
28801@{width="4",alignment="1",col_name="parent-id",colhdr="P-ID"@},
28802@{width="3",alignment="1",col_name="priority",colhdr="Pri"@},
28803@{width="22",alignment="-1",col_name="state",colhdr="State"@},
28804@{width="1",alignment="2",col_name="name",colhdr="Name"@}],
28805body=[@{current="*",id="1",task-id=" 644010",thread-id="1",priority="48",
28806state="Child Termination Wait",name="main_task"@}]@}
28807(gdb)
28808@end smallexample
28809
a2c02241
NR
28810@c %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% SECTION %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
28811@node GDB/MI Program Execution
28812@section @sc{gdb/mi} Program Execution
922fbb7b 28813
ef21caaf 28814These are the asynchronous commands which generate the out-of-band
3f94c067 28815record @samp{*stopped}. Currently @value{GDBN} only really executes
ef21caaf
NR
28816asynchronously with remote targets and this interaction is mimicked in
28817other cases.
922fbb7b 28818
922fbb7b
AC
28819@subheading The @code{-exec-continue} Command
28820@findex -exec-continue
28821
28822@subsubheading Synopsis
28823
28824@smallexample
540aa8e7 28825 -exec-continue [--reverse] [--all|--thread-group N]
922fbb7b
AC
28826@end smallexample
28827
540aa8e7
MS
28828Resumes the execution of the inferior program, which will continue
28829to execute until it reaches a debugger stop event. If the
28830@samp{--reverse} option is specified, execution resumes in reverse until
28831it reaches a stop event. Stop events may include
28832@itemize @bullet
28833@item
28834breakpoints or watchpoints
28835@item
28836signals or exceptions
28837@item
28838the end of the process (or its beginning under @samp{--reverse})
28839@item
28840the end or beginning of a replay log if one is being used.
28841@end itemize
28842In all-stop mode (@pxref{All-Stop
28843Mode}), may resume only one thread, or all threads, depending on the
28844value of the @samp{scheduler-locking} variable. If @samp{--all} is
a79b8f6e 28845specified, all threads (in all inferiors) will be resumed. The @samp{--all} option is
540aa8e7
MS
28846ignored in all-stop mode. If the @samp{--thread-group} options is
28847specified, then all threads in that thread group are resumed.
922fbb7b
AC
28848
28849@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
28850
28851The corresponding @value{GDBN} corresponding is @samp{continue}.
28852
28853@subsubheading Example
28854
28855@smallexample
28856-exec-continue
28857^running
594fe323 28858(gdb)
922fbb7b 28859@@Hello world
a47ec5fe
AR
28860*stopped,reason="breakpoint-hit",disp="keep",bkptno="2",frame=@{
28861func="foo",args=[],file="hello.c",fullname="/home/foo/bar/hello.c",
28862line="13"@}
594fe323 28863(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28864@end smallexample
28865
28866
28867@subheading The @code{-exec-finish} Command
28868@findex -exec-finish
28869
28870@subsubheading Synopsis
28871
28872@smallexample
540aa8e7 28873 -exec-finish [--reverse]
922fbb7b
AC
28874@end smallexample
28875
ef21caaf
NR
28876Resumes the execution of the inferior program until the current
28877function is exited. Displays the results returned by the function.
540aa8e7
MS
28878If the @samp{--reverse} option is specified, resumes the reverse
28879execution of the inferior program until the point where current
28880function was called.
922fbb7b
AC
28881
28882@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
28883
28884The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{finish}.
28885
28886@subsubheading Example
28887
28888Function returning @code{void}.
28889
28890@smallexample
28891-exec-finish
28892^running
594fe323 28893(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28894@@hello from foo
28895*stopped,reason="function-finished",frame=@{func="main",args=[],
948d5102 28896file="hello.c",fullname="/home/foo/bar/hello.c",line="7"@}
594fe323 28897(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28898@end smallexample
28899
28900Function returning other than @code{void}. The name of the internal
28901@value{GDBN} variable storing the result is printed, together with the
28902value itself.
28903
28904@smallexample
28905-exec-finish
28906^running
594fe323 28907(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28908*stopped,reason="function-finished",frame=@{addr="0x000107b0",func="foo",
28909args=[@{name="a",value="1"],@{name="b",value="9"@}@},
948d5102 28910file="recursive2.c",fullname="/home/foo/bar/recursive2.c",line="14"@},
922fbb7b 28911gdb-result-var="$1",return-value="0"
594fe323 28912(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28913@end smallexample
28914
28915
28916@subheading The @code{-exec-interrupt} Command
28917@findex -exec-interrupt
28918
28919@subsubheading Synopsis
28920
28921@smallexample
c3b108f7 28922 -exec-interrupt [--all|--thread-group N]
922fbb7b
AC
28923@end smallexample
28924
ef21caaf
NR
28925Interrupts the background execution of the target. Note how the token
28926associated with the stop message is the one for the execution command
28927that has been interrupted. The token for the interrupt itself only
28928appears in the @samp{^done} output. If the user is trying to
922fbb7b
AC
28929interrupt a non-running program, an error message will be printed.
28930
c3b108f7
VP
28931Note that when asynchronous execution is enabled, this command is
28932asynchronous just like other execution commands. That is, first the
28933@samp{^done} response will be printed, and the target stop will be
28934reported after that using the @samp{*stopped} notification.
28935
28936In non-stop mode, only the context thread is interrupted by default.
a79b8f6e
VP
28937All threads (in all inferiors) will be interrupted if the
28938@samp{--all} option is specified. If the @samp{--thread-group}
28939option is specified, all threads in that group will be interrupted.
c3b108f7 28940
922fbb7b
AC
28941@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
28942
28943The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{interrupt}.
28944
28945@subsubheading Example
28946
28947@smallexample
594fe323 28948(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28949111-exec-continue
28950111^running
28951
594fe323 28952(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28953222-exec-interrupt
28954222^done
594fe323 28955(gdb)
922fbb7b 28956111*stopped,signal-name="SIGINT",signal-meaning="Interrupt",
76ff342d 28957frame=@{addr="0x00010140",func="foo",args=[],file="try.c",
948d5102 28958fullname="/home/foo/bar/try.c",line="13"@}
594fe323 28959(gdb)
922fbb7b 28960
594fe323 28961(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28962-exec-interrupt
28963^error,msg="mi_cmd_exec_interrupt: Inferior not executing."
594fe323 28964(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
28965@end smallexample
28966
83eba9b7
VP
28967@subheading The @code{-exec-jump} Command
28968@findex -exec-jump
28969
28970@subsubheading Synopsis
28971
28972@smallexample
28973 -exec-jump @var{location}
28974@end smallexample
28975
28976Resumes execution of the inferior program at the location specified by
28977parameter. @xref{Specify Location}, for a description of the
28978different forms of @var{location}.
28979
28980@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
28981
28982The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{jump}.
28983
28984@subsubheading Example
28985
28986@smallexample
28987-exec-jump foo.c:10
28988*running,thread-id="all"
28989^running
28990@end smallexample
28991
922fbb7b
AC
28992
28993@subheading The @code{-exec-next} Command
28994@findex -exec-next
28995
28996@subsubheading Synopsis
28997
28998@smallexample
540aa8e7 28999 -exec-next [--reverse]
922fbb7b
AC
29000@end smallexample
29001
ef21caaf
NR
29002Resumes execution of the inferior program, stopping when the beginning
29003of the next source line is reached.
922fbb7b 29004
540aa8e7
MS
29005If the @samp{--reverse} option is specified, resumes reverse execution
29006of the inferior program, stopping at the beginning of the previous
29007source line. If you issue this command on the first line of a
29008function, it will take you back to the caller of that function, to the
29009source line where the function was called.
29010
29011
922fbb7b
AC
29012@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
29013
29014The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{next}.
29015
29016@subsubheading Example
29017
29018@smallexample
29019-exec-next
29020^running
594fe323 29021(gdb)
922fbb7b 29022*stopped,reason="end-stepping-range",line="8",file="hello.c"
594fe323 29023(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
29024@end smallexample
29025
29026
29027@subheading The @code{-exec-next-instruction} Command
29028@findex -exec-next-instruction
29029
29030@subsubheading Synopsis
29031
29032@smallexample
540aa8e7 29033 -exec-next-instruction [--reverse]
922fbb7b
AC
29034@end smallexample
29035
ef21caaf
NR
29036Executes one machine instruction. If the instruction is a function
29037call, continues until the function returns. If the program stops at an
29038instruction in the middle of a source line, the address will be
29039printed as well.
922fbb7b 29040
540aa8e7
MS
29041If the @samp{--reverse} option is specified, resumes reverse execution
29042of the inferior program, stopping at the previous instruction. If the
29043previously executed instruction was a return from another function,
29044it will continue to execute in reverse until the call to that function
29045(from the current stack frame) is reached.
29046
922fbb7b
AC
29047@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
29048
29049The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{nexti}.
29050
29051@subsubheading Example
29052
29053@smallexample
594fe323 29054(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
29055-exec-next-instruction
29056^running
29057
594fe323 29058(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
29059*stopped,reason="end-stepping-range",
29060addr="0x000100d4",line="5",file="hello.c"
594fe323 29061(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
29062@end smallexample
29063
29064
29065@subheading The @code{-exec-return} Command
29066@findex -exec-return
29067
29068@subsubheading Synopsis
29069
29070@smallexample
29071 -exec-return
29072@end smallexample
29073
29074Makes current function return immediately. Doesn't execute the inferior.
29075Displays the new current frame.
29076
29077@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
29078
29079The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{return}.
29080
29081@subsubheading Example
29082
29083@smallexample
594fe323 29084(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
29085200-break-insert callee4
29086200^done,bkpt=@{number="1",addr="0x00010734",
29087file="../../../devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",line="8"@}
594fe323 29088(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
29089000-exec-run
29090000^running
594fe323 29091(gdb)
a47ec5fe 29092000*stopped,reason="breakpoint-hit",disp="keep",bkptno="1",
922fbb7b 29093frame=@{func="callee4",args=[],
76ff342d
DJ
29094file="../../../devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",
29095fullname="/home/foo/bar/devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",line="8"@}
594fe323 29096(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
29097205-break-delete
29098205^done
594fe323 29099(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
29100111-exec-return
29101111^done,frame=@{level="0",func="callee3",
29102args=[@{name="strarg",
29103value="0x11940 \"A string argument.\""@}],
76ff342d
DJ
29104file="../../../devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",
29105fullname="/home/foo/bar/devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",line="18"@}
594fe323 29106(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
29107@end smallexample
29108
29109
29110@subheading The @code{-exec-run} Command
29111@findex -exec-run
29112
29113@subsubheading Synopsis
29114
29115@smallexample
a79b8f6e 29116 -exec-run [--all | --thread-group N]
922fbb7b
AC
29117@end smallexample
29118
ef21caaf
NR
29119Starts execution of the inferior from the beginning. The inferior
29120executes until either a breakpoint is encountered or the program
29121exits. In the latter case the output will include an exit code, if
29122the program has exited exceptionally.
922fbb7b 29123
a79b8f6e
VP
29124When no option is specified, the current inferior is started. If the
29125@samp{--thread-group} option is specified, it should refer to a thread
29126group of type @samp{process}, and that thread group will be started.
29127If the @samp{--all} option is specified, then all inferiors will be started.
29128
922fbb7b
AC
29129@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
29130
29131The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{run}.
29132
ef21caaf 29133@subsubheading Examples
922fbb7b
AC
29134
29135@smallexample
594fe323 29136(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
29137-break-insert main
29138^done,bkpt=@{number="1",addr="0x0001072c",file="recursive2.c",line="4"@}
594fe323 29139(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
29140-exec-run
29141^running
594fe323 29142(gdb)
a47ec5fe 29143*stopped,reason="breakpoint-hit",disp="keep",bkptno="1",
76ff342d 29144frame=@{func="main",args=[],file="recursive2.c",
948d5102 29145fullname="/home/foo/bar/recursive2.c",line="4"@}
594fe323 29146(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
29147@end smallexample
29148
ef21caaf
NR
29149@noindent
29150Program exited normally:
29151
29152@smallexample
594fe323 29153(gdb)
ef21caaf
NR
29154-exec-run
29155^running
594fe323 29156(gdb)
ef21caaf
NR
29157x = 55
29158*stopped,reason="exited-normally"
594fe323 29159(gdb)
ef21caaf
NR
29160@end smallexample
29161
29162@noindent
29163Program exited exceptionally:
29164
29165@smallexample
594fe323 29166(gdb)
ef21caaf
NR
29167-exec-run
29168^running
594fe323 29169(gdb)
ef21caaf
NR
29170x = 55
29171*stopped,reason="exited",exit-code="01"
594fe323 29172(gdb)
ef21caaf
NR
29173@end smallexample
29174
29175Another way the program can terminate is if it receives a signal such as
29176@code{SIGINT}. In this case, @sc{gdb/mi} displays this:
29177
29178@smallexample
594fe323 29179(gdb)
ef21caaf
NR
29180*stopped,reason="exited-signalled",signal-name="SIGINT",
29181signal-meaning="Interrupt"
29182@end smallexample
29183
922fbb7b 29184
a2c02241
NR
29185@c @subheading -exec-signal
29186
29187
29188@subheading The @code{-exec-step} Command
29189@findex -exec-step
922fbb7b
AC
29190
29191@subsubheading Synopsis
29192
29193@smallexample
540aa8e7 29194 -exec-step [--reverse]
922fbb7b
AC
29195@end smallexample
29196
a2c02241
NR
29197Resumes execution of the inferior program, stopping when the beginning
29198of the next source line is reached, if the next source line is not a
29199function call. If it is, stop at the first instruction of the called
540aa8e7
MS
29200function. If the @samp{--reverse} option is specified, resumes reverse
29201execution of the inferior program, stopping at the beginning of the
29202previously executed source line.
922fbb7b
AC
29203
29204@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
29205
a2c02241 29206The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{step}.
922fbb7b
AC
29207
29208@subsubheading Example
29209
29210Stepping into a function:
29211
29212@smallexample
29213-exec-step
29214^running
594fe323 29215(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
29216*stopped,reason="end-stepping-range",
29217frame=@{func="foo",args=[@{name="a",value="10"@},
76ff342d 29218@{name="b",value="0"@}],file="recursive2.c",
948d5102 29219fullname="/home/foo/bar/recursive2.c",line="11"@}
594fe323 29220(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
29221@end smallexample
29222
29223Regular stepping:
29224
29225@smallexample
29226-exec-step
29227^running
594fe323 29228(gdb)
922fbb7b 29229*stopped,reason="end-stepping-range",line="14",file="recursive2.c"
594fe323 29230(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
29231@end smallexample
29232
29233
29234@subheading The @code{-exec-step-instruction} Command
29235@findex -exec-step-instruction
29236
29237@subsubheading Synopsis
29238
29239@smallexample
540aa8e7 29240 -exec-step-instruction [--reverse]
922fbb7b
AC
29241@end smallexample
29242
540aa8e7
MS
29243Resumes the inferior which executes one machine instruction. If the
29244@samp{--reverse} option is specified, resumes reverse execution of the
29245inferior program, stopping at the previously executed instruction.
29246The output, once @value{GDBN} has stopped, will vary depending on
29247whether we have stopped in the middle of a source line or not. In the
29248former case, the address at which the program stopped will be printed
29249as well.
922fbb7b
AC
29250
29251@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
29252
29253The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{stepi}.
29254
29255@subsubheading Example
29256
29257@smallexample
594fe323 29258(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
29259-exec-step-instruction
29260^running
29261
594fe323 29262(gdb)
922fbb7b 29263*stopped,reason="end-stepping-range",
76ff342d 29264frame=@{func="foo",args=[],file="try.c",
948d5102 29265fullname="/home/foo/bar/try.c",line="10"@}
594fe323 29266(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
29267-exec-step-instruction
29268^running
29269
594fe323 29270(gdb)
922fbb7b 29271*stopped,reason="end-stepping-range",
76ff342d 29272frame=@{addr="0x000100f4",func="foo",args=[],file="try.c",
948d5102 29273fullname="/home/foo/bar/try.c",line="10"@}
594fe323 29274(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
29275@end smallexample
29276
29277
29278@subheading The @code{-exec-until} Command
29279@findex -exec-until
29280
29281@subsubheading Synopsis
29282
29283@smallexample
29284 -exec-until [ @var{location} ]
29285@end smallexample
29286
ef21caaf
NR
29287Executes the inferior until the @var{location} specified in the
29288argument is reached. If there is no argument, the inferior executes
29289until a source line greater than the current one is reached. The
29290reason for stopping in this case will be @samp{location-reached}.
922fbb7b
AC
29291
29292@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
29293
29294The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{until}.
29295
29296@subsubheading Example
29297
29298@smallexample
594fe323 29299(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
29300-exec-until recursive2.c:6
29301^running
594fe323 29302(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
29303x = 55
29304*stopped,reason="location-reached",frame=@{func="main",args=[],
948d5102 29305file="recursive2.c",fullname="/home/foo/bar/recursive2.c",line="6"@}
594fe323 29306(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
29307@end smallexample
29308
29309@ignore
29310@subheading -file-clear
29311Is this going away????
29312@end ignore
29313
351ff01a 29314@c %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% SECTION %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
a2c02241
NR
29315@node GDB/MI Stack Manipulation
29316@section @sc{gdb/mi} Stack Manipulation Commands
351ff01a 29317
922fbb7b 29318
a2c02241
NR
29319@subheading The @code{-stack-info-frame} Command
29320@findex -stack-info-frame
922fbb7b
AC
29321
29322@subsubheading Synopsis
29323
29324@smallexample
a2c02241 29325 -stack-info-frame
922fbb7b
AC
29326@end smallexample
29327
a2c02241 29328Get info on the selected frame.
922fbb7b
AC
29329
29330@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
29331
a2c02241
NR
29332The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{info frame} or @samp{frame}
29333(without arguments).
922fbb7b
AC
29334
29335@subsubheading Example
29336
29337@smallexample
594fe323 29338(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
29339-stack-info-frame
29340^done,frame=@{level="1",addr="0x0001076c",func="callee3",
29341file="../../../devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",
29342fullname="/home/foo/bar/devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",line="17"@}
594fe323 29343(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
29344@end smallexample
29345
a2c02241
NR
29346@subheading The @code{-stack-info-depth} Command
29347@findex -stack-info-depth
922fbb7b
AC
29348
29349@subsubheading Synopsis
29350
29351@smallexample
a2c02241 29352 -stack-info-depth [ @var{max-depth} ]
922fbb7b
AC
29353@end smallexample
29354
a2c02241
NR
29355Return the depth of the stack. If the integer argument @var{max-depth}
29356is specified, do not count beyond @var{max-depth} frames.
922fbb7b
AC
29357
29358@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
29359
a2c02241 29360There's no equivalent @value{GDBN} command.
922fbb7b
AC
29361
29362@subsubheading Example
29363
a2c02241
NR
29364For a stack with frame levels 0 through 11:
29365
922fbb7b 29366@smallexample
594fe323 29367(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
29368-stack-info-depth
29369^done,depth="12"
594fe323 29370(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
29371-stack-info-depth 4
29372^done,depth="4"
594fe323 29373(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
29374-stack-info-depth 12
29375^done,depth="12"
594fe323 29376(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
29377-stack-info-depth 11
29378^done,depth="11"
594fe323 29379(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
29380-stack-info-depth 13
29381^done,depth="12"
594fe323 29382(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
29383@end smallexample
29384
a2c02241
NR
29385@subheading The @code{-stack-list-arguments} Command
29386@findex -stack-list-arguments
922fbb7b
AC
29387
29388@subsubheading Synopsis
29389
29390@smallexample
3afae151 29391 -stack-list-arguments @var{print-values}
a2c02241 29392 [ @var{low-frame} @var{high-frame} ]
922fbb7b
AC
29393@end smallexample
29394
a2c02241
NR
29395Display a list of the arguments for the frames between @var{low-frame}
29396and @var{high-frame} (inclusive). If @var{low-frame} and
2f1acb09
VP
29397@var{high-frame} are not provided, list the arguments for the whole
29398call stack. If the two arguments are equal, show the single frame
29399at the corresponding level. It is an error if @var{low-frame} is
29400larger than the actual number of frames. On the other hand,
29401@var{high-frame} may be larger than the actual number of frames, in
29402which case only existing frames will be returned.
a2c02241 29403
3afae151
VP
29404If @var{print-values} is 0 or @code{--no-values}, print only the names of
29405the variables; if it is 1 or @code{--all-values}, print also their
29406values; and if it is 2 or @code{--simple-values}, print the name,
29407type and value for simple data types, and the name and type for arrays,
29408structures and unions.
922fbb7b 29409
b3372f91
VP
29410Use of this command to obtain arguments in a single frame is
29411deprecated in favor of the @samp{-stack-list-variables} command.
29412
922fbb7b
AC
29413@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
29414
a2c02241
NR
29415@value{GDBN} does not have an equivalent command. @code{gdbtk} has a
29416@samp{gdb_get_args} command which partially overlaps with the
29417functionality of @samp{-stack-list-arguments}.
922fbb7b
AC
29418
29419@subsubheading Example
922fbb7b 29420
a2c02241 29421@smallexample
594fe323 29422(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
29423-stack-list-frames
29424^done,
29425stack=[
29426frame=@{level="0",addr="0x00010734",func="callee4",
29427file="../../../devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",
29428fullname="/home/foo/bar/devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",line="8"@},
29429frame=@{level="1",addr="0x0001076c",func="callee3",
29430file="../../../devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",
29431fullname="/home/foo/bar/devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",line="17"@},
29432frame=@{level="2",addr="0x0001078c",func="callee2",
29433file="../../../devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",
29434fullname="/home/foo/bar/devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",line="22"@},
29435frame=@{level="3",addr="0x000107b4",func="callee1",
29436file="../../../devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",
29437fullname="/home/foo/bar/devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",line="27"@},
29438frame=@{level="4",addr="0x000107e0",func="main",
29439file="../../../devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",
29440fullname="/home/foo/bar/devo/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",line="32"@}]
594fe323 29441(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
29442-stack-list-arguments 0
29443^done,
29444stack-args=[
29445frame=@{level="0",args=[]@},
29446frame=@{level="1",args=[name="strarg"]@},
29447frame=@{level="2",args=[name="intarg",name="strarg"]@},
29448frame=@{level="3",args=[name="intarg",name="strarg",name="fltarg"]@},
29449frame=@{level="4",args=[]@}]
594fe323 29450(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
29451-stack-list-arguments 1
29452^done,
29453stack-args=[
29454frame=@{level="0",args=[]@},
29455frame=@{level="1",
29456 args=[@{name="strarg",value="0x11940 \"A string argument.\""@}]@},
29457frame=@{level="2",args=[
29458@{name="intarg",value="2"@},
29459@{name="strarg",value="0x11940 \"A string argument.\""@}]@},
29460@{frame=@{level="3",args=[
29461@{name="intarg",value="2"@},
29462@{name="strarg",value="0x11940 \"A string argument.\""@},
29463@{name="fltarg",value="3.5"@}]@},
29464frame=@{level="4",args=[]@}]
594fe323 29465(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
29466-stack-list-arguments 0 2 2
29467^done,stack-args=[frame=@{level="2",args=[name="intarg",name="strarg"]@}]
594fe323 29468(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
29469-stack-list-arguments 1 2 2
29470^done,stack-args=[frame=@{level="2",
29471args=[@{name="intarg",value="2"@},
29472@{name="strarg",value="0x11940 \"A string argument.\""@}]@}]
594fe323 29473(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
29474@end smallexample
29475
29476@c @subheading -stack-list-exception-handlers
922fbb7b 29477
a2c02241
NR
29478
29479@subheading The @code{-stack-list-frames} Command
29480@findex -stack-list-frames
1abaf70c
BR
29481
29482@subsubheading Synopsis
29483
29484@smallexample
a2c02241 29485 -stack-list-frames [ @var{low-frame} @var{high-frame} ]
1abaf70c
BR
29486@end smallexample
29487
a2c02241
NR
29488List the frames currently on the stack. For each frame it displays the
29489following info:
29490
29491@table @samp
29492@item @var{level}
d3e8051b 29493The frame number, 0 being the topmost frame, i.e., the innermost function.
a2c02241
NR
29494@item @var{addr}
29495The @code{$pc} value for that frame.
29496@item @var{func}
29497Function name.
29498@item @var{file}
29499File name of the source file where the function lives.
7d288aaa
TT
29500@item @var{fullname}
29501The full file name of the source file where the function lives.
a2c02241
NR
29502@item @var{line}
29503Line number corresponding to the @code{$pc}.
7d288aaa
TT
29504@item @var{from}
29505The shared library where this function is defined. This is only given
29506if the frame's function is not known.
a2c02241
NR
29507@end table
29508
29509If invoked without arguments, this command prints a backtrace for the
29510whole stack. If given two integer arguments, it shows the frames whose
29511levels are between the two arguments (inclusive). If the two arguments
2ab1eb7a
VP
29512are equal, it shows the single frame at the corresponding level. It is
29513an error if @var{low-frame} is larger than the actual number of
a5451f4e 29514frames. On the other hand, @var{high-frame} may be larger than the
2ab1eb7a 29515actual number of frames, in which case only existing frames will be returned.
1abaf70c
BR
29516
29517@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
29518
a2c02241 29519The corresponding @value{GDBN} commands are @samp{backtrace} and @samp{where}.
1abaf70c
BR
29520
29521@subsubheading Example
29522
a2c02241
NR
29523Full stack backtrace:
29524
1abaf70c 29525@smallexample
594fe323 29526(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
29527-stack-list-frames
29528^done,stack=
29529[frame=@{level="0",addr="0x0001076c",func="foo",
29530 file="recursive2.c",fullname="/home/foo/bar/recursive2.c",line="11"@},
29531frame=@{level="1",addr="0x000107a4",func="foo",
29532 file="recursive2.c",fullname="/home/foo/bar/recursive2.c",line="14"@},
29533frame=@{level="2",addr="0x000107a4",func="foo",
29534 file="recursive2.c",fullname="/home/foo/bar/recursive2.c",line="14"@},
29535frame=@{level="3",addr="0x000107a4",func="foo",
29536 file="recursive2.c",fullname="/home/foo/bar/recursive2.c",line="14"@},
29537frame=@{level="4",addr="0x000107a4",func="foo",
29538 file="recursive2.c",fullname="/home/foo/bar/recursive2.c",line="14"@},
29539frame=@{level="5",addr="0x000107a4",func="foo",
29540 file="recursive2.c",fullname="/home/foo/bar/recursive2.c",line="14"@},
29541frame=@{level="6",addr="0x000107a4",func="foo",
29542 file="recursive2.c",fullname="/home/foo/bar/recursive2.c",line="14"@},
29543frame=@{level="7",addr="0x000107a4",func="foo",
29544 file="recursive2.c",fullname="/home/foo/bar/recursive2.c",line="14"@},
29545frame=@{level="8",addr="0x000107a4",func="foo",
29546 file="recursive2.c",fullname="/home/foo/bar/recursive2.c",line="14"@},
29547frame=@{level="9",addr="0x000107a4",func="foo",
29548 file="recursive2.c",fullname="/home/foo/bar/recursive2.c",line="14"@},
29549frame=@{level="10",addr="0x000107a4",func="foo",
29550 file="recursive2.c",fullname="/home/foo/bar/recursive2.c",line="14"@},
29551frame=@{level="11",addr="0x00010738",func="main",
29552 file="recursive2.c",fullname="/home/foo/bar/recursive2.c",line="4"@}]
594fe323 29553(gdb)
1abaf70c
BR
29554@end smallexample
29555
a2c02241 29556Show frames between @var{low_frame} and @var{high_frame}:
1abaf70c 29557
a2c02241 29558@smallexample
594fe323 29559(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
29560-stack-list-frames 3 5
29561^done,stack=
29562[frame=@{level="3",addr="0x000107a4",func="foo",
29563 file="recursive2.c",fullname="/home/foo/bar/recursive2.c",line="14"@},
29564frame=@{level="4",addr="0x000107a4",func="foo",
29565 file="recursive2.c",fullname="/home/foo/bar/recursive2.c",line="14"@},
29566frame=@{level="5",addr="0x000107a4",func="foo",
29567 file="recursive2.c",fullname="/home/foo/bar/recursive2.c",line="14"@}]
594fe323 29568(gdb)
a2c02241 29569@end smallexample
922fbb7b 29570
a2c02241 29571Show a single frame:
922fbb7b
AC
29572
29573@smallexample
594fe323 29574(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
29575-stack-list-frames 3 3
29576^done,stack=
29577[frame=@{level="3",addr="0x000107a4",func="foo",
29578 file="recursive2.c",fullname="/home/foo/bar/recursive2.c",line="14"@}]
594fe323 29579(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
29580@end smallexample
29581
922fbb7b 29582
a2c02241
NR
29583@subheading The @code{-stack-list-locals} Command
29584@findex -stack-list-locals
57c22c6c 29585
a2c02241 29586@subsubheading Synopsis
922fbb7b
AC
29587
29588@smallexample
a2c02241 29589 -stack-list-locals @var{print-values}
922fbb7b
AC
29590@end smallexample
29591
a2c02241
NR
29592Display the local variable names for the selected frame. If
29593@var{print-values} is 0 or @code{--no-values}, print only the names of
29594the variables; if it is 1 or @code{--all-values}, print also their
29595values; and if it is 2 or @code{--simple-values}, print the name,
3afae151 29596type and value for simple data types, and the name and type for arrays,
a2c02241
NR
29597structures and unions. In this last case, a frontend can immediately
29598display the value of simple data types and create variable objects for
d3e8051b 29599other data types when the user wishes to explore their values in
a2c02241 29600more detail.
922fbb7b 29601
b3372f91
VP
29602This command is deprecated in favor of the
29603@samp{-stack-list-variables} command.
29604
922fbb7b
AC
29605@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
29606
a2c02241 29607@samp{info locals} in @value{GDBN}, @samp{gdb_get_locals} in @code{gdbtk}.
922fbb7b
AC
29608
29609@subsubheading Example
922fbb7b
AC
29610
29611@smallexample
594fe323 29612(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
29613-stack-list-locals 0
29614^done,locals=[name="A",name="B",name="C"]
594fe323 29615(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
29616-stack-list-locals --all-values
29617^done,locals=[@{name="A",value="1"@},@{name="B",value="2"@},
29618 @{name="C",value="@{1, 2, 3@}"@}]
29619-stack-list-locals --simple-values
29620^done,locals=[@{name="A",type="int",value="1"@},
29621 @{name="B",type="int",value="2"@},@{name="C",type="int [3]"@}]
594fe323 29622(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
29623@end smallexample
29624
b3372f91
VP
29625@subheading The @code{-stack-list-variables} Command
29626@findex -stack-list-variables
29627
29628@subsubheading Synopsis
29629
29630@smallexample
29631 -stack-list-variables @var{print-values}
29632@end smallexample
29633
29634Display the names of local variables and function arguments for the selected frame. If
29635@var{print-values} is 0 or @code{--no-values}, print only the names of
29636the variables; if it is 1 or @code{--all-values}, print also their
29637values; and if it is 2 or @code{--simple-values}, print the name,
3afae151 29638type and value for simple data types, and the name and type for arrays,
b3372f91
VP
29639structures and unions.
29640
29641@subsubheading Example
29642
29643@smallexample
29644(gdb)
29645-stack-list-variables --thread 1 --frame 0 --all-values
4f412fd0 29646^done,variables=[@{name="x",value="11"@},@{name="s",value="@{a = 1, b = 2@}"@}]
b3372f91
VP
29647(gdb)
29648@end smallexample
29649
922fbb7b 29650
a2c02241
NR
29651@subheading The @code{-stack-select-frame} Command
29652@findex -stack-select-frame
922fbb7b
AC
29653
29654@subsubheading Synopsis
29655
29656@smallexample
a2c02241 29657 -stack-select-frame @var{framenum}
922fbb7b
AC
29658@end smallexample
29659
a2c02241
NR
29660Change the selected frame. Select a different frame @var{framenum} on
29661the stack.
922fbb7b 29662
c3b108f7
VP
29663This command in deprecated in favor of passing the @samp{--frame}
29664option to every command.
29665
922fbb7b
AC
29666@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
29667
a2c02241
NR
29668The corresponding @value{GDBN} commands are @samp{frame}, @samp{up},
29669@samp{down}, @samp{select-frame}, @samp{up-silent}, and @samp{down-silent}.
922fbb7b
AC
29670
29671@subsubheading Example
29672
29673@smallexample
594fe323 29674(gdb)
a2c02241 29675-stack-select-frame 2
922fbb7b 29676^done
594fe323 29677(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
29678@end smallexample
29679
29680@c %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% SECTION %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
a2c02241
NR
29681@node GDB/MI Variable Objects
29682@section @sc{gdb/mi} Variable Objects
922fbb7b 29683
a1b5960f 29684@ignore
922fbb7b 29685
a2c02241 29686@subheading Motivation for Variable Objects in @sc{gdb/mi}
922fbb7b 29687
a2c02241
NR
29688For the implementation of a variable debugger window (locals, watched
29689expressions, etc.), we are proposing the adaptation of the existing code
29690used by @code{Insight}.
922fbb7b 29691
a2c02241 29692The two main reasons for that are:
922fbb7b 29693
a2c02241
NR
29694@enumerate 1
29695@item
29696It has been proven in practice (it is already on its second generation).
922fbb7b 29697
a2c02241
NR
29698@item
29699It will shorten development time (needless to say how important it is
29700now).
29701@end enumerate
922fbb7b 29702
a2c02241
NR
29703The original interface was designed to be used by Tcl code, so it was
29704slightly changed so it could be used through @sc{gdb/mi}. This section
29705describes the @sc{gdb/mi} operations that will be available and gives some
29706hints about their use.
922fbb7b 29707
a2c02241
NR
29708@emph{Note}: In addition to the set of operations described here, we
29709expect the @sc{gui} implementation of a variable window to require, at
29710least, the following operations:
922fbb7b 29711
a2c02241
NR
29712@itemize @bullet
29713@item @code{-gdb-show} @code{output-radix}
29714@item @code{-stack-list-arguments}
29715@item @code{-stack-list-locals}
29716@item @code{-stack-select-frame}
29717@end itemize
922fbb7b 29718
a1b5960f
VP
29719@end ignore
29720
c8b2f53c 29721@subheading Introduction to Variable Objects
922fbb7b 29722
a2c02241 29723@cindex variable objects in @sc{gdb/mi}
c8b2f53c
VP
29724
29725Variable objects are "object-oriented" MI interface for examining and
29726changing values of expressions. Unlike some other MI interfaces that
29727work with expressions, variable objects are specifically designed for
29728simple and efficient presentation in the frontend. A variable object
29729is identified by string name. When a variable object is created, the
29730frontend specifies the expression for that variable object. The
29731expression can be a simple variable, or it can be an arbitrary complex
29732expression, and can even involve CPU registers. After creating a
29733variable object, the frontend can invoke other variable object
29734operations---for example to obtain or change the value of a variable
29735object, or to change display format.
29736
29737Variable objects have hierarchical tree structure. Any variable object
29738that corresponds to a composite type, such as structure in C, has
29739a number of child variable objects, for example corresponding to each
29740element of a structure. A child variable object can itself have
29741children, recursively. Recursion ends when we reach
25d5ea92
VP
29742leaf variable objects, which always have built-in types. Child variable
29743objects are created only by explicit request, so if a frontend
29744is not interested in the children of a particular variable object, no
29745child will be created.
c8b2f53c
VP
29746
29747For a leaf variable object it is possible to obtain its value as a
29748string, or set the value from a string. String value can be also
29749obtained for a non-leaf variable object, but it's generally a string
29750that only indicates the type of the object, and does not list its
29751contents. Assignment to a non-leaf variable object is not allowed.
29752
29753A frontend does not need to read the values of all variable objects each time
29754the program stops. Instead, MI provides an update command that lists all
29755variable objects whose values has changed since the last update
29756operation. This considerably reduces the amount of data that must
25d5ea92
VP
29757be transferred to the frontend. As noted above, children variable
29758objects are created on demand, and only leaf variable objects have a
29759real value. As result, gdb will read target memory only for leaf
29760variables that frontend has created.
29761
29762The automatic update is not always desirable. For example, a frontend
29763might want to keep a value of some expression for future reference,
29764and never update it. For another example, fetching memory is
29765relatively slow for embedded targets, so a frontend might want
29766to disable automatic update for the variables that are either not
29767visible on the screen, or ``closed''. This is possible using so
29768called ``frozen variable objects''. Such variable objects are never
29769implicitly updated.
922fbb7b 29770
c3b108f7
VP
29771Variable objects can be either @dfn{fixed} or @dfn{floating}. For the
29772fixed variable object, the expression is parsed when the variable
29773object is created, including associating identifiers to specific
29774variables. The meaning of expression never changes. For a floating
29775variable object the values of variables whose names appear in the
29776expressions are re-evaluated every time in the context of the current
29777frame. Consider this example:
29778
29779@smallexample
29780void do_work(...)
29781@{
29782 struct work_state state;
29783
29784 if (...)
29785 do_work(...);
29786@}
29787@end smallexample
29788
29789If a fixed variable object for the @code{state} variable is created in
7a9dd1b2 29790this function, and we enter the recursive call, the variable
c3b108f7
VP
29791object will report the value of @code{state} in the top-level
29792@code{do_work} invocation. On the other hand, a floating variable
29793object will report the value of @code{state} in the current frame.
29794
29795If an expression specified when creating a fixed variable object
29796refers to a local variable, the variable object becomes bound to the
29797thread and frame in which the variable object is created. When such
29798variable object is updated, @value{GDBN} makes sure that the
29799thread/frame combination the variable object is bound to still exists,
29800and re-evaluates the variable object in context of that thread/frame.
29801
a2c02241
NR
29802The following is the complete set of @sc{gdb/mi} operations defined to
29803access this functionality:
922fbb7b 29804
a2c02241
NR
29805@multitable @columnfractions .4 .6
29806@item @strong{Operation}
29807@tab @strong{Description}
922fbb7b 29808
0cc7d26f
TT
29809@item @code{-enable-pretty-printing}
29810@tab enable Python-based pretty-printing
a2c02241
NR
29811@item @code{-var-create}
29812@tab create a variable object
29813@item @code{-var-delete}
22d8a470 29814@tab delete the variable object and/or its children
a2c02241
NR
29815@item @code{-var-set-format}
29816@tab set the display format of this variable
29817@item @code{-var-show-format}
29818@tab show the display format of this variable
29819@item @code{-var-info-num-children}
29820@tab tells how many children this object has
29821@item @code{-var-list-children}
29822@tab return a list of the object's children
29823@item @code{-var-info-type}
29824@tab show the type of this variable object
29825@item @code{-var-info-expression}
02142340
VP
29826@tab print parent-relative expression that this variable object represents
29827@item @code{-var-info-path-expression}
29828@tab print full expression that this variable object represents
a2c02241
NR
29829@item @code{-var-show-attributes}
29830@tab is this variable editable? does it exist here?
29831@item @code{-var-evaluate-expression}
29832@tab get the value of this variable
29833@item @code{-var-assign}
29834@tab set the value of this variable
29835@item @code{-var-update}
29836@tab update the variable and its children
25d5ea92
VP
29837@item @code{-var-set-frozen}
29838@tab set frozeness attribute
0cc7d26f
TT
29839@item @code{-var-set-update-range}
29840@tab set range of children to display on update
a2c02241 29841@end multitable
922fbb7b 29842
a2c02241
NR
29843In the next subsection we describe each operation in detail and suggest
29844how it can be used.
922fbb7b 29845
a2c02241 29846@subheading Description And Use of Operations on Variable Objects
922fbb7b 29847
0cc7d26f
TT
29848@subheading The @code{-enable-pretty-printing} Command
29849@findex -enable-pretty-printing
29850
29851@smallexample
29852-enable-pretty-printing
29853@end smallexample
29854
29855@value{GDBN} allows Python-based visualizers to affect the output of the
29856MI variable object commands. However, because there was no way to
29857implement this in a fully backward-compatible way, a front end must
29858request that this functionality be enabled.
29859
29860Once enabled, this feature cannot be disabled.
29861
29862Note that if Python support has not been compiled into @value{GDBN},
29863this command will still succeed (and do nothing).
29864
f43030c4
TT
29865This feature is currently (as of @value{GDBN} 7.0) experimental, and
29866may work differently in future versions of @value{GDBN}.
29867
a2c02241
NR
29868@subheading The @code{-var-create} Command
29869@findex -var-create
ef21caaf 29870
a2c02241 29871@subsubheading Synopsis
ef21caaf 29872
a2c02241
NR
29873@smallexample
29874 -var-create @{@var{name} | "-"@}
c3b108f7 29875 @{@var{frame-addr} | "*" | "@@"@} @var{expression}
a2c02241
NR
29876@end smallexample
29877
29878This operation creates a variable object, which allows the monitoring of
29879a variable, the result of an expression, a memory cell or a CPU
29880register.
ef21caaf 29881
a2c02241
NR
29882The @var{name} parameter is the string by which the object can be
29883referenced. It must be unique. If @samp{-} is specified, the varobj
29884system will generate a string ``varNNNNNN'' automatically. It will be
c3b108f7 29885unique provided that one does not specify @var{name} of that format.
a2c02241 29886The command fails if a duplicate name is found.
ef21caaf 29887
a2c02241
NR
29888The frame under which the expression should be evaluated can be
29889specified by @var{frame-addr}. A @samp{*} indicates that the current
c3b108f7
VP
29890frame should be used. A @samp{@@} indicates that a floating variable
29891object must be created.
922fbb7b 29892
a2c02241
NR
29893@var{expression} is any expression valid on the current language set (must not
29894begin with a @samp{*}), or one of the following:
922fbb7b 29895
a2c02241
NR
29896@itemize @bullet
29897@item
29898@samp{*@var{addr}}, where @var{addr} is the address of a memory cell
922fbb7b 29899
a2c02241
NR
29900@item
29901@samp{*@var{addr}-@var{addr}} --- a memory address range (TBD)
922fbb7b 29902
a2c02241
NR
29903@item
29904@samp{$@var{regname}} --- a CPU register name
29905@end itemize
922fbb7b 29906
0cc7d26f
TT
29907@cindex dynamic varobj
29908A varobj's contents may be provided by a Python-based pretty-printer. In this
29909case the varobj is known as a @dfn{dynamic varobj}. Dynamic varobjs
29910have slightly different semantics in some cases. If the
29911@code{-enable-pretty-printing} command is not sent, then @value{GDBN}
29912will never create a dynamic varobj. This ensures backward
29913compatibility for existing clients.
29914
a2c02241 29915@subsubheading Result
922fbb7b 29916
0cc7d26f
TT
29917This operation returns attributes of the newly-created varobj. These
29918are:
29919
29920@table @samp
29921@item name
29922The name of the varobj.
29923
29924@item numchild
29925The number of children of the varobj. This number is not necessarily
29926reliable for a dynamic varobj. Instead, you must examine the
29927@samp{has_more} attribute.
29928
29929@item value
29930The varobj's scalar value. For a varobj whose type is some sort of
29931aggregate (e.g., a @code{struct}), or for a dynamic varobj, this value
29932will not be interesting.
29933
29934@item type
29935The varobj's type. This is a string representation of the type, as
8264ba82
AG
29936would be printed by the @value{GDBN} CLI. If @samp{print object}
29937(@pxref{Print Settings, set print object}) is set to @code{on}, the
29938@emph{actual} (derived) type of the object is shown rather than the
29939@emph{declared} one.
0cc7d26f
TT
29940
29941@item thread-id
29942If a variable object is bound to a specific thread, then this is the
29943thread's identifier.
29944
29945@item has_more
29946For a dynamic varobj, this indicates whether there appear to be any
29947children available. For a non-dynamic varobj, this will be 0.
29948
29949@item dynamic
29950This attribute will be present and have the value @samp{1} if the
29951varobj is a dynamic varobj. If the varobj is not a dynamic varobj,
29952then this attribute will not be present.
29953
29954@item displayhint
29955A dynamic varobj can supply a display hint to the front end. The
29956value comes directly from the Python pretty-printer object's
4c374409 29957@code{display_hint} method. @xref{Pretty Printing API}.
0cc7d26f
TT
29958@end table
29959
29960Typical output will look like this:
922fbb7b
AC
29961
29962@smallexample
0cc7d26f
TT
29963 name="@var{name}",numchild="@var{N}",type="@var{type}",thread-id="@var{M}",
29964 has_more="@var{has_more}"
dcaaae04
NR
29965@end smallexample
29966
a2c02241
NR
29967
29968@subheading The @code{-var-delete} Command
29969@findex -var-delete
922fbb7b
AC
29970
29971@subsubheading Synopsis
29972
29973@smallexample
22d8a470 29974 -var-delete [ -c ] @var{name}
922fbb7b
AC
29975@end smallexample
29976
a2c02241 29977Deletes a previously created variable object and all of its children.
22d8a470 29978With the @samp{-c} option, just deletes the children.
922fbb7b 29979
a2c02241 29980Returns an error if the object @var{name} is not found.
922fbb7b 29981
922fbb7b 29982
a2c02241
NR
29983@subheading The @code{-var-set-format} Command
29984@findex -var-set-format
922fbb7b 29985
a2c02241 29986@subsubheading Synopsis
922fbb7b
AC
29987
29988@smallexample
a2c02241 29989 -var-set-format @var{name} @var{format-spec}
922fbb7b
AC
29990@end smallexample
29991
a2c02241
NR
29992Sets the output format for the value of the object @var{name} to be
29993@var{format-spec}.
29994
de051565 29995@anchor{-var-set-format}
a2c02241
NR
29996The syntax for the @var{format-spec} is as follows:
29997
29998@smallexample
29999 @var{format-spec} @expansion{}
30000 @{binary | decimal | hexadecimal | octal | natural@}
30001@end smallexample
30002
c8b2f53c
VP
30003The natural format is the default format choosen automatically
30004based on the variable type (like decimal for an @code{int}, hex
30005for pointers, etc.).
30006
30007For a variable with children, the format is set only on the
30008variable itself, and the children are not affected.
a2c02241
NR
30009
30010@subheading The @code{-var-show-format} Command
30011@findex -var-show-format
922fbb7b
AC
30012
30013@subsubheading Synopsis
30014
30015@smallexample
a2c02241 30016 -var-show-format @var{name}
922fbb7b
AC
30017@end smallexample
30018
a2c02241 30019Returns the format used to display the value of the object @var{name}.
922fbb7b 30020
a2c02241
NR
30021@smallexample
30022 @var{format} @expansion{}
30023 @var{format-spec}
30024@end smallexample
922fbb7b 30025
922fbb7b 30026
a2c02241
NR
30027@subheading The @code{-var-info-num-children} Command
30028@findex -var-info-num-children
30029
30030@subsubheading Synopsis
30031
30032@smallexample
30033 -var-info-num-children @var{name}
30034@end smallexample
30035
30036Returns the number of children of a variable object @var{name}:
30037
30038@smallexample
30039 numchild=@var{n}
30040@end smallexample
30041
0cc7d26f
TT
30042Note that this number is not completely reliable for a dynamic varobj.
30043It will return the current number of children, but more children may
30044be available.
30045
a2c02241
NR
30046
30047@subheading The @code{-var-list-children} Command
30048@findex -var-list-children
30049
30050@subsubheading Synopsis
30051
30052@smallexample
0cc7d26f 30053 -var-list-children [@var{print-values}] @var{name} [@var{from} @var{to}]
a2c02241 30054@end smallexample
b569d230 30055@anchor{-var-list-children}
a2c02241
NR
30056
30057Return a list of the children of the specified variable object and
30058create variable objects for them, if they do not already exist. With
f5011d11 30059a single argument or if @var{print-values} has a value of 0 or
a2c02241
NR
30060@code{--no-values}, print only the names of the variables; if
30061@var{print-values} is 1 or @code{--all-values}, also print their
30062values; and if it is 2 or @code{--simple-values} print the name and
30063value for simple data types and just the name for arrays, structures
30064and unions.
922fbb7b 30065
0cc7d26f
TT
30066@var{from} and @var{to}, if specified, indicate the range of children
30067to report. If @var{from} or @var{to} is less than zero, the range is
30068reset and all children will be reported. Otherwise, children starting
30069at @var{from} (zero-based) and up to and excluding @var{to} will be
30070reported.
30071
30072If a child range is requested, it will only affect the current call to
30073@code{-var-list-children}, but not future calls to @code{-var-update}.
30074For this, you must instead use @code{-var-set-update-range}. The
30075intent of this approach is to enable a front end to implement any
30076update approach it likes; for example, scrolling a view may cause the
30077front end to request more children with @code{-var-list-children}, and
30078then the front end could call @code{-var-set-update-range} with a
30079different range to ensure that future updates are restricted to just
30080the visible items.
30081
b569d230
EZ
30082For each child the following results are returned:
30083
30084@table @var
30085
30086@item name
30087Name of the variable object created for this child.
30088
30089@item exp
30090The expression to be shown to the user by the front end to designate this child.
30091For example this may be the name of a structure member.
30092
0cc7d26f
TT
30093For a dynamic varobj, this value cannot be used to form an
30094expression. There is no way to do this at all with a dynamic varobj.
30095
b569d230
EZ
30096For C/C@t{++} structures there are several pseudo children returned to
30097designate access qualifiers. For these pseudo children @var{exp} is
30098@samp{public}, @samp{private}, or @samp{protected}. In this case the
30099type and value are not present.
30100
0cc7d26f
TT
30101A dynamic varobj will not report the access qualifying
30102pseudo-children, regardless of the language. This information is not
30103available at all with a dynamic varobj.
30104
b569d230 30105@item numchild
0cc7d26f
TT
30106Number of children this child has. For a dynamic varobj, this will be
301070.
b569d230
EZ
30108
30109@item type
8264ba82
AG
30110The type of the child. If @samp{print object}
30111(@pxref{Print Settings, set print object}) is set to @code{on}, the
30112@emph{actual} (derived) type of the object is shown rather than the
30113@emph{declared} one.
b569d230
EZ
30114
30115@item value
30116If values were requested, this is the value.
30117
30118@item thread-id
30119If this variable object is associated with a thread, this is the thread id.
30120Otherwise this result is not present.
30121
30122@item frozen
30123If the variable object is frozen, this variable will be present with a value of 1.
30124@end table
30125
0cc7d26f
TT
30126The result may have its own attributes:
30127
30128@table @samp
30129@item displayhint
30130A dynamic varobj can supply a display hint to the front end. The
30131value comes directly from the Python pretty-printer object's
4c374409 30132@code{display_hint} method. @xref{Pretty Printing API}.
0cc7d26f
TT
30133
30134@item has_more
30135This is an integer attribute which is nonzero if there are children
30136remaining after the end of the selected range.
30137@end table
30138
922fbb7b
AC
30139@subsubheading Example
30140
30141@smallexample
594fe323 30142(gdb)
a2c02241 30143 -var-list-children n
b569d230 30144 ^done,numchild=@var{n},children=[child=@{name=@var{name},exp=@var{exp},
a2c02241 30145 numchild=@var{n},type=@var{type}@},@r{(repeats N times)}]
594fe323 30146(gdb)
a2c02241 30147 -var-list-children --all-values n
b569d230 30148 ^done,numchild=@var{n},children=[child=@{name=@var{name},exp=@var{exp},
a2c02241 30149 numchild=@var{n},value=@var{value},type=@var{type}@},@r{(repeats N times)}]
922fbb7b
AC
30150@end smallexample
30151
922fbb7b 30152
a2c02241
NR
30153@subheading The @code{-var-info-type} Command
30154@findex -var-info-type
922fbb7b 30155
a2c02241
NR
30156@subsubheading Synopsis
30157
30158@smallexample
30159 -var-info-type @var{name}
30160@end smallexample
30161
30162Returns the type of the specified variable @var{name}. The type is
30163returned as a string in the same format as it is output by the
30164@value{GDBN} CLI:
30165
30166@smallexample
30167 type=@var{typename}
30168@end smallexample
30169
30170
30171@subheading The @code{-var-info-expression} Command
30172@findex -var-info-expression
922fbb7b
AC
30173
30174@subsubheading Synopsis
30175
30176@smallexample
a2c02241 30177 -var-info-expression @var{name}
922fbb7b
AC
30178@end smallexample
30179
02142340
VP
30180Returns a string that is suitable for presenting this
30181variable object in user interface. The string is generally
30182not valid expression in the current language, and cannot be evaluated.
30183
30184For example, if @code{a} is an array, and variable object
30185@code{A} was created for @code{a}, then we'll get this output:
922fbb7b 30186
a2c02241 30187@smallexample
02142340
VP
30188(gdb) -var-info-expression A.1
30189^done,lang="C",exp="1"
a2c02241 30190@end smallexample
922fbb7b 30191
a2c02241 30192@noindent
02142340
VP
30193Here, the values of @code{lang} can be @code{@{"C" | "C++" | "Java"@}}.
30194
30195Note that the output of the @code{-var-list-children} command also
30196includes those expressions, so the @code{-var-info-expression} command
30197is of limited use.
30198
30199@subheading The @code{-var-info-path-expression} Command
30200@findex -var-info-path-expression
30201
30202@subsubheading Synopsis
30203
30204@smallexample
30205 -var-info-path-expression @var{name}
30206@end smallexample
30207
30208Returns an expression that can be evaluated in the current
30209context and will yield the same value that a variable object has.
30210Compare this with the @code{-var-info-expression} command, which
30211result can be used only for UI presentation. Typical use of
30212the @code{-var-info-path-expression} command is creating a
30213watchpoint from a variable object.
30214
0cc7d26f
TT
30215This command is currently not valid for children of a dynamic varobj,
30216and will give an error when invoked on one.
30217
02142340
VP
30218For example, suppose @code{C} is a C@t{++} class, derived from class
30219@code{Base}, and that the @code{Base} class has a member called
30220@code{m_size}. Assume a variable @code{c} is has the type of
30221@code{C} and a variable object @code{C} was created for variable
30222@code{c}. Then, we'll get this output:
30223@smallexample
30224(gdb) -var-info-path-expression C.Base.public.m_size
30225^done,path_expr=((Base)c).m_size)
30226@end smallexample
922fbb7b 30227
a2c02241
NR
30228@subheading The @code{-var-show-attributes} Command
30229@findex -var-show-attributes
922fbb7b 30230
a2c02241 30231@subsubheading Synopsis
922fbb7b 30232
a2c02241
NR
30233@smallexample
30234 -var-show-attributes @var{name}
30235@end smallexample
922fbb7b 30236
a2c02241 30237List attributes of the specified variable object @var{name}:
922fbb7b
AC
30238
30239@smallexample
a2c02241 30240 status=@var{attr} [ ( ,@var{attr} )* ]
922fbb7b
AC
30241@end smallexample
30242
a2c02241
NR
30243@noindent
30244where @var{attr} is @code{@{ @{ editable | noneditable @} | TBD @}}.
30245
30246@subheading The @code{-var-evaluate-expression} Command
30247@findex -var-evaluate-expression
30248
30249@subsubheading Synopsis
30250
30251@smallexample
de051565 30252 -var-evaluate-expression [-f @var{format-spec}] @var{name}
a2c02241
NR
30253@end smallexample
30254
30255Evaluates the expression that is represented by the specified variable
de051565
MK
30256object and returns its value as a string. The format of the string
30257can be specified with the @samp{-f} option. The possible values of
30258this option are the same as for @code{-var-set-format}
30259(@pxref{-var-set-format}). If the @samp{-f} option is not specified,
30260the current display format will be used. The current display format
30261can be changed using the @code{-var-set-format} command.
a2c02241
NR
30262
30263@smallexample
30264 value=@var{value}
30265@end smallexample
30266
30267Note that one must invoke @code{-var-list-children} for a variable
30268before the value of a child variable can be evaluated.
30269
30270@subheading The @code{-var-assign} Command
30271@findex -var-assign
30272
30273@subsubheading Synopsis
30274
30275@smallexample
30276 -var-assign @var{name} @var{expression}
30277@end smallexample
30278
30279Assigns the value of @var{expression} to the variable object specified
30280by @var{name}. The object must be @samp{editable}. If the variable's
30281value is altered by the assign, the variable will show up in any
30282subsequent @code{-var-update} list.
30283
30284@subsubheading Example
922fbb7b
AC
30285
30286@smallexample
594fe323 30287(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
30288-var-assign var1 3
30289^done,value="3"
594fe323 30290(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
30291-var-update *
30292^done,changelist=[@{name="var1",in_scope="true",type_changed="false"@}]
594fe323 30293(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
30294@end smallexample
30295
a2c02241
NR
30296@subheading The @code{-var-update} Command
30297@findex -var-update
30298
30299@subsubheading Synopsis
30300
30301@smallexample
30302 -var-update [@var{print-values}] @{@var{name} | "*"@}
30303@end smallexample
30304
c8b2f53c
VP
30305Reevaluate the expressions corresponding to the variable object
30306@var{name} and all its direct and indirect children, and return the
36ece8b3
NR
30307list of variable objects whose values have changed; @var{name} must
30308be a root variable object. Here, ``changed'' means that the result of
30309@code{-var-evaluate-expression} before and after the
30310@code{-var-update} is different. If @samp{*} is used as the variable
9f708cb2
VP
30311object names, all existing variable objects are updated, except
30312for frozen ones (@pxref{-var-set-frozen}). The option
36ece8b3 30313@var{print-values} determines whether both names and values, or just
de051565 30314names are printed. The possible values of this option are the same
36ece8b3
NR
30315as for @code{-var-list-children} (@pxref{-var-list-children}). It is
30316recommended to use the @samp{--all-values} option, to reduce the
30317number of MI commands needed on each program stop.
c8b2f53c 30318
c3b108f7
VP
30319With the @samp{*} parameter, if a variable object is bound to a
30320currently running thread, it will not be updated, without any
30321diagnostic.
a2c02241 30322
0cc7d26f
TT
30323If @code{-var-set-update-range} was previously used on a varobj, then
30324only the selected range of children will be reported.
922fbb7b 30325
0cc7d26f
TT
30326@code{-var-update} reports all the changed varobjs in a tuple named
30327@samp{changelist}.
30328
30329Each item in the change list is itself a tuple holding:
30330
30331@table @samp
30332@item name
30333The name of the varobj.
30334
30335@item value
30336If values were requested for this update, then this field will be
30337present and will hold the value of the varobj.
922fbb7b 30338
0cc7d26f 30339@item in_scope
9f708cb2 30340@anchor{-var-update}
0cc7d26f 30341This field is a string which may take one of three values:
36ece8b3
NR
30342
30343@table @code
30344@item "true"
30345The variable object's current value is valid.
30346
30347@item "false"
30348The variable object does not currently hold a valid value but it may
30349hold one in the future if its associated expression comes back into
30350scope.
30351
30352@item "invalid"
30353The variable object no longer holds a valid value.
30354This can occur when the executable file being debugged has changed,
30355either through recompilation or by using the @value{GDBN} @code{file}
30356command. The front end should normally choose to delete these variable
30357objects.
30358@end table
30359
30360In the future new values may be added to this list so the front should
30361be prepared for this possibility. @xref{GDB/MI Development and Front Ends, ,@sc{GDB/MI} Development and Front Ends}.
30362
0cc7d26f
TT
30363@item type_changed
30364This is only present if the varobj is still valid. If the type
30365changed, then this will be the string @samp{true}; otherwise it will
30366be @samp{false}.
30367
7191c139
JB
30368When a varobj's type changes, its children are also likely to have
30369become incorrect. Therefore, the varobj's children are automatically
30370deleted when this attribute is @samp{true}. Also, the varobj's update
30371range, when set using the @code{-var-set-update-range} command, is
30372unset.
30373
0cc7d26f
TT
30374@item new_type
30375If the varobj's type changed, then this field will be present and will
30376hold the new type.
30377
30378@item new_num_children
30379For a dynamic varobj, if the number of children changed, or if the
30380type changed, this will be the new number of children.
30381
30382The @samp{numchild} field in other varobj responses is generally not
30383valid for a dynamic varobj -- it will show the number of children that
30384@value{GDBN} knows about, but because dynamic varobjs lazily
30385instantiate their children, this will not reflect the number of
30386children which may be available.
30387
30388The @samp{new_num_children} attribute only reports changes to the
30389number of children known by @value{GDBN}. This is the only way to
30390detect whether an update has removed children (which necessarily can
30391only happen at the end of the update range).
30392
30393@item displayhint
30394The display hint, if any.
30395
30396@item has_more
30397This is an integer value, which will be 1 if there are more children
30398available outside the varobj's update range.
30399
30400@item dynamic
30401This attribute will be present and have the value @samp{1} if the
30402varobj is a dynamic varobj. If the varobj is not a dynamic varobj,
30403then this attribute will not be present.
30404
30405@item new_children
30406If new children were added to a dynamic varobj within the selected
30407update range (as set by @code{-var-set-update-range}), then they will
30408be listed in this attribute.
30409@end table
30410
30411@subsubheading Example
30412
30413@smallexample
30414(gdb)
30415-var-assign var1 3
30416^done,value="3"
30417(gdb)
30418-var-update --all-values var1
30419^done,changelist=[@{name="var1",value="3",in_scope="true",
30420type_changed="false"@}]
30421(gdb)
30422@end smallexample
30423
25d5ea92
VP
30424@subheading The @code{-var-set-frozen} Command
30425@findex -var-set-frozen
9f708cb2 30426@anchor{-var-set-frozen}
25d5ea92
VP
30427
30428@subsubheading Synopsis
30429
30430@smallexample
9f708cb2 30431 -var-set-frozen @var{name} @var{flag}
25d5ea92
VP
30432@end smallexample
30433
9f708cb2 30434Set the frozenness flag on the variable object @var{name}. The
25d5ea92 30435@var{flag} parameter should be either @samp{1} to make the variable
9f708cb2 30436frozen or @samp{0} to make it unfrozen. If a variable object is
25d5ea92 30437frozen, then neither itself, nor any of its children, are
9f708cb2 30438implicitly updated by @code{-var-update} of
25d5ea92
VP
30439a parent variable or by @code{-var-update *}. Only
30440@code{-var-update} of the variable itself will update its value and
30441values of its children. After a variable object is unfrozen, it is
30442implicitly updated by all subsequent @code{-var-update} operations.
30443Unfreezing a variable does not update it, only subsequent
30444@code{-var-update} does.
30445
30446@subsubheading Example
30447
30448@smallexample
30449(gdb)
30450-var-set-frozen V 1
30451^done
30452(gdb)
30453@end smallexample
30454
0cc7d26f
TT
30455@subheading The @code{-var-set-update-range} command
30456@findex -var-set-update-range
30457@anchor{-var-set-update-range}
30458
30459@subsubheading Synopsis
30460
30461@smallexample
30462 -var-set-update-range @var{name} @var{from} @var{to}
30463@end smallexample
30464
30465Set the range of children to be returned by future invocations of
30466@code{-var-update}.
30467
30468@var{from} and @var{to} indicate the range of children to report. If
30469@var{from} or @var{to} is less than zero, the range is reset and all
30470children will be reported. Otherwise, children starting at @var{from}
30471(zero-based) and up to and excluding @var{to} will be reported.
30472
30473@subsubheading Example
30474
30475@smallexample
30476(gdb)
30477-var-set-update-range V 1 2
30478^done
30479@end smallexample
30480
b6313243
TT
30481@subheading The @code{-var-set-visualizer} command
30482@findex -var-set-visualizer
30483@anchor{-var-set-visualizer}
30484
30485@subsubheading Synopsis
30486
30487@smallexample
30488 -var-set-visualizer @var{name} @var{visualizer}
30489@end smallexample
30490
30491Set a visualizer for the variable object @var{name}.
30492
30493@var{visualizer} is the visualizer to use. The special value
30494@samp{None} means to disable any visualizer in use.
30495
30496If not @samp{None}, @var{visualizer} must be a Python expression.
30497This expression must evaluate to a callable object which accepts a
30498single argument. @value{GDBN} will call this object with the value of
30499the varobj @var{name} as an argument (this is done so that the same
30500Python pretty-printing code can be used for both the CLI and MI).
30501When called, this object must return an object which conforms to the
4c374409 30502pretty-printing interface (@pxref{Pretty Printing API}).
b6313243
TT
30503
30504The pre-defined function @code{gdb.default_visualizer} may be used to
30505select a visualizer by following the built-in process
30506(@pxref{Selecting Pretty-Printers}). This is done automatically when
30507a varobj is created, and so ordinarily is not needed.
30508
30509This feature is only available if Python support is enabled. The MI
30510command @code{-list-features} (@pxref{GDB/MI Miscellaneous Commands})
30511can be used to check this.
30512
30513@subsubheading Example
30514
30515Resetting the visualizer:
30516
30517@smallexample
30518(gdb)
30519-var-set-visualizer V None
30520^done
30521@end smallexample
30522
30523Reselecting the default (type-based) visualizer:
30524
30525@smallexample
30526(gdb)
30527-var-set-visualizer V gdb.default_visualizer
30528^done
30529@end smallexample
30530
30531Suppose @code{SomeClass} is a visualizer class. A lambda expression
30532can be used to instantiate this class for a varobj:
30533
30534@smallexample
30535(gdb)
30536-var-set-visualizer V "lambda val: SomeClass()"
30537^done
30538@end smallexample
25d5ea92 30539
a2c02241
NR
30540@c %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% SECTION %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
30541@node GDB/MI Data Manipulation
30542@section @sc{gdb/mi} Data Manipulation
922fbb7b 30543
a2c02241
NR
30544@cindex data manipulation, in @sc{gdb/mi}
30545@cindex @sc{gdb/mi}, data manipulation
30546This section describes the @sc{gdb/mi} commands that manipulate data:
30547examine memory and registers, evaluate expressions, etc.
30548
30549@c REMOVED FROM THE INTERFACE.
30550@c @subheading -data-assign
30551@c Change the value of a program variable. Plenty of side effects.
79a6e687 30552@c @subsubheading GDB Command
a2c02241
NR
30553@c set variable
30554@c @subsubheading Example
30555@c N.A.
30556
30557@subheading The @code{-data-disassemble} Command
30558@findex -data-disassemble
922fbb7b
AC
30559
30560@subsubheading Synopsis
30561
30562@smallexample
a2c02241
NR
30563 -data-disassemble
30564 [ -s @var{start-addr} -e @var{end-addr} ]
30565 | [ -f @var{filename} -l @var{linenum} [ -n @var{lines} ] ]
30566 -- @var{mode}
922fbb7b
AC
30567@end smallexample
30568
a2c02241
NR
30569@noindent
30570Where:
30571
30572@table @samp
30573@item @var{start-addr}
30574is the beginning address (or @code{$pc})
30575@item @var{end-addr}
30576is the end address
30577@item @var{filename}
30578is the name of the file to disassemble
30579@item @var{linenum}
30580is the line number to disassemble around
30581@item @var{lines}
d3e8051b 30582is the number of disassembly lines to be produced. If it is -1,
a2c02241
NR
30583the whole function will be disassembled, in case no @var{end-addr} is
30584specified. If @var{end-addr} is specified as a non-zero value, and
30585@var{lines} is lower than the number of disassembly lines between
30586@var{start-addr} and @var{end-addr}, only @var{lines} lines are
30587displayed; if @var{lines} is higher than the number of lines between
30588@var{start-addr} and @var{end-addr}, only the lines up to @var{end-addr}
30589are displayed.
30590@item @var{mode}
b716877b
AB
30591is either 0 (meaning only disassembly), 1 (meaning mixed source and
30592disassembly), 2 (meaning disassembly with raw opcodes), or 3 (meaning
30593mixed source and disassembly with raw opcodes).
a2c02241
NR
30594@end table
30595
30596@subsubheading Result
30597
30598The output for each instruction is composed of four fields:
30599
30600@itemize @bullet
30601@item Address
30602@item Func-name
30603@item Offset
30604@item Instruction
30605@end itemize
30606
30607Note that whatever included in the instruction field, is not manipulated
d3e8051b 30608directly by @sc{gdb/mi}, i.e., it is not possible to adjust its format.
922fbb7b
AC
30609
30610@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
30611
a2c02241 30612There's no direct mapping from this command to the CLI.
922fbb7b
AC
30613
30614@subsubheading Example
30615
a2c02241
NR
30616Disassemble from the current value of @code{$pc} to @code{$pc + 20}:
30617
922fbb7b 30618@smallexample
594fe323 30619(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
30620-data-disassemble -s $pc -e "$pc + 20" -- 0
30621^done,
30622asm_insns=[
30623@{address="0x000107c0",func-name="main",offset="4",
30624inst="mov 2, %o0"@},
30625@{address="0x000107c4",func-name="main",offset="8",
30626inst="sethi %hi(0x11800), %o2"@},
30627@{address="0x000107c8",func-name="main",offset="12",
30628inst="or %o2, 0x140, %o1\t! 0x11940 <_lib_version+8>"@},
30629@{address="0x000107cc",func-name="main",offset="16",
30630inst="sethi %hi(0x11800), %o2"@},
30631@{address="0x000107d0",func-name="main",offset="20",
30632inst="or %o2, 0x168, %o4\t! 0x11968 <_lib_version+48>"@}]
594fe323 30633(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
30634@end smallexample
30635
30636Disassemble the whole @code{main} function. Line 32 is part of
30637@code{main}.
30638
30639@smallexample
30640-data-disassemble -f basics.c -l 32 -- 0
30641^done,asm_insns=[
30642@{address="0x000107bc",func-name="main",offset="0",
30643inst="save %sp, -112, %sp"@},
30644@{address="0x000107c0",func-name="main",offset="4",
30645inst="mov 2, %o0"@},
30646@{address="0x000107c4",func-name="main",offset="8",
30647inst="sethi %hi(0x11800), %o2"@},
30648[@dots{}]
30649@{address="0x0001081c",func-name="main",offset="96",inst="ret "@},
30650@{address="0x00010820",func-name="main",offset="100",inst="restore "@}]
594fe323 30651(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
30652@end smallexample
30653
a2c02241 30654Disassemble 3 instructions from the start of @code{main}:
922fbb7b 30655
a2c02241 30656@smallexample
594fe323 30657(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
30658-data-disassemble -f basics.c -l 32 -n 3 -- 0
30659^done,asm_insns=[
30660@{address="0x000107bc",func-name="main",offset="0",
30661inst="save %sp, -112, %sp"@},
30662@{address="0x000107c0",func-name="main",offset="4",
30663inst="mov 2, %o0"@},
30664@{address="0x000107c4",func-name="main",offset="8",
30665inst="sethi %hi(0x11800), %o2"@}]
594fe323 30666(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
30667@end smallexample
30668
30669Disassemble 3 instructions from the start of @code{main} in mixed mode:
30670
30671@smallexample
594fe323 30672(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
30673-data-disassemble -f basics.c -l 32 -n 3 -- 1
30674^done,asm_insns=[
30675src_and_asm_line=@{line="31",
30676file="/kwikemart/marge/ezannoni/flathead-dev/devo/gdb/ \
30677 testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",line_asm_insn=[
30678@{address="0x000107bc",func-name="main",offset="0",
30679inst="save %sp, -112, %sp"@}]@},
30680src_and_asm_line=@{line="32",
30681file="/kwikemart/marge/ezannoni/flathead-dev/devo/gdb/ \
30682 testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c",line_asm_insn=[
30683@{address="0x000107c0",func-name="main",offset="4",
30684inst="mov 2, %o0"@},
30685@{address="0x000107c4",func-name="main",offset="8",
30686inst="sethi %hi(0x11800), %o2"@}]@}]
594fe323 30687(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
30688@end smallexample
30689
30690
30691@subheading The @code{-data-evaluate-expression} Command
30692@findex -data-evaluate-expression
922fbb7b
AC
30693
30694@subsubheading Synopsis
30695
30696@smallexample
a2c02241 30697 -data-evaluate-expression @var{expr}
922fbb7b
AC
30698@end smallexample
30699
a2c02241
NR
30700Evaluate @var{expr} as an expression. The expression could contain an
30701inferior function call. The function call will execute synchronously.
30702If the expression contains spaces, it must be enclosed in double quotes.
922fbb7b
AC
30703
30704@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
30705
a2c02241
NR
30706The corresponding @value{GDBN} commands are @samp{print}, @samp{output}, and
30707@samp{call}. In @code{gdbtk} only, there's a corresponding
30708@samp{gdb_eval} command.
922fbb7b
AC
30709
30710@subsubheading Example
30711
a2c02241
NR
30712In the following example, the numbers that precede the commands are the
30713@dfn{tokens} described in @ref{GDB/MI Command Syntax, ,@sc{gdb/mi}
30714Command Syntax}. Notice how @sc{gdb/mi} returns the same tokens in its
30715output.
30716
922fbb7b 30717@smallexample
a2c02241
NR
30718211-data-evaluate-expression A
30719211^done,value="1"
594fe323 30720(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
30721311-data-evaluate-expression &A
30722311^done,value="0xefffeb7c"
594fe323 30723(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
30724411-data-evaluate-expression A+3
30725411^done,value="4"
594fe323 30726(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
30727511-data-evaluate-expression "A + 3"
30728511^done,value="4"
594fe323 30729(gdb)
a2c02241 30730@end smallexample
922fbb7b
AC
30731
30732
a2c02241
NR
30733@subheading The @code{-data-list-changed-registers} Command
30734@findex -data-list-changed-registers
922fbb7b
AC
30735
30736@subsubheading Synopsis
30737
30738@smallexample
a2c02241 30739 -data-list-changed-registers
922fbb7b
AC
30740@end smallexample
30741
a2c02241 30742Display a list of the registers that have changed.
922fbb7b
AC
30743
30744@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
30745
a2c02241
NR
30746@value{GDBN} doesn't have a direct analog for this command; @code{gdbtk}
30747has the corresponding command @samp{gdb_changed_register_list}.
922fbb7b
AC
30748
30749@subsubheading Example
922fbb7b 30750
a2c02241 30751On a PPC MBX board:
922fbb7b
AC
30752
30753@smallexample
594fe323 30754(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
30755-exec-continue
30756^running
922fbb7b 30757
594fe323 30758(gdb)
a47ec5fe
AR
30759*stopped,reason="breakpoint-hit",disp="keep",bkptno="1",frame=@{
30760func="main",args=[],file="try.c",fullname="/home/foo/bar/try.c",
30761line="5"@}
594fe323 30762(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
30763-data-list-changed-registers
30764^done,changed-registers=["0","1","2","4","5","6","7","8","9",
30765"10","11","13","14","15","16","17","18","19","20","21","22","23",
30766"24","25","26","27","28","30","31","64","65","66","67","69"]
594fe323 30767(gdb)
a2c02241 30768@end smallexample
922fbb7b
AC
30769
30770
a2c02241
NR
30771@subheading The @code{-data-list-register-names} Command
30772@findex -data-list-register-names
922fbb7b
AC
30773
30774@subsubheading Synopsis
30775
30776@smallexample
a2c02241 30777 -data-list-register-names [ ( @var{regno} )+ ]
922fbb7b
AC
30778@end smallexample
30779
a2c02241
NR
30780Show a list of register names for the current target. If no arguments
30781are given, it shows a list of the names of all the registers. If
30782integer numbers are given as arguments, it will print a list of the
30783names of the registers corresponding to the arguments. To ensure
30784consistency between a register name and its number, the output list may
30785include empty register names.
922fbb7b
AC
30786
30787@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
30788
a2c02241
NR
30789@value{GDBN} does not have a command which corresponds to
30790@samp{-data-list-register-names}. In @code{gdbtk} there is a
30791corresponding command @samp{gdb_regnames}.
922fbb7b
AC
30792
30793@subsubheading Example
922fbb7b 30794
a2c02241
NR
30795For the PPC MBX board:
30796@smallexample
594fe323 30797(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
30798-data-list-register-names
30799^done,register-names=["r0","r1","r2","r3","r4","r5","r6","r7",
30800"r8","r9","r10","r11","r12","r13","r14","r15","r16","r17","r18",
30801"r19","r20","r21","r22","r23","r24","r25","r26","r27","r28","r29",
30802"r30","r31","f0","f1","f2","f3","f4","f5","f6","f7","f8","f9",
30803"f10","f11","f12","f13","f14","f15","f16","f17","f18","f19","f20",
30804"f21","f22","f23","f24","f25","f26","f27","f28","f29","f30","f31",
30805"", "pc","ps","cr","lr","ctr","xer"]
594fe323 30806(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
30807-data-list-register-names 1 2 3
30808^done,register-names=["r1","r2","r3"]
594fe323 30809(gdb)
a2c02241 30810@end smallexample
922fbb7b 30811
a2c02241
NR
30812@subheading The @code{-data-list-register-values} Command
30813@findex -data-list-register-values
922fbb7b
AC
30814
30815@subsubheading Synopsis
30816
30817@smallexample
a2c02241 30818 -data-list-register-values @var{fmt} [ ( @var{regno} )*]
922fbb7b
AC
30819@end smallexample
30820
a2c02241
NR
30821Display the registers' contents. @var{fmt} is the format according to
30822which the registers' contents are to be returned, followed by an optional
30823list of numbers specifying the registers to display. A missing list of
30824numbers indicates that the contents of all the registers must be returned.
30825
30826Allowed formats for @var{fmt} are:
30827
30828@table @code
30829@item x
30830Hexadecimal
30831@item o
30832Octal
30833@item t
30834Binary
30835@item d
30836Decimal
30837@item r
30838Raw
30839@item N
30840Natural
30841@end table
922fbb7b
AC
30842
30843@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
30844
a2c02241
NR
30845The corresponding @value{GDBN} commands are @samp{info reg}, @samp{info
30846all-reg}, and (in @code{gdbtk}) @samp{gdb_fetch_registers}.
922fbb7b
AC
30847
30848@subsubheading Example
922fbb7b 30849
a2c02241
NR
30850For a PPC MBX board (note: line breaks are for readability only, they
30851don't appear in the actual output):
30852
30853@smallexample
594fe323 30854(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
30855-data-list-register-values r 64 65
30856^done,register-values=[@{number="64",value="0xfe00a300"@},
30857@{number="65",value="0x00029002"@}]
594fe323 30858(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
30859-data-list-register-values x
30860^done,register-values=[@{number="0",value="0xfe0043c8"@},
30861@{number="1",value="0x3fff88"@},@{number="2",value="0xfffffffe"@},
30862@{number="3",value="0x0"@},@{number="4",value="0xa"@},
30863@{number="5",value="0x3fff68"@},@{number="6",value="0x3fff58"@},
30864@{number="7",value="0xfe011e98"@},@{number="8",value="0x2"@},
30865@{number="9",value="0xfa202820"@},@{number="10",value="0xfa202808"@},
30866@{number="11",value="0x1"@},@{number="12",value="0x0"@},
30867@{number="13",value="0x4544"@},@{number="14",value="0xffdfffff"@},
30868@{number="15",value="0xffffffff"@},@{number="16",value="0xfffffeff"@},
30869@{number="17",value="0xefffffed"@},@{number="18",value="0xfffffffe"@},
30870@{number="19",value="0xffffffff"@},@{number="20",value="0xffffffff"@},
30871@{number="21",value="0xffffffff"@},@{number="22",value="0xfffffff7"@},
30872@{number="23",value="0xffffffff"@},@{number="24",value="0xffffffff"@},
30873@{number="25",value="0xffffffff"@},@{number="26",value="0xfffffffb"@},
30874@{number="27",value="0xffffffff"@},@{number="28",value="0xf7bfffff"@},
30875@{number="29",value="0x0"@},@{number="30",value="0xfe010000"@},
30876@{number="31",value="0x0"@},@{number="32",value="0x0"@},
30877@{number="33",value="0x0"@},@{number="34",value="0x0"@},
30878@{number="35",value="0x0"@},@{number="36",value="0x0"@},
30879@{number="37",value="0x0"@},@{number="38",value="0x0"@},
30880@{number="39",value="0x0"@},@{number="40",value="0x0"@},
30881@{number="41",value="0x0"@},@{number="42",value="0x0"@},
30882@{number="43",value="0x0"@},@{number="44",value="0x0"@},
30883@{number="45",value="0x0"@},@{number="46",value="0x0"@},
30884@{number="47",value="0x0"@},@{number="48",value="0x0"@},
30885@{number="49",value="0x0"@},@{number="50",value="0x0"@},
30886@{number="51",value="0x0"@},@{number="52",value="0x0"@},
30887@{number="53",value="0x0"@},@{number="54",value="0x0"@},
30888@{number="55",value="0x0"@},@{number="56",value="0x0"@},
30889@{number="57",value="0x0"@},@{number="58",value="0x0"@},
30890@{number="59",value="0x0"@},@{number="60",value="0x0"@},
30891@{number="61",value="0x0"@},@{number="62",value="0x0"@},
30892@{number="63",value="0x0"@},@{number="64",value="0xfe00a300"@},
30893@{number="65",value="0x29002"@},@{number="66",value="0x202f04b5"@},
30894@{number="67",value="0xfe0043b0"@},@{number="68",value="0xfe00b3e4"@},
30895@{number="69",value="0x20002b03"@}]
594fe323 30896(gdb)
a2c02241 30897@end smallexample
922fbb7b 30898
a2c02241
NR
30899
30900@subheading The @code{-data-read-memory} Command
30901@findex -data-read-memory
922fbb7b 30902
8dedea02
VP
30903This command is deprecated, use @code{-data-read-memory-bytes} instead.
30904
922fbb7b
AC
30905@subsubheading Synopsis
30906
30907@smallexample
a2c02241
NR
30908 -data-read-memory [ -o @var{byte-offset} ]
30909 @var{address} @var{word-format} @var{word-size}
30910 @var{nr-rows} @var{nr-cols} [ @var{aschar} ]
922fbb7b
AC
30911@end smallexample
30912
a2c02241
NR
30913@noindent
30914where:
922fbb7b 30915
a2c02241
NR
30916@table @samp
30917@item @var{address}
30918An expression specifying the address of the first memory word to be
30919read. Complex expressions containing embedded white space should be
30920quoted using the C convention.
922fbb7b 30921
a2c02241
NR
30922@item @var{word-format}
30923The format to be used to print the memory words. The notation is the
30924same as for @value{GDBN}'s @code{print} command (@pxref{Output Formats,
79a6e687 30925,Output Formats}).
922fbb7b 30926
a2c02241
NR
30927@item @var{word-size}
30928The size of each memory word in bytes.
922fbb7b 30929
a2c02241
NR
30930@item @var{nr-rows}
30931The number of rows in the output table.
922fbb7b 30932
a2c02241
NR
30933@item @var{nr-cols}
30934The number of columns in the output table.
922fbb7b 30935
a2c02241
NR
30936@item @var{aschar}
30937If present, indicates that each row should include an @sc{ascii} dump. The
30938value of @var{aschar} is used as a padding character when a byte is not a
30939member of the printable @sc{ascii} character set (printable @sc{ascii}
30940characters are those whose code is between 32 and 126, inclusively).
922fbb7b 30941
a2c02241
NR
30942@item @var{byte-offset}
30943An offset to add to the @var{address} before fetching memory.
30944@end table
922fbb7b 30945
a2c02241
NR
30946This command displays memory contents as a table of @var{nr-rows} by
30947@var{nr-cols} words, each word being @var{word-size} bytes. In total,
30948@code{@var{nr-rows} * @var{nr-cols} * @var{word-size}} bytes are read
30949(returned as @samp{total-bytes}). Should less than the requested number
30950of bytes be returned by the target, the missing words are identified
30951using @samp{N/A}. The number of bytes read from the target is returned
30952in @samp{nr-bytes} and the starting address used to read memory in
30953@samp{addr}.
30954
30955The address of the next/previous row or page is available in
30956@samp{next-row} and @samp{prev-row}, @samp{next-page} and
30957@samp{prev-page}.
922fbb7b
AC
30958
30959@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
30960
a2c02241
NR
30961The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{x}. @code{gdbtk} has
30962@samp{gdb_get_mem} memory read command.
922fbb7b
AC
30963
30964@subsubheading Example
32e7087d 30965
a2c02241
NR
30966Read six bytes of memory starting at @code{bytes+6} but then offset by
30967@code{-6} bytes. Format as three rows of two columns. One byte per
30968word. Display each word in hex.
32e7087d
JB
30969
30970@smallexample
594fe323 30971(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
309729-data-read-memory -o -6 -- bytes+6 x 1 3 2
309739^done,addr="0x00001390",nr-bytes="6",total-bytes="6",
30974next-row="0x00001396",prev-row="0x0000138e",next-page="0x00001396",
30975prev-page="0x0000138a",memory=[
30976@{addr="0x00001390",data=["0x00","0x01"]@},
30977@{addr="0x00001392",data=["0x02","0x03"]@},
30978@{addr="0x00001394",data=["0x04","0x05"]@}]
594fe323 30979(gdb)
32e7087d
JB
30980@end smallexample
30981
a2c02241
NR
30982Read two bytes of memory starting at address @code{shorts + 64} and
30983display as a single word formatted in decimal.
32e7087d 30984
32e7087d 30985@smallexample
594fe323 30986(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
309875-data-read-memory shorts+64 d 2 1 1
309885^done,addr="0x00001510",nr-bytes="2",total-bytes="2",
30989next-row="0x00001512",prev-row="0x0000150e",
30990next-page="0x00001512",prev-page="0x0000150e",memory=[
30991@{addr="0x00001510",data=["128"]@}]
594fe323 30992(gdb)
32e7087d
JB
30993@end smallexample
30994
a2c02241
NR
30995Read thirty two bytes of memory starting at @code{bytes+16} and format
30996as eight rows of four columns. Include a string encoding with @samp{x}
30997used as the non-printable character.
922fbb7b
AC
30998
30999@smallexample
594fe323 31000(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
310014-data-read-memory bytes+16 x 1 8 4 x
310024^done,addr="0x000013a0",nr-bytes="32",total-bytes="32",
31003next-row="0x000013c0",prev-row="0x0000139c",
31004next-page="0x000013c0",prev-page="0x00001380",memory=[
31005@{addr="0x000013a0",data=["0x10","0x11","0x12","0x13"],ascii="xxxx"@},
31006@{addr="0x000013a4",data=["0x14","0x15","0x16","0x17"],ascii="xxxx"@},
31007@{addr="0x000013a8",data=["0x18","0x19","0x1a","0x1b"],ascii="xxxx"@},
31008@{addr="0x000013ac",data=["0x1c","0x1d","0x1e","0x1f"],ascii="xxxx"@},
31009@{addr="0x000013b0",data=["0x20","0x21","0x22","0x23"],ascii=" !\"#"@},
31010@{addr="0x000013b4",data=["0x24","0x25","0x26","0x27"],ascii="$%&'"@},
31011@{addr="0x000013b8",data=["0x28","0x29","0x2a","0x2b"],ascii="()*+"@},
31012@{addr="0x000013bc",data=["0x2c","0x2d","0x2e","0x2f"],ascii=",-./"@}]
594fe323 31013(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
31014@end smallexample
31015
8dedea02
VP
31016@subheading The @code{-data-read-memory-bytes} Command
31017@findex -data-read-memory-bytes
31018
31019@subsubheading Synopsis
31020
31021@smallexample
31022 -data-read-memory-bytes [ -o @var{byte-offset} ]
31023 @var{address} @var{count}
31024@end smallexample
31025
31026@noindent
31027where:
31028
31029@table @samp
31030@item @var{address}
31031An expression specifying the address of the first memory word to be
31032read. Complex expressions containing embedded white space should be
31033quoted using the C convention.
31034
31035@item @var{count}
31036The number of bytes to read. This should be an integer literal.
31037
31038@item @var{byte-offset}
31039The offsets in bytes relative to @var{address} at which to start
31040reading. This should be an integer literal. This option is provided
31041so that a frontend is not required to first evaluate address and then
31042perform address arithmetics itself.
31043
31044@end table
31045
31046This command attempts to read all accessible memory regions in the
31047specified range. First, all regions marked as unreadable in the memory
31048map (if one is defined) will be skipped. @xref{Memory Region
31049Attributes}. Second, @value{GDBN} will attempt to read the remaining
31050regions. For each one, if reading full region results in an errors,
31051@value{GDBN} will try to read a subset of the region.
31052
31053In general, every single byte in the region may be readable or not,
31054and the only way to read every readable byte is to try a read at
31055every address, which is not practical. Therefore, @value{GDBN} will
31056attempt to read all accessible bytes at either beginning or the end
31057of the region, using a binary division scheme. This heuristic works
31058well for reading accross a memory map boundary. Note that if a region
31059has a readable range that is neither at the beginning or the end,
31060@value{GDBN} will not read it.
31061
31062The result record (@pxref{GDB/MI Result Records}) that is output of
31063the command includes a field named @samp{memory} whose content is a
31064list of tuples. Each tuple represent a successfully read memory block
31065and has the following fields:
31066
31067@table @code
31068@item begin
31069The start address of the memory block, as hexadecimal literal.
31070
31071@item end
31072The end address of the memory block, as hexadecimal literal.
31073
31074@item offset
31075The offset of the memory block, as hexadecimal literal, relative to
31076the start address passed to @code{-data-read-memory-bytes}.
31077
31078@item contents
31079The contents of the memory block, in hex.
31080
31081@end table
31082
31083
31084
31085@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
31086
31087The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{x}.
31088
31089@subsubheading Example
31090
31091@smallexample
31092(gdb)
31093-data-read-memory-bytes &a 10
31094^done,memory=[@{begin="0xbffff154",offset="0x00000000",
31095 end="0xbffff15e",
31096 contents="01000000020000000300"@}]
31097(gdb)
31098@end smallexample
31099
31100
31101@subheading The @code{-data-write-memory-bytes} Command
31102@findex -data-write-memory-bytes
31103
31104@subsubheading Synopsis
31105
31106@smallexample
31107 -data-write-memory-bytes @var{address} @var{contents}
31108@end smallexample
31109
31110@noindent
31111where:
31112
31113@table @samp
31114@item @var{address}
31115An expression specifying the address of the first memory word to be
31116read. Complex expressions containing embedded white space should be
31117quoted using the C convention.
31118
31119@item @var{contents}
31120The hex-encoded bytes to write.
31121
31122@end table
31123
31124@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
31125
31126There's no corresponding @value{GDBN} command.
31127
31128@subsubheading Example
31129
31130@smallexample
31131(gdb)
31132-data-write-memory-bytes &a "aabbccdd"
31133^done
31134(gdb)
31135@end smallexample
31136
31137
a2c02241
NR
31138@c %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% SECTION %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
31139@node GDB/MI Tracepoint Commands
31140@section @sc{gdb/mi} Tracepoint Commands
922fbb7b 31141
18148017
VP
31142The commands defined in this section implement MI support for
31143tracepoints. For detailed introduction, see @ref{Tracepoints}.
31144
31145@subheading The @code{-trace-find} Command
31146@findex -trace-find
31147
31148@subsubheading Synopsis
31149
31150@smallexample
31151 -trace-find @var{mode} [@var{parameters}@dots{}]
31152@end smallexample
31153
31154Find a trace frame using criteria defined by @var{mode} and
31155@var{parameters}. The following table lists permissible
31156modes and their parameters. For details of operation, see @ref{tfind}.
31157
31158@table @samp
31159
31160@item none
31161No parameters are required. Stops examining trace frames.
31162
31163@item frame-number
31164An integer is required as parameter. Selects tracepoint frame with
31165that index.
31166
31167@item tracepoint-number
31168An integer is required as parameter. Finds next
31169trace frame that corresponds to tracepoint with the specified number.
31170
31171@item pc
31172An address is required as parameter. Finds
31173next trace frame that corresponds to any tracepoint at the specified
31174address.
31175
31176@item pc-inside-range
31177Two addresses are required as parameters. Finds next trace
31178frame that corresponds to a tracepoint at an address inside the
31179specified range. Both bounds are considered to be inside the range.
31180
31181@item pc-outside-range
31182Two addresses are required as parameters. Finds
31183next trace frame that corresponds to a tracepoint at an address outside
31184the specified range. Both bounds are considered to be inside the range.
31185
31186@item line
31187Line specification is required as parameter. @xref{Specify Location}.
31188Finds next trace frame that corresponds to a tracepoint at
31189the specified location.
31190
31191@end table
31192
31193If @samp{none} was passed as @var{mode}, the response does not
31194have fields. Otherwise, the response may have the following fields:
31195
31196@table @samp
31197@item found
31198This field has either @samp{0} or @samp{1} as the value, depending
31199on whether a matching tracepoint was found.
31200
31201@item traceframe
31202The index of the found traceframe. This field is present iff
31203the @samp{found} field has value of @samp{1}.
31204
31205@item tracepoint
31206The index of the found tracepoint. This field is present iff
31207the @samp{found} field has value of @samp{1}.
31208
31209@item frame
31210The information about the frame corresponding to the found trace
31211frame. This field is present only if a trace frame was found.
cd64ee31 31212@xref{GDB/MI Frame Information}, for description of this field.
18148017
VP
31213
31214@end table
31215
7d13fe92
SS
31216@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
31217
31218The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{tfind}.
31219
18148017
VP
31220@subheading -trace-define-variable
31221@findex -trace-define-variable
31222
31223@subsubheading Synopsis
31224
31225@smallexample
31226 -trace-define-variable @var{name} [ @var{value} ]
31227@end smallexample
31228
31229Create trace variable @var{name} if it does not exist. If
31230@var{value} is specified, sets the initial value of the specified
31231trace variable to that value. Note that the @var{name} should start
31232with the @samp{$} character.
31233
7d13fe92
SS
31234@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
31235
31236The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{tvariable}.
31237
18148017
VP
31238@subheading -trace-list-variables
31239@findex -trace-list-variables
922fbb7b 31240
18148017 31241@subsubheading Synopsis
922fbb7b 31242
18148017
VP
31243@smallexample
31244 -trace-list-variables
31245@end smallexample
922fbb7b 31246
18148017
VP
31247Return a table of all defined trace variables. Each element of the
31248table has the following fields:
922fbb7b 31249
18148017
VP
31250@table @samp
31251@item name
31252The name of the trace variable. This field is always present.
922fbb7b 31253
18148017
VP
31254@item initial
31255The initial value. This is a 64-bit signed integer. This
31256field is always present.
922fbb7b 31257
18148017
VP
31258@item current
31259The value the trace variable has at the moment. This is a 64-bit
31260signed integer. This field is absent iff current value is
31261not defined, for example if the trace was never run, or is
31262presently running.
922fbb7b 31263
18148017 31264@end table
922fbb7b 31265
7d13fe92
SS
31266@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
31267
31268The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{tvariables}.
31269
18148017 31270@subsubheading Example
922fbb7b 31271
18148017
VP
31272@smallexample
31273(gdb)
31274-trace-list-variables
31275^done,trace-variables=@{nr_rows="1",nr_cols="3",
31276hdr=[@{width="15",alignment="-1",col_name="name",colhdr="Name"@},
31277 @{width="11",alignment="-1",col_name="initial",colhdr="Initial"@},
31278 @{width="11",alignment="-1",col_name="current",colhdr="Current"@}],
31279body=[variable=@{name="$trace_timestamp",initial="0"@}
31280 variable=@{name="$foo",initial="10",current="15"@}]@}
31281(gdb)
31282@end smallexample
922fbb7b 31283
18148017
VP
31284@subheading -trace-save
31285@findex -trace-save
922fbb7b 31286
18148017
VP
31287@subsubheading Synopsis
31288
31289@smallexample
31290 -trace-save [-r ] @var{filename}
31291@end smallexample
31292
31293Saves the collected trace data to @var{filename}. Without the
31294@samp{-r} option, the data is downloaded from the target and saved
31295in a local file. With the @samp{-r} option the target is asked
31296to perform the save.
31297
7d13fe92
SS
31298@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
31299
31300The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{tsave}.
31301
18148017
VP
31302
31303@subheading -trace-start
31304@findex -trace-start
31305
31306@subsubheading Synopsis
31307
31308@smallexample
31309 -trace-start
31310@end smallexample
922fbb7b 31311
18148017
VP
31312Starts a tracing experiments. The result of this command does not
31313have any fields.
922fbb7b 31314
7d13fe92
SS
31315@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
31316
31317The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{tstart}.
31318
18148017
VP
31319@subheading -trace-status
31320@findex -trace-status
922fbb7b 31321
18148017
VP
31322@subsubheading Synopsis
31323
31324@smallexample
31325 -trace-status
31326@end smallexample
31327
a97153c7 31328Obtains the status of a tracing experiment. The result may include
18148017
VP
31329the following fields:
31330
31331@table @samp
31332
31333@item supported
31334May have a value of either @samp{0}, when no tracing operations are
31335supported, @samp{1}, when all tracing operations are supported, or
31336@samp{file} when examining trace file. In the latter case, examining
31337of trace frame is possible but new tracing experiement cannot be
31338started. This field is always present.
31339
31340@item running
31341May have a value of either @samp{0} or @samp{1} depending on whether
31342tracing experiement is in progress on target. This field is present
31343if @samp{supported} field is not @samp{0}.
31344
31345@item stop-reason
31346Report the reason why the tracing was stopped last time. This field
31347may be absent iff tracing was never stopped on target yet. The
31348value of @samp{request} means the tracing was stopped as result of
31349the @code{-trace-stop} command. The value of @samp{overflow} means
31350the tracing buffer is full. The value of @samp{disconnection} means
31351tracing was automatically stopped when @value{GDBN} has disconnected.
31352The value of @samp{passcount} means tracing was stopped when a
31353tracepoint was passed a maximal number of times for that tracepoint.
31354This field is present if @samp{supported} field is not @samp{0}.
31355
31356@item stopping-tracepoint
31357The number of tracepoint whose passcount as exceeded. This field is
31358present iff the @samp{stop-reason} field has the value of
31359@samp{passcount}.
31360
31361@item frames
87290684
SS
31362@itemx frames-created
31363The @samp{frames} field is a count of the total number of trace frames
31364in the trace buffer, while @samp{frames-created} is the total created
31365during the run, including ones that were discarded, such as when a
31366circular trace buffer filled up. Both fields are optional.
18148017
VP
31367
31368@item buffer-size
31369@itemx buffer-free
31370These fields tell the current size of the tracing buffer and the
87290684 31371remaining space. These fields are optional.
18148017 31372
a97153c7
PA
31373@item circular
31374The value of the circular trace buffer flag. @code{1} means that the
31375trace buffer is circular and old trace frames will be discarded if
31376necessary to make room, @code{0} means that the trace buffer is linear
31377and may fill up.
31378
31379@item disconnected
31380The value of the disconnected tracing flag. @code{1} means that
31381tracing will continue after @value{GDBN} disconnects, @code{0} means
31382that the trace run will stop.
31383
18148017
VP
31384@end table
31385
7d13fe92
SS
31386@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
31387
31388The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{tstatus}.
31389
18148017
VP
31390@subheading -trace-stop
31391@findex -trace-stop
31392
31393@subsubheading Synopsis
31394
31395@smallexample
31396 -trace-stop
31397@end smallexample
922fbb7b 31398
18148017
VP
31399Stops a tracing experiment. The result of this command has the same
31400fields as @code{-trace-status}, except that the @samp{supported} and
31401@samp{running} fields are not output.
922fbb7b 31402
7d13fe92
SS
31403@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
31404
31405The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{tstop}.
31406
922fbb7b 31407
a2c02241
NR
31408@c %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% SECTION %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
31409@node GDB/MI Symbol Query
31410@section @sc{gdb/mi} Symbol Query Commands
922fbb7b
AC
31411
31412
9901a55b 31413@ignore
a2c02241
NR
31414@subheading The @code{-symbol-info-address} Command
31415@findex -symbol-info-address
922fbb7b
AC
31416
31417@subsubheading Synopsis
31418
31419@smallexample
a2c02241 31420 -symbol-info-address @var{symbol}
922fbb7b
AC
31421@end smallexample
31422
a2c02241 31423Describe where @var{symbol} is stored.
922fbb7b
AC
31424
31425@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
31426
a2c02241 31427The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{info address}.
922fbb7b
AC
31428
31429@subsubheading Example
31430N.A.
31431
31432
a2c02241
NR
31433@subheading The @code{-symbol-info-file} Command
31434@findex -symbol-info-file
922fbb7b
AC
31435
31436@subsubheading Synopsis
31437
31438@smallexample
a2c02241 31439 -symbol-info-file
922fbb7b
AC
31440@end smallexample
31441
a2c02241 31442Show the file for the symbol.
922fbb7b 31443
a2c02241 31444@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
922fbb7b 31445
a2c02241
NR
31446There's no equivalent @value{GDBN} command. @code{gdbtk} has
31447@samp{gdb_find_file}.
922fbb7b
AC
31448
31449@subsubheading Example
31450N.A.
31451
31452
a2c02241
NR
31453@subheading The @code{-symbol-info-function} Command
31454@findex -symbol-info-function
922fbb7b
AC
31455
31456@subsubheading Synopsis
31457
31458@smallexample
a2c02241 31459 -symbol-info-function
922fbb7b
AC
31460@end smallexample
31461
a2c02241 31462Show which function the symbol lives in.
922fbb7b
AC
31463
31464@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
31465
a2c02241 31466@samp{gdb_get_function} in @code{gdbtk}.
922fbb7b
AC
31467
31468@subsubheading Example
31469N.A.
31470
31471
a2c02241
NR
31472@subheading The @code{-symbol-info-line} Command
31473@findex -symbol-info-line
922fbb7b
AC
31474
31475@subsubheading Synopsis
31476
31477@smallexample
a2c02241 31478 -symbol-info-line
922fbb7b
AC
31479@end smallexample
31480
a2c02241 31481Show the core addresses of the code for a source line.
922fbb7b 31482
a2c02241 31483@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
922fbb7b 31484
a2c02241
NR
31485The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{info line}.
31486@code{gdbtk} has the @samp{gdb_get_line} and @samp{gdb_get_file} commands.
922fbb7b
AC
31487
31488@subsubheading Example
a2c02241 31489N.A.
922fbb7b
AC
31490
31491
a2c02241
NR
31492@subheading The @code{-symbol-info-symbol} Command
31493@findex -symbol-info-symbol
07f31aa6
DJ
31494
31495@subsubheading Synopsis
31496
a2c02241
NR
31497@smallexample
31498 -symbol-info-symbol @var{addr}
31499@end smallexample
07f31aa6 31500
a2c02241 31501Describe what symbol is at location @var{addr}.
07f31aa6 31502
a2c02241 31503@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
07f31aa6 31504
a2c02241 31505The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{info symbol}.
07f31aa6
DJ
31506
31507@subsubheading Example
a2c02241 31508N.A.
07f31aa6
DJ
31509
31510
a2c02241
NR
31511@subheading The @code{-symbol-list-functions} Command
31512@findex -symbol-list-functions
922fbb7b
AC
31513
31514@subsubheading Synopsis
31515
31516@smallexample
a2c02241 31517 -symbol-list-functions
922fbb7b
AC
31518@end smallexample
31519
a2c02241 31520List the functions in the executable.
922fbb7b
AC
31521
31522@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
31523
a2c02241
NR
31524@samp{info functions} in @value{GDBN}, @samp{gdb_listfunc} and
31525@samp{gdb_search} in @code{gdbtk}.
922fbb7b
AC
31526
31527@subsubheading Example
a2c02241 31528N.A.
9901a55b 31529@end ignore
922fbb7b
AC
31530
31531
a2c02241
NR
31532@subheading The @code{-symbol-list-lines} Command
31533@findex -symbol-list-lines
922fbb7b
AC
31534
31535@subsubheading Synopsis
31536
31537@smallexample
a2c02241 31538 -symbol-list-lines @var{filename}
922fbb7b
AC
31539@end smallexample
31540
a2c02241
NR
31541Print the list of lines that contain code and their associated program
31542addresses for the given source filename. The entries are sorted in
31543ascending PC order.
922fbb7b
AC
31544
31545@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
31546
a2c02241 31547There is no corresponding @value{GDBN} command.
922fbb7b
AC
31548
31549@subsubheading Example
a2c02241 31550@smallexample
594fe323 31551(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
31552-symbol-list-lines basics.c
31553^done,lines=[@{pc="0x08048554",line="7"@},@{pc="0x0804855a",line="8"@}]
594fe323 31554(gdb)
a2c02241 31555@end smallexample
922fbb7b
AC
31556
31557
9901a55b 31558@ignore
a2c02241
NR
31559@subheading The @code{-symbol-list-types} Command
31560@findex -symbol-list-types
922fbb7b
AC
31561
31562@subsubheading Synopsis
31563
31564@smallexample
a2c02241 31565 -symbol-list-types
922fbb7b
AC
31566@end smallexample
31567
a2c02241 31568List all the type names.
922fbb7b
AC
31569
31570@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
31571
a2c02241
NR
31572The corresponding commands are @samp{info types} in @value{GDBN},
31573@samp{gdb_search} in @code{gdbtk}.
922fbb7b
AC
31574
31575@subsubheading Example
31576N.A.
31577
31578
a2c02241
NR
31579@subheading The @code{-symbol-list-variables} Command
31580@findex -symbol-list-variables
922fbb7b
AC
31581
31582@subsubheading Synopsis
31583
31584@smallexample
a2c02241 31585 -symbol-list-variables
922fbb7b
AC
31586@end smallexample
31587
a2c02241 31588List all the global and static variable names.
922fbb7b
AC
31589
31590@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
31591
a2c02241 31592@samp{info variables} in @value{GDBN}, @samp{gdb_search} in @code{gdbtk}.
922fbb7b
AC
31593
31594@subsubheading Example
31595N.A.
31596
31597
a2c02241
NR
31598@subheading The @code{-symbol-locate} Command
31599@findex -symbol-locate
922fbb7b
AC
31600
31601@subsubheading Synopsis
31602
31603@smallexample
a2c02241 31604 -symbol-locate
922fbb7b
AC
31605@end smallexample
31606
922fbb7b
AC
31607@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
31608
a2c02241 31609@samp{gdb_loc} in @code{gdbtk}.
922fbb7b
AC
31610
31611@subsubheading Example
31612N.A.
31613
31614
a2c02241
NR
31615@subheading The @code{-symbol-type} Command
31616@findex -symbol-type
922fbb7b
AC
31617
31618@subsubheading Synopsis
31619
31620@smallexample
a2c02241 31621 -symbol-type @var{variable}
922fbb7b
AC
31622@end smallexample
31623
a2c02241 31624Show type of @var{variable}.
922fbb7b 31625
a2c02241 31626@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
922fbb7b 31627
a2c02241
NR
31628The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{ptype}, @code{gdbtk} has
31629@samp{gdb_obj_variable}.
31630
31631@subsubheading Example
31632N.A.
9901a55b 31633@end ignore
a2c02241
NR
31634
31635
31636@c %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% SECTION %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
31637@node GDB/MI File Commands
31638@section @sc{gdb/mi} File Commands
31639
31640This section describes the GDB/MI commands to specify executable file names
31641and to read in and obtain symbol table information.
31642
31643@subheading The @code{-file-exec-and-symbols} Command
31644@findex -file-exec-and-symbols
31645
31646@subsubheading Synopsis
922fbb7b
AC
31647
31648@smallexample
a2c02241 31649 -file-exec-and-symbols @var{file}
922fbb7b
AC
31650@end smallexample
31651
a2c02241
NR
31652Specify the executable file to be debugged. This file is the one from
31653which the symbol table is also read. If no file is specified, the
31654command clears the executable and symbol information. If breakpoints
31655are set when using this command with no arguments, @value{GDBN} will produce
31656error messages. Otherwise, no output is produced, except a completion
31657notification.
31658
922fbb7b
AC
31659@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
31660
a2c02241 31661The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{file}.
922fbb7b
AC
31662
31663@subsubheading Example
31664
31665@smallexample
594fe323 31666(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
31667-file-exec-and-symbols /kwikemart/marge/ezannoni/TRUNK/mbx/hello.mbx
31668^done
594fe323 31669(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
31670@end smallexample
31671
922fbb7b 31672
a2c02241
NR
31673@subheading The @code{-file-exec-file} Command
31674@findex -file-exec-file
922fbb7b
AC
31675
31676@subsubheading Synopsis
31677
31678@smallexample
a2c02241 31679 -file-exec-file @var{file}
922fbb7b
AC
31680@end smallexample
31681
a2c02241
NR
31682Specify the executable file to be debugged. Unlike
31683@samp{-file-exec-and-symbols}, the symbol table is @emph{not} read
31684from this file. If used without argument, @value{GDBN} clears the information
31685about the executable file. No output is produced, except a completion
31686notification.
922fbb7b 31687
a2c02241
NR
31688@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
31689
31690The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{exec-file}.
922fbb7b
AC
31691
31692@subsubheading Example
a2c02241
NR
31693
31694@smallexample
594fe323 31695(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
31696-file-exec-file /kwikemart/marge/ezannoni/TRUNK/mbx/hello.mbx
31697^done
594fe323 31698(gdb)
a2c02241 31699@end smallexample
922fbb7b
AC
31700
31701
9901a55b 31702@ignore
a2c02241
NR
31703@subheading The @code{-file-list-exec-sections} Command
31704@findex -file-list-exec-sections
922fbb7b
AC
31705
31706@subsubheading Synopsis
31707
31708@smallexample
a2c02241 31709 -file-list-exec-sections
922fbb7b
AC
31710@end smallexample
31711
a2c02241
NR
31712List the sections of the current executable file.
31713
922fbb7b
AC
31714@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
31715
a2c02241
NR
31716The @value{GDBN} command @samp{info file} shows, among the rest, the same
31717information as this command. @code{gdbtk} has a corresponding command
31718@samp{gdb_load_info}.
922fbb7b
AC
31719
31720@subsubheading Example
31721N.A.
9901a55b 31722@end ignore
922fbb7b
AC
31723
31724
a2c02241
NR
31725@subheading The @code{-file-list-exec-source-file} Command
31726@findex -file-list-exec-source-file
922fbb7b
AC
31727
31728@subsubheading Synopsis
31729
31730@smallexample
a2c02241 31731 -file-list-exec-source-file
922fbb7b
AC
31732@end smallexample
31733
a2c02241 31734List the line number, the current source file, and the absolute path
44288b44
NR
31735to the current source file for the current executable. The macro
31736information field has a value of @samp{1} or @samp{0} depending on
31737whether or not the file includes preprocessor macro information.
922fbb7b
AC
31738
31739@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
31740
a2c02241 31741The @value{GDBN} equivalent is @samp{info source}
922fbb7b
AC
31742
31743@subsubheading Example
31744
922fbb7b 31745@smallexample
594fe323 31746(gdb)
a2c02241 31747123-file-list-exec-source-file
44288b44 31748123^done,line="1",file="foo.c",fullname="/home/bar/foo.c,macro-info="1"
594fe323 31749(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
31750@end smallexample
31751
31752
a2c02241
NR
31753@subheading The @code{-file-list-exec-source-files} Command
31754@findex -file-list-exec-source-files
922fbb7b
AC
31755
31756@subsubheading Synopsis
31757
31758@smallexample
a2c02241 31759 -file-list-exec-source-files
922fbb7b
AC
31760@end smallexample
31761
a2c02241
NR
31762List the source files for the current executable.
31763
3f94c067
BW
31764It will always output the filename, but only when @value{GDBN} can find
31765the absolute file name of a source file, will it output the fullname.
922fbb7b
AC
31766
31767@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
31768
a2c02241
NR
31769The @value{GDBN} equivalent is @samp{info sources}.
31770@code{gdbtk} has an analogous command @samp{gdb_listfiles}.
922fbb7b
AC
31771
31772@subsubheading Example
922fbb7b 31773@smallexample
594fe323 31774(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
31775-file-list-exec-source-files
31776^done,files=[
31777@{file=foo.c,fullname=/home/foo.c@},
31778@{file=/home/bar.c,fullname=/home/bar.c@},
31779@{file=gdb_could_not_find_fullpath.c@}]
594fe323 31780(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
31781@end smallexample
31782
9901a55b 31783@ignore
a2c02241
NR
31784@subheading The @code{-file-list-shared-libraries} Command
31785@findex -file-list-shared-libraries
922fbb7b 31786
a2c02241 31787@subsubheading Synopsis
922fbb7b 31788
a2c02241
NR
31789@smallexample
31790 -file-list-shared-libraries
31791@end smallexample
922fbb7b 31792
a2c02241 31793List the shared libraries in the program.
922fbb7b 31794
a2c02241 31795@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
922fbb7b 31796
a2c02241 31797The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{info shared}.
922fbb7b 31798
a2c02241
NR
31799@subsubheading Example
31800N.A.
922fbb7b
AC
31801
31802
a2c02241
NR
31803@subheading The @code{-file-list-symbol-files} Command
31804@findex -file-list-symbol-files
922fbb7b 31805
a2c02241 31806@subsubheading Synopsis
922fbb7b 31807
a2c02241
NR
31808@smallexample
31809 -file-list-symbol-files
31810@end smallexample
922fbb7b 31811
a2c02241 31812List symbol files.
922fbb7b 31813
a2c02241 31814@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
922fbb7b 31815
a2c02241 31816The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{info file} (part of it).
922fbb7b 31817
a2c02241
NR
31818@subsubheading Example
31819N.A.
9901a55b 31820@end ignore
922fbb7b 31821
922fbb7b 31822
a2c02241
NR
31823@subheading The @code{-file-symbol-file} Command
31824@findex -file-symbol-file
922fbb7b 31825
a2c02241 31826@subsubheading Synopsis
922fbb7b 31827
a2c02241
NR
31828@smallexample
31829 -file-symbol-file @var{file}
31830@end smallexample
922fbb7b 31831
a2c02241
NR
31832Read symbol table info from the specified @var{file} argument. When
31833used without arguments, clears @value{GDBN}'s symbol table info. No output is
31834produced, except for a completion notification.
922fbb7b 31835
a2c02241 31836@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
922fbb7b 31837
a2c02241 31838The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{symbol-file}.
922fbb7b 31839
a2c02241 31840@subsubheading Example
922fbb7b 31841
a2c02241 31842@smallexample
594fe323 31843(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
31844-file-symbol-file /kwikemart/marge/ezannoni/TRUNK/mbx/hello.mbx
31845^done
594fe323 31846(gdb)
a2c02241 31847@end smallexample
922fbb7b 31848
a2c02241 31849@ignore
a2c02241
NR
31850@c %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% SECTION %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
31851@node GDB/MI Memory Overlay Commands
31852@section @sc{gdb/mi} Memory Overlay Commands
922fbb7b 31853
a2c02241 31854The memory overlay commands are not implemented.
922fbb7b 31855
a2c02241 31856@c @subheading -overlay-auto
922fbb7b 31857
a2c02241 31858@c @subheading -overlay-list-mapping-state
922fbb7b 31859
a2c02241 31860@c @subheading -overlay-list-overlays
922fbb7b 31861
a2c02241 31862@c @subheading -overlay-map
922fbb7b 31863
a2c02241 31864@c @subheading -overlay-off
922fbb7b 31865
a2c02241 31866@c @subheading -overlay-on
922fbb7b 31867
a2c02241 31868@c @subheading -overlay-unmap
922fbb7b 31869
a2c02241
NR
31870@c %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% SECTION %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
31871@node GDB/MI Signal Handling Commands
31872@section @sc{gdb/mi} Signal Handling Commands
922fbb7b 31873
a2c02241 31874Signal handling commands are not implemented.
922fbb7b 31875
a2c02241 31876@c @subheading -signal-handle
922fbb7b 31877
a2c02241 31878@c @subheading -signal-list-handle-actions
922fbb7b 31879
a2c02241
NR
31880@c @subheading -signal-list-signal-types
31881@end ignore
922fbb7b 31882
922fbb7b 31883
a2c02241
NR
31884@c %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% SECTION %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
31885@node GDB/MI Target Manipulation
31886@section @sc{gdb/mi} Target Manipulation Commands
922fbb7b
AC
31887
31888
a2c02241
NR
31889@subheading The @code{-target-attach} Command
31890@findex -target-attach
922fbb7b
AC
31891
31892@subsubheading Synopsis
31893
31894@smallexample
c3b108f7 31895 -target-attach @var{pid} | @var{gid} | @var{file}
922fbb7b
AC
31896@end smallexample
31897
c3b108f7
VP
31898Attach to a process @var{pid} or a file @var{file} outside of
31899@value{GDBN}, or a thread group @var{gid}. If attaching to a thread
31900group, the id previously returned by
31901@samp{-list-thread-groups --available} must be used.
922fbb7b 31902
79a6e687 31903@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
922fbb7b 31904
a2c02241 31905The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{attach}.
922fbb7b 31906
a2c02241 31907@subsubheading Example
b56e7235
VP
31908@smallexample
31909(gdb)
31910-target-attach 34
31911=thread-created,id="1"
5ae4183a 31912*stopped,thread-id="1",frame=@{addr="0xb7f7e410",func="bar",args=[]@}
b56e7235
VP
31913^done
31914(gdb)
31915@end smallexample
a2c02241 31916
9901a55b 31917@ignore
a2c02241
NR
31918@subheading The @code{-target-compare-sections} Command
31919@findex -target-compare-sections
922fbb7b
AC
31920
31921@subsubheading Synopsis
31922
31923@smallexample
a2c02241 31924 -target-compare-sections [ @var{section} ]
922fbb7b
AC
31925@end smallexample
31926
a2c02241
NR
31927Compare data of section @var{section} on target to the exec file.
31928Without the argument, all sections are compared.
922fbb7b 31929
a2c02241 31930@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
922fbb7b 31931
a2c02241 31932The @value{GDBN} equivalent is @samp{compare-sections}.
922fbb7b 31933
a2c02241
NR
31934@subsubheading Example
31935N.A.
9901a55b 31936@end ignore
a2c02241
NR
31937
31938
31939@subheading The @code{-target-detach} Command
31940@findex -target-detach
922fbb7b
AC
31941
31942@subsubheading Synopsis
31943
31944@smallexample
c3b108f7 31945 -target-detach [ @var{pid} | @var{gid} ]
922fbb7b
AC
31946@end smallexample
31947
a2c02241 31948Detach from the remote target which normally resumes its execution.
c3b108f7
VP
31949If either @var{pid} or @var{gid} is specified, detaches from either
31950the specified process, or specified thread group. There's no output.
a2c02241 31951
79a6e687 31952@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
a2c02241
NR
31953
31954The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{detach}.
31955
31956@subsubheading Example
922fbb7b
AC
31957
31958@smallexample
594fe323 31959(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
31960-target-detach
31961^done
594fe323 31962(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
31963@end smallexample
31964
31965
a2c02241
NR
31966@subheading The @code{-target-disconnect} Command
31967@findex -target-disconnect
922fbb7b
AC
31968
31969@subsubheading Synopsis
31970
123dc839 31971@smallexample
a2c02241 31972 -target-disconnect
123dc839 31973@end smallexample
922fbb7b 31974
a2c02241
NR
31975Disconnect from the remote target. There's no output and the target is
31976generally not resumed.
31977
79a6e687 31978@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
a2c02241
NR
31979
31980The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{disconnect}.
bc8ced35
NR
31981
31982@subsubheading Example
922fbb7b
AC
31983
31984@smallexample
594fe323 31985(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
31986-target-disconnect
31987^done
594fe323 31988(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
31989@end smallexample
31990
31991
a2c02241
NR
31992@subheading The @code{-target-download} Command
31993@findex -target-download
922fbb7b
AC
31994
31995@subsubheading Synopsis
31996
31997@smallexample
a2c02241 31998 -target-download
922fbb7b
AC
31999@end smallexample
32000
a2c02241
NR
32001Loads the executable onto the remote target.
32002It prints out an update message every half second, which includes the fields:
32003
32004@table @samp
32005@item section
32006The name of the section.
32007@item section-sent
32008The size of what has been sent so far for that section.
32009@item section-size
32010The size of the section.
32011@item total-sent
32012The total size of what was sent so far (the current and the previous sections).
32013@item total-size
32014The size of the overall executable to download.
32015@end table
32016
32017@noindent
32018Each message is sent as status record (@pxref{GDB/MI Output Syntax, ,
32019@sc{gdb/mi} Output Syntax}).
32020
32021In addition, it prints the name and size of the sections, as they are
32022downloaded. These messages include the following fields:
32023
32024@table @samp
32025@item section
32026The name of the section.
32027@item section-size
32028The size of the section.
32029@item total-size
32030The size of the overall executable to download.
32031@end table
32032
32033@noindent
32034At the end, a summary is printed.
32035
32036@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
32037
32038The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{load}.
32039
32040@subsubheading Example
32041
32042Note: each status message appears on a single line. Here the messages
32043have been broken down so that they can fit onto a page.
922fbb7b
AC
32044
32045@smallexample
594fe323 32046(gdb)
a2c02241
NR
32047-target-download
32048+download,@{section=".text",section-size="6668",total-size="9880"@}
32049+download,@{section=".text",section-sent="512",section-size="6668",
32050total-sent="512",total-size="9880"@}
32051+download,@{section=".text",section-sent="1024",section-size="6668",
32052total-sent="1024",total-size="9880"@}
32053+download,@{section=".text",section-sent="1536",section-size="6668",
32054total-sent="1536",total-size="9880"@}
32055+download,@{section=".text",section-sent="2048",section-size="6668",
32056total-sent="2048",total-size="9880"@}
32057+download,@{section=".text",section-sent="2560",section-size="6668",
32058total-sent="2560",total-size="9880"@}
32059+download,@{section=".text",section-sent="3072",section-size="6668",
32060total-sent="3072",total-size="9880"@}
32061+download,@{section=".text",section-sent="3584",section-size="6668",
32062total-sent="3584",total-size="9880"@}
32063+download,@{section=".text",section-sent="4096",section-size="6668",
32064total-sent="4096",total-size="9880"@}
32065+download,@{section=".text",section-sent="4608",section-size="6668",
32066total-sent="4608",total-size="9880"@}
32067+download,@{section=".text",section-sent="5120",section-size="6668",
32068total-sent="5120",total-size="9880"@}
32069+download,@{section=".text",section-sent="5632",section-size="6668",
32070total-sent="5632",total-size="9880"@}
32071+download,@{section=".text",section-sent="6144",section-size="6668",
32072total-sent="6144",total-size="9880"@}
32073+download,@{section=".text",section-sent="6656",section-size="6668",
32074total-sent="6656",total-size="9880"@}
32075+download,@{section=".init",section-size="28",total-size="9880"@}
32076+download,@{section=".fini",section-size="28",total-size="9880"@}
32077+download,@{section=".data",section-size="3156",total-size="9880"@}
32078+download,@{section=".data",section-sent="512",section-size="3156",
32079total-sent="7236",total-size="9880"@}
32080+download,@{section=".data",section-sent="1024",section-size="3156",
32081total-sent="7748",total-size="9880"@}
32082+download,@{section=".data",section-sent="1536",section-size="3156",
32083total-sent="8260",total-size="9880"@}
32084+download,@{section=".data",section-sent="2048",section-size="3156",
32085total-sent="8772",total-size="9880"@}
32086+download,@{section=".data",section-sent="2560",section-size="3156",
32087total-sent="9284",total-size="9880"@}
32088+download,@{section=".data",section-sent="3072",section-size="3156",
32089total-sent="9796",total-size="9880"@}
32090^done,address="0x10004",load-size="9880",transfer-rate="6586",
32091write-rate="429"
594fe323 32092(gdb)
922fbb7b
AC
32093@end smallexample
32094
32095
9901a55b 32096@ignore
a2c02241
NR
32097@subheading The @code{-target-exec-status} Command
32098@findex -target-exec-status
922fbb7b
AC
32099
32100@subsubheading Synopsis
32101
32102@smallexample
a2c02241 32103 -target-exec-status
922fbb7b
AC
32104@end smallexample
32105
a2c02241
NR
32106Provide information on the state of the target (whether it is running or
32107not, for instance).
922fbb7b 32108
a2c02241 32109@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
922fbb7b 32110
a2c02241
NR
32111There's no equivalent @value{GDBN} command.
32112
32113@subsubheading Example
32114N.A.
922fbb7b 32115
a2c02241
NR
32116
32117@subheading The @code{-target-list-available-targets} Command
32118@findex -target-list-available-targets
922fbb7b
AC
32119
32120@subsubheading Synopsis
32121
32122@smallexample
a2c02241 32123 -target-list-available-targets
922fbb7b
AC
32124@end smallexample
32125
a2c02241 32126List the possible targets to connect to.
922fbb7b 32127
a2c02241 32128@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
922fbb7b 32129
a2c02241 32130The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{help target}.
922fbb7b 32131
a2c02241
NR
32132@subsubheading Example
32133N.A.
32134
32135
32136@subheading The @code{-target-list-current-targets} Command
32137@findex -target-list-current-targets
922fbb7b
AC
32138
32139@subsubheading Synopsis
32140
32141@smallexample
a2c02241 32142 -target-list-current-targets
922fbb7b
AC
32143@end smallexample
32144
a2c02241 32145Describe the current target.
922fbb7b 32146
a2c02241 32147@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
922fbb7b 32148
a2c02241
NR
32149The corresponding information is printed by @samp{info file} (among
32150other things).
922fbb7b 32151
a2c02241
NR
32152@subsubheading Example
32153N.A.
32154
32155
32156@subheading The @code{-target-list-parameters} Command
32157@findex -target-list-parameters
922fbb7b
AC
32158
32159@subsubheading Synopsis
32160
32161@smallexample
a2c02241 32162 -target-list-parameters
922fbb7b
AC
32163@end smallexample
32164
a2c02241 32165@c ????
9901a55b 32166@end ignore
a2c02241
NR
32167
32168@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
32169
32170No equivalent.
922fbb7b
AC
32171
32172@subsubheading Example
a2c02241
NR
32173N.A.
32174
32175
32176@subheading The @code{-target-select} Command
32177@findex -target-select
32178
32179@subsubheading Synopsis
922fbb7b
AC
32180
32181@smallexample
a2c02241 32182 -target-select @var{type} @var{parameters @dots{}}
922fbb7b
AC
32183@end smallexample
32184
a2c02241 32185Connect @value{GDBN} to the remote target. This command takes two args:
922fbb7b 32186
a2c02241
NR
32187@table @samp
32188@item @var{type}
75c99385 32189The type of target, for instance @samp{remote}, etc.
a2c02241
NR
32190@item @var{parameters}
32191Device names, host names and the like. @xref{Target Commands, ,
79a6e687 32192Commands for Managing Targets}, for more details.
a2c02241
NR
32193@end table
32194
32195The output is a connection notification, followed by the address at
32196which the target program is, in the following form:
922fbb7b
AC
32197
32198@smallexample
a2c02241
NR
32199^connected,addr="@var{address}",func="@var{function name}",
32200 args=[@var{arg list}]
922fbb7b
AC
32201@end smallexample
32202
a2c02241
NR
32203@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
32204
32205The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{target}.
265eeb58
NR
32206
32207@subsubheading Example
922fbb7b 32208
265eeb58 32209@smallexample
594fe323 32210(gdb)
75c99385 32211-target-select remote /dev/ttya
a2c02241 32212^connected,addr="0xfe00a300",func="??",args=[]
594fe323 32213(gdb)
265eeb58 32214@end smallexample
ef21caaf 32215
a6b151f1
DJ
32216@c %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% SECTION %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
32217@node GDB/MI File Transfer Commands
32218@section @sc{gdb/mi} File Transfer Commands
32219
32220
32221@subheading The @code{-target-file-put} Command
32222@findex -target-file-put
32223
32224@subsubheading Synopsis
32225
32226@smallexample
32227 -target-file-put @var{hostfile} @var{targetfile}
32228@end smallexample
32229
32230Copy file @var{hostfile} from the host system (the machine running
32231@value{GDBN}) to @var{targetfile} on the target system.
32232
32233@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
32234
32235The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{remote put}.
32236
32237@subsubheading Example
32238
32239@smallexample
32240(gdb)
32241-target-file-put localfile remotefile
32242^done
32243(gdb)
32244@end smallexample
32245
32246
1763a388 32247@subheading The @code{-target-file-get} Command
a6b151f1
DJ
32248@findex -target-file-get
32249
32250@subsubheading Synopsis
32251
32252@smallexample
32253 -target-file-get @var{targetfile} @var{hostfile}
32254@end smallexample
32255
32256Copy file @var{targetfile} from the target system to @var{hostfile}
32257on the host system.
32258
32259@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
32260
32261The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{remote get}.
32262
32263@subsubheading Example
32264
32265@smallexample
32266(gdb)
32267-target-file-get remotefile localfile
32268^done
32269(gdb)
32270@end smallexample
32271
32272
32273@subheading The @code{-target-file-delete} Command
32274@findex -target-file-delete
32275
32276@subsubheading Synopsis
32277
32278@smallexample
32279 -target-file-delete @var{targetfile}
32280@end smallexample
32281
32282Delete @var{targetfile} from the target system.
32283
32284@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
32285
32286The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{remote delete}.
32287
32288@subsubheading Example
32289
32290@smallexample
32291(gdb)
32292-target-file-delete remotefile
32293^done
32294(gdb)
32295@end smallexample
32296
32297
ef21caaf
NR
32298@c %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% SECTION %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
32299@node GDB/MI Miscellaneous Commands
32300@section Miscellaneous @sc{gdb/mi} Commands
32301
32302@c @subheading -gdb-complete
32303
32304@subheading The @code{-gdb-exit} Command
32305@findex -gdb-exit
32306
32307@subsubheading Synopsis
32308
32309@smallexample
32310 -gdb-exit
32311@end smallexample
32312
32313Exit @value{GDBN} immediately.
32314
32315@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
32316
32317Approximately corresponds to @samp{quit}.
32318
32319@subsubheading Example
32320
32321@smallexample
594fe323 32322(gdb)
ef21caaf
NR
32323-gdb-exit
32324^exit
32325@end smallexample
32326
a2c02241 32327
9901a55b 32328@ignore
a2c02241
NR
32329@subheading The @code{-exec-abort} Command
32330@findex -exec-abort
32331
32332@subsubheading Synopsis
32333
32334@smallexample
32335 -exec-abort
32336@end smallexample
32337
32338Kill the inferior running program.
32339
32340@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
32341
32342The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{kill}.
32343
32344@subsubheading Example
32345N.A.
9901a55b 32346@end ignore
a2c02241
NR
32347
32348
ef21caaf
NR
32349@subheading The @code{-gdb-set} Command
32350@findex -gdb-set
32351
32352@subsubheading Synopsis
32353
32354@smallexample
32355 -gdb-set
32356@end smallexample
32357
32358Set an internal @value{GDBN} variable.
32359@c IS THIS A DOLLAR VARIABLE? OR SOMETHING LIKE ANNOTATE ?????
32360
32361@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
32362
32363The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{set}.
32364
32365@subsubheading Example
32366
32367@smallexample
594fe323 32368(gdb)
ef21caaf
NR
32369-gdb-set $foo=3
32370^done
594fe323 32371(gdb)
ef21caaf
NR
32372@end smallexample
32373
32374
32375@subheading The @code{-gdb-show} Command
32376@findex -gdb-show
32377
32378@subsubheading Synopsis
32379
32380@smallexample
32381 -gdb-show
32382@end smallexample
32383
32384Show the current value of a @value{GDBN} variable.
32385
79a6e687 32386@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
ef21caaf
NR
32387
32388The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{show}.
32389
32390@subsubheading Example
32391
32392@smallexample
594fe323 32393(gdb)
ef21caaf
NR
32394-gdb-show annotate
32395^done,value="0"
594fe323 32396(gdb)
ef21caaf
NR
32397@end smallexample
32398
32399@c @subheading -gdb-source
32400
32401
32402@subheading The @code{-gdb-version} Command
32403@findex -gdb-version
32404
32405@subsubheading Synopsis
32406
32407@smallexample
32408 -gdb-version
32409@end smallexample
32410
32411Show version information for @value{GDBN}. Used mostly in testing.
32412
32413@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
32414
32415The @value{GDBN} equivalent is @samp{show version}. @value{GDBN} by
32416default shows this information when you start an interactive session.
32417
32418@subsubheading Example
32419
32420@c This example modifies the actual output from GDB to avoid overfull
32421@c box in TeX.
32422@smallexample
594fe323 32423(gdb)
ef21caaf
NR
32424-gdb-version
32425~GNU gdb 5.2.1
32426~Copyright 2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
32427~GDB is free software, covered by the GNU General Public License, and
32428~you are welcome to change it and/or distribute copies of it under
32429~ certain conditions.
32430~Type "show copying" to see the conditions.
32431~There is absolutely no warranty for GDB. Type "show warranty" for
32432~ details.
32433~This GDB was configured as
32434 "--host=sparc-sun-solaris2.5.1 --target=ppc-eabi".
32435^done
594fe323 32436(gdb)
ef21caaf
NR
32437@end smallexample
32438
084344da
VP
32439@subheading The @code{-list-features} Command
32440@findex -list-features
32441
32442Returns a list of particular features of the MI protocol that
32443this version of gdb implements. A feature can be a command,
32444or a new field in an output of some command, or even an
32445important bugfix. While a frontend can sometimes detect presence
32446of a feature at runtime, it is easier to perform detection at debugger
32447startup.
32448
32449The command returns a list of strings, with each string naming an
32450available feature. Each returned string is just a name, it does not
32451have any internal structure. The list of possible feature names
32452is given below.
32453
32454Example output:
32455
32456@smallexample
32457(gdb) -list-features
32458^done,result=["feature1","feature2"]
32459@end smallexample
32460
32461The current list of features is:
32462
30e026bb
VP
32463@table @samp
32464@item frozen-varobjs
a05336a1
JB
32465Indicates support for the @code{-var-set-frozen} command, as well
32466as possible presense of the @code{frozen} field in the output
30e026bb
VP
32467of @code{-varobj-create}.
32468@item pending-breakpoints
a05336a1
JB
32469Indicates support for the @option{-f} option to the @code{-break-insert}
32470command.
b6313243 32471@item python
a05336a1 32472Indicates Python scripting support, Python-based
b6313243
TT
32473pretty-printing commands, and possible presence of the
32474@samp{display_hint} field in the output of @code{-var-list-children}
30e026bb 32475@item thread-info
a05336a1 32476Indicates support for the @code{-thread-info} command.
8dedea02 32477@item data-read-memory-bytes
a05336a1 32478Indicates support for the @code{-data-read-memory-bytes} and the
8dedea02 32479@code{-data-write-memory-bytes} commands.
39c4d40a
TT
32480@item breakpoint-notifications
32481Indicates that changes to breakpoints and breakpoints created via the
32482CLI will be announced via async records.
5d77fe44
JB
32483@item ada-task-info
32484Indicates support for the @code{-ada-task-info} command.
30e026bb 32485@end table
084344da 32486
c6ebd6cf
VP
32487@subheading The @code{-list-target-features} Command
32488@findex -list-target-features
32489
32490Returns a list of particular features that are supported by the
32491target. Those features affect the permitted MI commands, but
32492unlike the features reported by the @code{-list-features} command, the
32493features depend on which target GDB is using at the moment. Whenever
32494a target can change, due to commands such as @code{-target-select},
32495@code{-target-attach} or @code{-exec-run}, the list of target features
32496may change, and the frontend should obtain it again.
32497Example output:
32498
32499@smallexample
32500(gdb) -list-features
32501^done,result=["async"]
32502@end smallexample
32503
32504The current list of features is:
32505
32506@table @samp
32507@item async
32508Indicates that the target is capable of asynchronous command
32509execution, which means that @value{GDBN} will accept further commands
32510while the target is running.
32511
f75d858b
MK
32512@item reverse
32513Indicates that the target is capable of reverse execution.
32514@xref{Reverse Execution}, for more information.
32515
c6ebd6cf
VP
32516@end table
32517
c3b108f7
VP
32518@subheading The @code{-list-thread-groups} Command
32519@findex -list-thread-groups
32520
32521@subheading Synopsis
32522
32523@smallexample
dc146f7c 32524-list-thread-groups [ --available ] [ --recurse 1 ] [ @var{group} ... ]
c3b108f7
VP
32525@end smallexample
32526
dc146f7c
VP
32527Lists thread groups (@pxref{Thread groups}). When a single thread
32528group is passed as the argument, lists the children of that group.
32529When several thread group are passed, lists information about those
32530thread groups. Without any parameters, lists information about all
32531top-level thread groups.
32532
32533Normally, thread groups that are being debugged are reported.
32534With the @samp{--available} option, @value{GDBN} reports thread groups
32535available on the target.
32536
32537The output of this command may have either a @samp{threads} result or
32538a @samp{groups} result. The @samp{thread} result has a list of tuples
32539as value, with each tuple describing a thread (@pxref{GDB/MI Thread
32540Information}). The @samp{groups} result has a list of tuples as value,
32541each tuple describing a thread group. If top-level groups are
32542requested (that is, no parameter is passed), or when several groups
32543are passed, the output always has a @samp{groups} result. The format
32544of the @samp{group} result is described below.
32545
32546To reduce the number of roundtrips it's possible to list thread groups
32547together with their children, by passing the @samp{--recurse} option
32548and the recursion depth. Presently, only recursion depth of 1 is
32549permitted. If this option is present, then every reported thread group
32550will also include its children, either as @samp{group} or
32551@samp{threads} field.
32552
32553In general, any combination of option and parameters is permitted, with
32554the following caveats:
32555
32556@itemize @bullet
32557@item
32558When a single thread group is passed, the output will typically
32559be the @samp{threads} result. Because threads may not contain
32560anything, the @samp{recurse} option will be ignored.
32561
32562@item
32563When the @samp{--available} option is passed, limited information may
32564be available. In particular, the list of threads of a process might
32565be inaccessible. Further, specifying specific thread groups might
32566not give any performance advantage over listing all thread groups.
32567The frontend should assume that @samp{-list-thread-groups --available}
32568is always an expensive operation and cache the results.
32569
32570@end itemize
32571
32572The @samp{groups} result is a list of tuples, where each tuple may
32573have the following fields:
32574
32575@table @code
32576@item id
32577Identifier of the thread group. This field is always present.
a79b8f6e
VP
32578The identifier is an opaque string; frontends should not try to
32579convert it to an integer, even though it might look like one.
dc146f7c
VP
32580
32581@item type
32582The type of the thread group. At present, only @samp{process} is a
32583valid type.
32584
32585@item pid
32586The target-specific process identifier. This field is only present
a79b8f6e 32587for thread groups of type @samp{process} and only if the process exists.
c3b108f7 32588
dc146f7c
VP
32589@item num_children
32590The number of children this thread group has. This field may be
32591absent for an available thread group.
32592
32593@item threads
32594This field has a list of tuples as value, each tuple describing a
32595thread. It may be present if the @samp{--recurse} option is
32596specified, and it's actually possible to obtain the threads.
32597
32598@item cores
32599This field is a list of integers, each identifying a core that one
32600thread of the group is running on. This field may be absent if
32601such information is not available.
32602
a79b8f6e
VP
32603@item executable
32604The name of the executable file that corresponds to this thread group.
32605The field is only present for thread groups of type @samp{process},
32606and only if there is a corresponding executable file.
32607
dc146f7c 32608@end table
c3b108f7
VP
32609
32610@subheading Example
32611
32612@smallexample
32613@value{GDBP}
32614-list-thread-groups
32615^done,groups=[@{id="17",type="process",pid="yyy",num_children="2"@}]
32616-list-thread-groups 17
32617^done,threads=[@{id="2",target-id="Thread 0xb7e14b90 (LWP 21257)",
32618 frame=@{level="0",addr="0xffffe410",func="__kernel_vsyscall",args=[]@},state="running"@},
32619@{id="1",target-id="Thread 0xb7e156b0 (LWP 21254)",
32620 frame=@{level="0",addr="0x0804891f",func="foo",args=[@{name="i",value="10"@}],
32621 file="/tmp/a.c",fullname="/tmp/a.c",line="158"@},state="running"@}]]
dc146f7c
VP
32622-list-thread-groups --available
32623^done,groups=[@{id="17",type="process",pid="yyy",num_children="2",cores=[1,2]@}]
32624-list-thread-groups --available --recurse 1
32625 ^done,groups=[@{id="17", types="process",pid="yyy",num_children="2",cores=[1,2],
32626 threads=[@{id="1",target-id="Thread 0xb7e14b90",cores=[1]@},
32627 @{id="2",target-id="Thread 0xb7e14b90",cores=[2]@}]@},..]
32628-list-thread-groups --available --recurse 1 17 18
32629^done,groups=[@{id="17", types="process",pid="yyy",num_children="2",cores=[1,2],
32630 threads=[@{id="1",target-id="Thread 0xb7e14b90",cores=[1]@},
32631 @{id="2",target-id="Thread 0xb7e14b90",cores=[2]@}]@},...]
c3b108f7 32632@end smallexample
c6ebd6cf 32633
f3e0e960
SS
32634@subheading The @code{-info-os} Command
32635@findex -info-os
32636
32637@subsubheading Synopsis
32638
32639@smallexample
32640-info-os [ @var{type} ]
32641@end smallexample
32642
32643If no argument is supplied, the command returns a table of available
32644operating-system-specific information types. If one of these types is
32645supplied as an argument @var{type}, then the command returns a table
32646of data of that type.
32647
32648The types of information available depend on the target operating
32649system.
32650
32651@subsubheading @value{GDBN} Command
32652
32653The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{info os}.
32654
32655@subsubheading Example
32656
32657When run on a @sc{gnu}/Linux system, the output will look something
32658like this:
32659
32660@smallexample
32661@value{GDBP}
32662-info-os
32663^done,OSDataTable=@{nr_rows="9",nr_cols="2",
32664hdr=[@{width="10",alignment="-1",col_name="col0",colhdr="Type"@},
32665 @{width="10",alignment="-1",col_name="col1",colhdr="Description"@}],
32666body=[item=@{col0="processes",col1="Listing of all processes"@},
32667 item=@{col0="procgroups",col1="Listing of all process groups"@},
32668 item=@{col0="threads",col1="Listing of all threads"@},
32669 item=@{col0="files",col1="Listing of all file descriptors"@},
32670 item=@{col0="sockets",col1="Listing of all internet-domain sockets"@},
32671 item=@{col0="shm",col1="Listing of all shared-memory regions"@},
32672 item=@{col0="semaphores",col1="Listing of all semaphores"@},
32673 item=@{col0="msg",col1="Listing of all message queues"@},
32674 item=@{col0="modules",col1="Listing of all loaded kernel modules"@}]@}
32675@value{GDBP}
32676-info-os processes
32677^done,OSDataTable=@{nr_rows="190",nr_cols="4",
32678hdr=[@{width="10",alignment="-1",col_name="col0",colhdr="pid"@},
32679 @{width="10",alignment="-1",col_name="col1",colhdr="user"@},
32680 @{width="10",alignment="-1",col_name="col2",colhdr="command"@},
32681 @{width="10",alignment="-1",col_name="col3",colhdr="cores"@}],
32682body=[item=@{col0="1",col1="root",col2="/sbin/init",col3="0"@},
32683 item=@{col0="2",col1="root",col2="[kthreadd]",col3="1"@},
32684 item=@{col0="3",col1="root",col2="[ksoftirqd/0]",col3="0"@},
32685 ...
32686 item=@{col0="26446",col1="stan",col2="bash",col3="0"@},
32687 item=@{col0="28152",col1="stan",col2="bash",col3="1"@}]@}
32688(gdb)
32689@end smallexample
a79b8f6e
VP
32690
32691@subheading The @code{-add-inferior} Command
32692@findex -add-inferior
32693
32694@subheading Synopsis
32695
32696@smallexample
32697-add-inferior
32698@end smallexample
32699
32700Creates a new inferior (@pxref{Inferiors and Programs}). The created
32701inferior is not associated with any executable. Such association may
32702be established with the @samp{-file-exec-and-symbols} command
32703(@pxref{GDB/MI File Commands}). The command response has a single
32704field, @samp{thread-group}, whose value is the identifier of the
32705thread group corresponding to the new inferior.
32706
32707@subheading Example
32708
32709@smallexample
32710@value{GDBP}
32711-add-inferior
32712^done,thread-group="i3"
32713@end smallexample
32714
ef21caaf
NR
32715@subheading The @code{-interpreter-exec} Command
32716@findex -interpreter-exec
32717
32718@subheading Synopsis
32719
32720@smallexample
32721-interpreter-exec @var{interpreter} @var{command}
32722@end smallexample
a2c02241 32723@anchor{-interpreter-exec}
ef21caaf
NR
32724
32725Execute the specified @var{command} in the given @var{interpreter}.
32726
32727@subheading @value{GDBN} Command
32728
32729The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{interpreter-exec}.
32730
32731@subheading Example
32732
32733@smallexample
594fe323 32734(gdb)
ef21caaf
NR
32735-interpreter-exec console "break main"
32736&"During symbol reading, couldn't parse type; debugger out of date?.\n"
32737&"During symbol reading, bad structure-type format.\n"
32738~"Breakpoint 1 at 0x8074fc6: file ../../src/gdb/main.c, line 743.\n"
32739^done
594fe323 32740(gdb)
ef21caaf
NR
32741@end smallexample
32742
32743@subheading The @code{-inferior-tty-set} Command
32744@findex -inferior-tty-set
32745
32746@subheading Synopsis
32747
32748@smallexample
32749-inferior-tty-set /dev/pts/1
32750@end smallexample
32751
32752Set terminal for future runs of the program being debugged.
32753
32754@subheading @value{GDBN} Command
32755
32756The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{set inferior-tty} /dev/pts/1.
32757
32758@subheading Example
32759
32760@smallexample
594fe323 32761(gdb)
ef21caaf
NR
32762-inferior-tty-set /dev/pts/1
32763^done
594fe323 32764(gdb)
ef21caaf
NR
32765@end smallexample
32766
32767@subheading The @code{-inferior-tty-show} Command
32768@findex -inferior-tty-show
32769
32770@subheading Synopsis
32771
32772@smallexample
32773-inferior-tty-show
32774@end smallexample
32775
32776Show terminal for future runs of program being debugged.
32777
32778@subheading @value{GDBN} Command
32779
32780The corresponding @value{GDBN} command is @samp{show inferior-tty}.
32781
32782@subheading Example
32783
32784@smallexample
594fe323 32785(gdb)
ef21caaf
NR
32786-inferior-tty-set /dev/pts/1
32787^done
594fe323 32788(gdb)
ef21caaf
NR
32789-inferior-tty-show
32790^done,inferior_tty_terminal="/dev/pts/1"
594fe323 32791(gdb)
ef21caaf 32792@end smallexample
922fbb7b 32793
a4eefcd8
NR
32794@subheading The @code{-enable-timings} Command
32795@findex -enable-timings
32796
32797@subheading Synopsis
32798
32799@smallexample
32800-enable-timings [yes | no]
32801@end smallexample
32802
32803Toggle the printing of the wallclock, user and system times for an MI
32804command as a field in its output. This command is to help frontend
32805developers optimize the performance of their code. No argument is
32806equivalent to @samp{yes}.
32807
32808@subheading @value{GDBN} Command
32809
32810No equivalent.
32811
32812@subheading Example
32813
32814@smallexample
32815(gdb)
32816-enable-timings
32817^done
32818(gdb)
32819-break-insert main
32820^done,bkpt=@{number="1",type="breakpoint",disp="keep",enabled="y",
32821addr="0x080484ed",func="main",file="myprog.c",
32822fullname="/home/nickrob/myprog.c",line="73",times="0"@},
32823time=@{wallclock="0.05185",user="0.00800",system="0.00000"@}
32824(gdb)
32825-enable-timings no
32826^done
32827(gdb)
32828-exec-run
32829^running
32830(gdb)
a47ec5fe 32831*stopped,reason="breakpoint-hit",disp="keep",bkptno="1",thread-id="0",
a4eefcd8
NR
32832frame=@{addr="0x080484ed",func="main",args=[@{name="argc",value="1"@},
32833@{name="argv",value="0xbfb60364"@}],file="myprog.c",
32834fullname="/home/nickrob/myprog.c",line="73"@}
32835(gdb)
32836@end smallexample
32837
922fbb7b
AC
32838@node Annotations
32839@chapter @value{GDBN} Annotations
32840
086432e2
AC
32841This chapter describes annotations in @value{GDBN}. Annotations were
32842designed to interface @value{GDBN} to graphical user interfaces or other
32843similar programs which want to interact with @value{GDBN} at a
922fbb7b
AC
32844relatively high level.
32845
d3e8051b 32846The annotation mechanism has largely been superseded by @sc{gdb/mi}
086432e2
AC
32847(@pxref{GDB/MI}).
32848
922fbb7b
AC
32849@ignore
32850This is Edition @value{EDITION}, @value{DATE}.
32851@end ignore
32852
32853@menu
32854* Annotations Overview:: What annotations are; the general syntax.
9e6c4bd5 32855* Server Prefix:: Issuing a command without affecting user state.
922fbb7b
AC
32856* Prompting:: Annotations marking @value{GDBN}'s need for input.
32857* Errors:: Annotations for error messages.
922fbb7b
AC
32858* Invalidation:: Some annotations describe things now invalid.
32859* Annotations for Running::
32860 Whether the program is running, how it stopped, etc.
32861* Source Annotations:: Annotations describing source code.
922fbb7b
AC
32862@end menu
32863
32864@node Annotations Overview
32865@section What is an Annotation?
32866@cindex annotations
32867
922fbb7b
AC
32868Annotations start with a newline character, two @samp{control-z}
32869characters, and the name of the annotation. If there is no additional
32870information associated with this annotation, the name of the annotation
32871is followed immediately by a newline. If there is additional
32872information, the name of the annotation is followed by a space, the
32873additional information, and a newline. The additional information
32874cannot contain newline characters.
32875
32876Any output not beginning with a newline and two @samp{control-z}
32877characters denotes literal output from @value{GDBN}. Currently there is
32878no need for @value{GDBN} to output a newline followed by two
32879@samp{control-z} characters, but if there was such a need, the
32880annotations could be extended with an @samp{escape} annotation which
32881means those three characters as output.
32882
086432e2
AC
32883The annotation @var{level}, which is specified using the
32884@option{--annotate} command line option (@pxref{Mode Options}), controls
32885how much information @value{GDBN} prints together with its prompt,
32886values of expressions, source lines, and other types of output. Level 0
d3e8051b 32887is for no annotations, level 1 is for use when @value{GDBN} is run as a
086432e2
AC
32888subprocess of @sc{gnu} Emacs, level 3 is the maximum annotation suitable
32889for programs that control @value{GDBN}, and level 2 annotations have
32890been made obsolete (@pxref{Limitations, , Limitations of the Annotation
09d4efe1
EZ
32891Interface, annotate, GDB's Obsolete Annotations}).
32892
32893@table @code
32894@kindex set annotate
32895@item set annotate @var{level}
e09f16f9 32896The @value{GDBN} command @code{set annotate} sets the level of
09d4efe1 32897annotations to the specified @var{level}.
9c16f35a
EZ
32898
32899@item show annotate
32900@kindex show annotate
32901Show the current annotation level.
09d4efe1
EZ
32902@end table
32903
32904This chapter describes level 3 annotations.
086432e2 32905
922fbb7b
AC
32906A simple example of starting up @value{GDBN} with annotations is:
32907
32908@smallexample
086432e2
AC
32909$ @kbd{gdb --annotate=3}
32910GNU gdb 6.0
32911Copyright 2003 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
922fbb7b
AC
32912GDB is free software, covered by the GNU General Public License,
32913and you are welcome to change it and/or distribute copies of it
32914under certain conditions.
32915Type "show copying" to see the conditions.
32916There is absolutely no warranty for GDB. Type "show warranty"
32917for details.
086432e2 32918This GDB was configured as "i386-pc-linux-gnu"
922fbb7b
AC
32919
32920^Z^Zpre-prompt
f7dc1244 32921(@value{GDBP})
922fbb7b 32922^Z^Zprompt
086432e2 32923@kbd{quit}
922fbb7b
AC
32924
32925^Z^Zpost-prompt
b383017d 32926$
922fbb7b
AC
32927@end smallexample
32928
32929Here @samp{quit} is input to @value{GDBN}; the rest is output from
32930@value{GDBN}. The three lines beginning @samp{^Z^Z} (where @samp{^Z}
32931denotes a @samp{control-z} character) are annotations; the rest is
32932output from @value{GDBN}.
32933
9e6c4bd5
NR
32934@node Server Prefix
32935@section The Server Prefix
32936@cindex server prefix
32937
32938If you prefix a command with @samp{server } then it will not affect
32939the command history, nor will it affect @value{GDBN}'s notion of which
32940command to repeat if @key{RET} is pressed on a line by itself. This
32941means that commands can be run behind a user's back by a front-end in
32942a transparent manner.
32943
d837706a
NR
32944The @code{server } prefix does not affect the recording of values into
32945the value history; to print a value without recording it into the
32946value history, use the @code{output} command instead of the
32947@code{print} command.
32948
32949Using this prefix also disables confirmation requests
32950(@pxref{confirmation requests}).
9e6c4bd5 32951
922fbb7b
AC
32952@node Prompting
32953@section Annotation for @value{GDBN} Input
32954
32955@cindex annotations for prompts
32956When @value{GDBN} prompts for input, it annotates this fact so it is possible
32957to know when to send output, when the output from a given command is
32958over, etc.
32959
32960Different kinds of input each have a different @dfn{input type}. Each
32961input type has three annotations: a @code{pre-} annotation, which
32962denotes the beginning of any prompt which is being output, a plain
32963annotation, which denotes the end of the prompt, and then a @code{post-}
32964annotation which denotes the end of any echo which may (or may not) be
32965associated with the input. For example, the @code{prompt} input type
32966features the following annotations:
32967
32968@smallexample
32969^Z^Zpre-prompt
32970^Z^Zprompt
32971^Z^Zpost-prompt
32972@end smallexample
32973
32974The input types are
32975
32976@table @code
e5ac9b53
EZ
32977@findex pre-prompt annotation
32978@findex prompt annotation
32979@findex post-prompt annotation
922fbb7b
AC
32980@item prompt
32981When @value{GDBN} is prompting for a command (the main @value{GDBN} prompt).
32982
e5ac9b53
EZ
32983@findex pre-commands annotation
32984@findex commands annotation
32985@findex post-commands annotation
922fbb7b
AC
32986@item commands
32987When @value{GDBN} prompts for a set of commands, like in the @code{commands}
32988command. The annotations are repeated for each command which is input.
32989
e5ac9b53
EZ
32990@findex pre-overload-choice annotation
32991@findex overload-choice annotation
32992@findex post-overload-choice annotation
922fbb7b
AC
32993@item overload-choice
32994When @value{GDBN} wants the user to select between various overloaded functions.
32995
e5ac9b53
EZ
32996@findex pre-query annotation
32997@findex query annotation
32998@findex post-query annotation
922fbb7b
AC
32999@item query
33000When @value{GDBN} wants the user to confirm a potentially dangerous operation.
33001
e5ac9b53
EZ
33002@findex pre-prompt-for-continue annotation
33003@findex prompt-for-continue annotation
33004@findex post-prompt-for-continue annotation
922fbb7b
AC
33005@item prompt-for-continue
33006When @value{GDBN} is asking the user to press return to continue. Note: Don't
33007expect this to work well; instead use @code{set height 0} to disable
33008prompting. This is because the counting of lines is buggy in the
33009presence of annotations.
33010@end table
33011
33012@node Errors
33013@section Errors
33014@cindex annotations for errors, warnings and interrupts
33015
e5ac9b53 33016@findex quit annotation
922fbb7b
AC
33017@smallexample
33018^Z^Zquit
33019@end smallexample
33020
33021This annotation occurs right before @value{GDBN} responds to an interrupt.
33022
e5ac9b53 33023@findex error annotation
922fbb7b
AC
33024@smallexample
33025^Z^Zerror
33026@end smallexample
33027
33028This annotation occurs right before @value{GDBN} responds to an error.
33029
33030Quit and error annotations indicate that any annotations which @value{GDBN} was
33031in the middle of may end abruptly. For example, if a
33032@code{value-history-begin} annotation is followed by a @code{error}, one
33033cannot expect to receive the matching @code{value-history-end}. One
33034cannot expect not to receive it either, however; an error annotation
33035does not necessarily mean that @value{GDBN} is immediately returning all the way
33036to the top level.
33037
e5ac9b53 33038@findex error-begin annotation
922fbb7b
AC
33039A quit or error annotation may be preceded by
33040
33041@smallexample
33042^Z^Zerror-begin
33043@end smallexample
33044
33045Any output between that and the quit or error annotation is the error
33046message.
33047
33048Warning messages are not yet annotated.
33049@c If we want to change that, need to fix warning(), type_error(),
33050@c range_error(), and possibly other places.
33051
922fbb7b
AC
33052@node Invalidation
33053@section Invalidation Notices
33054
33055@cindex annotations for invalidation messages
33056The following annotations say that certain pieces of state may have
33057changed.
33058
33059@table @code
e5ac9b53 33060@findex frames-invalid annotation
922fbb7b
AC
33061@item ^Z^Zframes-invalid
33062
33063The frames (for example, output from the @code{backtrace} command) may
33064have changed.
33065
e5ac9b53 33066@findex breakpoints-invalid annotation
922fbb7b
AC
33067@item ^Z^Zbreakpoints-invalid
33068
33069The breakpoints may have changed. For example, the user just added or
33070deleted a breakpoint.
33071@end table
33072
33073@node Annotations for Running
33074@section Running the Program
33075@cindex annotations for running programs
33076
e5ac9b53
EZ
33077@findex starting annotation
33078@findex stopping annotation
922fbb7b 33079When the program starts executing due to a @value{GDBN} command such as
b383017d 33080@code{step} or @code{continue},
922fbb7b
AC
33081
33082@smallexample
33083^Z^Zstarting
33084@end smallexample
33085
b383017d 33086is output. When the program stops,
922fbb7b
AC
33087
33088@smallexample
33089^Z^Zstopped
33090@end smallexample
33091
33092is output. Before the @code{stopped} annotation, a variety of
33093annotations describe how the program stopped.
33094
33095@table @code
e5ac9b53 33096@findex exited annotation
922fbb7b
AC
33097@item ^Z^Zexited @var{exit-status}
33098The program exited, and @var{exit-status} is the exit status (zero for
33099successful exit, otherwise nonzero).
33100
e5ac9b53
EZ
33101@findex signalled annotation
33102@findex signal-name annotation
33103@findex signal-name-end annotation
33104@findex signal-string annotation
33105@findex signal-string-end annotation
922fbb7b
AC
33106@item ^Z^Zsignalled
33107The program exited with a signal. After the @code{^Z^Zsignalled}, the
33108annotation continues:
33109
33110@smallexample
33111@var{intro-text}
33112^Z^Zsignal-name
33113@var{name}
33114^Z^Zsignal-name-end
33115@var{middle-text}
33116^Z^Zsignal-string
33117@var{string}
33118^Z^Zsignal-string-end
33119@var{end-text}
33120@end smallexample
33121
33122@noindent
33123where @var{name} is the name of the signal, such as @code{SIGILL} or
33124@code{SIGSEGV}, and @var{string} is the explanation of the signal, such
33125as @code{Illegal Instruction} or @code{Segmentation fault}.
33126@var{intro-text}, @var{middle-text}, and @var{end-text} are for the
33127user's benefit and have no particular format.
33128
e5ac9b53 33129@findex signal annotation
922fbb7b
AC
33130@item ^Z^Zsignal
33131The syntax of this annotation is just like @code{signalled}, but @value{GDBN} is
33132just saying that the program received the signal, not that it was
33133terminated with it.
33134
e5ac9b53 33135@findex breakpoint annotation
922fbb7b
AC
33136@item ^Z^Zbreakpoint @var{number}
33137The program hit breakpoint number @var{number}.
33138
e5ac9b53 33139@findex watchpoint annotation
922fbb7b
AC
33140@item ^Z^Zwatchpoint @var{number}
33141The program hit watchpoint number @var{number}.
33142@end table
33143
33144@node Source Annotations
33145@section Displaying Source
33146@cindex annotations for source display
33147
e5ac9b53 33148@findex source annotation
922fbb7b
AC
33149The following annotation is used instead of displaying source code:
33150
33151@smallexample
33152^Z^Zsource @var{filename}:@var{line}:@var{character}:@var{middle}:@var{addr}
33153@end smallexample
33154
33155where @var{filename} is an absolute file name indicating which source
33156file, @var{line} is the line number within that file (where 1 is the
33157first line in the file), @var{character} is the character position
33158within the file (where 0 is the first character in the file) (for most
33159debug formats this will necessarily point to the beginning of a line),
33160@var{middle} is @samp{middle} if @var{addr} is in the middle of the
33161line, or @samp{beg} if @var{addr} is at the beginning of the line, and
33162@var{addr} is the address in the target program associated with the
33163source which is being displayed. @var{addr} is in the form @samp{0x}
33164followed by one or more lowercase hex digits (note that this does not
33165depend on the language).
33166
4efc6507
DE
33167@node JIT Interface
33168@chapter JIT Compilation Interface
33169@cindex just-in-time compilation
33170@cindex JIT compilation interface
33171
33172This chapter documents @value{GDBN}'s @dfn{just-in-time} (JIT) compilation
33173interface. A JIT compiler is a program or library that generates native
33174executable code at runtime and executes it, usually in order to achieve good
33175performance while maintaining platform independence.
33176
33177Programs that use JIT compilation are normally difficult to debug because
33178portions of their code are generated at runtime, instead of being loaded from
33179object files, which is where @value{GDBN} normally finds the program's symbols
33180and debug information. In order to debug programs that use JIT compilation,
33181@value{GDBN} has an interface that allows the program to register in-memory
33182symbol files with @value{GDBN} at runtime.
33183
33184If you are using @value{GDBN} to debug a program that uses this interface, then
33185it should work transparently so long as you have not stripped the binary. If
33186you are developing a JIT compiler, then the interface is documented in the rest
33187of this chapter. At this time, the only known client of this interface is the
33188LLVM JIT.
33189
33190Broadly speaking, the JIT interface mirrors the dynamic loader interface. The
33191JIT compiler communicates with @value{GDBN} by writing data into a global
33192variable and calling a fuction at a well-known symbol. When @value{GDBN}
33193attaches, it reads a linked list of symbol files from the global variable to
33194find existing code, and puts a breakpoint in the function so that it can find
33195out about additional code.
33196
33197@menu
33198* Declarations:: Relevant C struct declarations
33199* Registering Code:: Steps to register code
33200* Unregistering Code:: Steps to unregister code
f85b53f8 33201* Custom Debug Info:: Emit debug information in a custom format
4efc6507
DE
33202@end menu
33203
33204@node Declarations
33205@section JIT Declarations
33206
33207These are the relevant struct declarations that a C program should include to
33208implement the interface:
33209
33210@smallexample
33211typedef enum
33212@{
33213 JIT_NOACTION = 0,
33214 JIT_REGISTER_FN,
33215 JIT_UNREGISTER_FN
33216@} jit_actions_t;
33217
33218struct jit_code_entry
33219@{
33220 struct jit_code_entry *next_entry;
33221 struct jit_code_entry *prev_entry;
33222 const char *symfile_addr;
33223 uint64_t symfile_size;
33224@};
33225
33226struct jit_descriptor
33227@{
33228 uint32_t version;
33229 /* This type should be jit_actions_t, but we use uint32_t
33230 to be explicit about the bitwidth. */
33231 uint32_t action_flag;
33232 struct jit_code_entry *relevant_entry;
33233 struct jit_code_entry *first_entry;
33234@};
33235
33236/* GDB puts a breakpoint in this function. */
33237void __attribute__((noinline)) __jit_debug_register_code() @{ @};
33238
33239/* Make sure to specify the version statically, because the
33240 debugger may check the version before we can set it. */
33241struct jit_descriptor __jit_debug_descriptor = @{ 1, 0, 0, 0 @};
33242@end smallexample
33243
33244If the JIT is multi-threaded, then it is important that the JIT synchronize any
33245modifications to this global data properly, which can easily be done by putting
33246a global mutex around modifications to these structures.
33247
33248@node Registering Code
33249@section Registering Code
33250
33251To register code with @value{GDBN}, the JIT should follow this protocol:
33252
33253@itemize @bullet
33254@item
33255Generate an object file in memory with symbols and other desired debug
33256information. The file must include the virtual addresses of the sections.
33257
33258@item
33259Create a code entry for the file, which gives the start and size of the symbol
33260file.
33261
33262@item
33263Add it to the linked list in the JIT descriptor.
33264
33265@item
33266Point the relevant_entry field of the descriptor at the entry.
33267
33268@item
33269Set @code{action_flag} to @code{JIT_REGISTER} and call
33270@code{__jit_debug_register_code}.
33271@end itemize
33272
33273When @value{GDBN} is attached and the breakpoint fires, @value{GDBN} uses the
33274@code{relevant_entry} pointer so it doesn't have to walk the list looking for
33275new code. However, the linked list must still be maintained in order to allow
33276@value{GDBN} to attach to a running process and still find the symbol files.
33277
33278@node Unregistering Code
33279@section Unregistering Code
33280
33281If code is freed, then the JIT should use the following protocol:
33282
33283@itemize @bullet
33284@item
33285Remove the code entry corresponding to the code from the linked list.
33286
33287@item
33288Point the @code{relevant_entry} field of the descriptor at the code entry.
33289
33290@item
33291Set @code{action_flag} to @code{JIT_UNREGISTER} and call
33292@code{__jit_debug_register_code}.
33293@end itemize
33294
33295If the JIT frees or recompiles code without unregistering it, then @value{GDBN}
33296and the JIT will leak the memory used for the associated symbol files.
33297
f85b53f8
SD
33298@node Custom Debug Info
33299@section Custom Debug Info
33300@cindex custom JIT debug info
33301@cindex JIT debug info reader
33302
33303Generating debug information in platform-native file formats (like ELF
33304or COFF) may be an overkill for JIT compilers; especially if all the
33305debug info is used for is displaying a meaningful backtrace. The
33306issue can be resolved by having the JIT writers decide on a debug info
33307format and also provide a reader that parses the debug info generated
33308by the JIT compiler. This section gives a brief overview on writing
33309such a parser. More specific details can be found in the source file
33310@file{gdb/jit-reader.in}, which is also installed as a header at
33311@file{@var{includedir}/gdb/jit-reader.h} for easy inclusion.
33312
33313The reader is implemented as a shared object (so this functionality is
33314not available on platforms which don't allow loading shared objects at
33315runtime). Two @value{GDBN} commands, @code{jit-reader-load} and
33316@code{jit-reader-unload} are provided, to be used to load and unload
33317the readers from a preconfigured directory. Once loaded, the shared
33318object is used the parse the debug information emitted by the JIT
33319compiler.
33320
33321@menu
33322* Using JIT Debug Info Readers:: How to use supplied readers correctly
33323* Writing JIT Debug Info Readers:: Creating a debug-info reader
33324@end menu
33325
33326@node Using JIT Debug Info Readers
33327@subsection Using JIT Debug Info Readers
33328@kindex jit-reader-load
33329@kindex jit-reader-unload
33330
33331Readers can be loaded and unloaded using the @code{jit-reader-load}
33332and @code{jit-reader-unload} commands.
33333
33334@table @code
33335@item jit-reader-load @var{reader-name}
33336Load the JIT reader named @var{reader-name}. On a UNIX system, this
33337will usually load @file{@var{libdir}/gdb/@var{reader-name}}, where
33338@var{libdir} is the system library directory, usually
33339@file{/usr/local/lib}. Only one reader can be active at a time;
33340trying to load a second reader when one is already loaded will result
33341in @value{GDBN} reporting an error. A new JIT reader can be loaded by
33342first unloading the current one using @code{jit-reader-load} and then
33343invoking @code{jit-reader-load}.
33344
33345@item jit-reader-unload
33346Unload the currently loaded JIT reader.
33347
33348@end table
33349
33350@node Writing JIT Debug Info Readers
33351@subsection Writing JIT Debug Info Readers
33352@cindex writing JIT debug info readers
33353
33354As mentioned, a reader is essentially a shared object conforming to a
33355certain ABI. This ABI is described in @file{jit-reader.h}.
33356
33357@file{jit-reader.h} defines the structures, macros and functions
33358required to write a reader. It is installed (along with
33359@value{GDBN}), in @file{@var{includedir}/gdb} where @var{includedir} is
33360the system include directory.
33361
33362Readers need to be released under a GPL compatible license. A reader
33363can be declared as released under such a license by placing the macro
33364@code{GDB_DECLARE_GPL_COMPATIBLE_READER} in a source file.
33365
33366The entry point for readers is the symbol @code{gdb_init_reader},
33367which is expected to be a function with the prototype
33368
33369@findex gdb_init_reader
33370@smallexample
33371extern struct gdb_reader_funcs *gdb_init_reader (void);
33372@end smallexample
33373
33374@cindex @code{struct gdb_reader_funcs}
33375
33376@code{struct gdb_reader_funcs} contains a set of pointers to callback
33377functions. These functions are executed to read the debug info
33378generated by the JIT compiler (@code{read}), to unwind stack frames
33379(@code{unwind}) and to create canonical frame IDs
33380(@code{get_Frame_id}). It also has a callback that is called when the
33381reader is being unloaded (@code{destroy}). The struct looks like this
33382
33383@smallexample
33384struct gdb_reader_funcs
33385@{
33386 /* Must be set to GDB_READER_INTERFACE_VERSION. */
33387 int reader_version;
33388
33389 /* For use by the reader. */
33390 void *priv_data;
33391
33392 gdb_read_debug_info *read;
33393 gdb_unwind_frame *unwind;
33394 gdb_get_frame_id *get_frame_id;
33395 gdb_destroy_reader *destroy;
33396@};
33397@end smallexample
33398
33399@cindex @code{struct gdb_symbol_callbacks}
33400@cindex @code{struct gdb_unwind_callbacks}
33401
33402The callbacks are provided with another set of callbacks by
33403@value{GDBN} to do their job. For @code{read}, these callbacks are
33404passed in a @code{struct gdb_symbol_callbacks} and for @code{unwind}
33405and @code{get_frame_id}, in a @code{struct gdb_unwind_callbacks}.
33406@code{struct gdb_symbol_callbacks} has callbacks to create new object
33407files and new symbol tables inside those object files. @code{struct
33408gdb_unwind_callbacks} has callbacks to read registers off the current
33409frame and to write out the values of the registers in the previous
33410frame. Both have a callback (@code{target_read}) to read bytes off the
33411target's address space.
33412
d1feda86
YQ
33413@node In-Process Agent
33414@chapter In-Process Agent
33415@cindex debugging agent
33416The traditional debugging model is conceptually low-speed, but works fine,
33417because most bugs can be reproduced in debugging-mode execution. However,
33418as multi-core or many-core processors are becoming mainstream, and
33419multi-threaded programs become more and more popular, there should be more
33420and more bugs that only manifest themselves at normal-mode execution, for
33421example, thread races, because debugger's interference with the program's
33422timing may conceal the bugs. On the other hand, in some applications,
33423it is not feasible for the debugger to interrupt the program's execution
33424long enough for the developer to learn anything helpful about its behavior.
33425If the program's correctness depends on its real-time behavior, delays
33426introduced by a debugger might cause the program to fail, even when the
33427code itself is correct. It is useful to be able to observe the program's
33428behavior without interrupting it.
33429
33430Therefore, traditional debugging model is too intrusive to reproduce
33431some bugs. In order to reduce the interference with the program, we can
33432reduce the number of operations performed by debugger. The
33433@dfn{In-Process Agent}, a shared library, is running within the same
33434process with inferior, and is able to perform some debugging operations
33435itself. As a result, debugger is only involved when necessary, and
33436performance of debugging can be improved accordingly. Note that
33437interference with program can be reduced but can't be removed completely,
33438because the in-process agent will still stop or slow down the program.
33439
33440The in-process agent can interpret and execute Agent Expressions
33441(@pxref{Agent Expressions}) during performing debugging operations. The
33442agent expressions can be used for different purposes, such as collecting
33443data in tracepoints, and condition evaluation in breakpoints.
33444
33445@anchor{Control Agent}
33446You can control whether the in-process agent is used as an aid for
33447debugging with the following commands:
33448
33449@table @code
33450@kindex set agent on
33451@item set agent on
33452Causes the in-process agent to perform some operations on behalf of the
33453debugger. Just which operations requested by the user will be done
33454by the in-process agent depends on the its capabilities. For example,
33455if you request to evaluate breakpoint conditions in the in-process agent,
33456and the in-process agent has such capability as well, then breakpoint
33457conditions will be evaluated in the in-process agent.
33458
33459@kindex set agent off
33460@item set agent off
33461Disables execution of debugging operations by the in-process agent. All
33462of the operations will be performed by @value{GDBN}.
33463
33464@kindex show agent
33465@item show agent
33466Display the current setting of execution of debugging operations by
33467the in-process agent.
33468@end table
33469
16bdd41f
YQ
33470@menu
33471* In-Process Agent Protocol::
33472@end menu
33473
33474@node In-Process Agent Protocol
33475@section In-Process Agent Protocol
33476@cindex in-process agent protocol
33477
33478The in-process agent is able to communicate with both @value{GDBN} and
33479GDBserver (@pxref{In-Process Agent}). This section documents the protocol
33480used for communications between @value{GDBN} or GDBserver and the IPA.
33481In general, @value{GDBN} or GDBserver sends commands
33482(@pxref{IPA Protocol Commands}) and data to in-process agent, and then
33483in-process agent replies back with the return result of the command, or
33484some other information. The data sent to in-process agent is composed
33485of primitive data types, such as 4-byte or 8-byte type, and composite
33486types, which are called objects (@pxref{IPA Protocol Objects}).
33487
33488@menu
33489* IPA Protocol Objects::
33490* IPA Protocol Commands::
33491@end menu
33492
33493@node IPA Protocol Objects
33494@subsection IPA Protocol Objects
33495@cindex ipa protocol objects
33496
33497The commands sent to and results received from agent may contain some
33498complex data types called @dfn{objects}.
33499
33500The in-process agent is running on the same machine with @value{GDBN}
33501or GDBserver, so it doesn't have to handle as much differences between
33502two ends as remote protocol (@pxref{Remote Protocol}) tries to handle.
33503However, there are still some differences of two ends in two processes:
33504
33505@enumerate
33506@item
33507word size. On some 64-bit machines, @value{GDBN} or GDBserver can be
33508compiled as a 64-bit executable, while in-process agent is a 32-bit one.
33509@item
33510ABI. Some machines may have multiple types of ABI, @value{GDBN} or
33511GDBserver is compiled with one, and in-process agent is compiled with
33512the other one.
33513@end enumerate
33514
33515Here are the IPA Protocol Objects:
33516
33517@enumerate
33518@item
33519agent expression object. It represents an agent expression
33520(@pxref{Agent Expressions}).
33521@anchor{agent expression object}
33522@item
33523tracepoint action object. It represents a tracepoint action
33524(@pxref{Tracepoint Actions,,Tracepoint Action Lists}) to collect registers,
33525memory, static trace data and to evaluate expression.
33526@anchor{tracepoint action object}
33527@item
33528tracepoint object. It represents a tracepoint (@pxref{Tracepoints}).
33529@anchor{tracepoint object}
33530
33531@end enumerate
33532
33533The following table describes important attributes of each IPA protocol
33534object:
33535
33536@multitable @columnfractions .30 .20 .50
33537@headitem Name @tab Size @tab Description
33538@item @emph{agent expression object} @tab @tab
33539@item length @tab 4 @tab length of bytes code
33540@item byte code @tab @var{length} @tab contents of byte code
33541@item @emph{tracepoint action for collecting memory} @tab @tab
33542@item 'M' @tab 1 @tab type of tracepoint action
33543@item addr @tab 8 @tab if @var{basereg} is @samp{-1}, @var{addr} is the
33544address of the lowest byte to collect, otherwise @var{addr} is the offset
33545of @var{basereg} for memory collecting.
33546@item len @tab 8 @tab length of memory for collecting
33547@item basereg @tab 4 @tab the register number containing the starting
33548memory address for collecting.
33549@item @emph{tracepoint action for collecting registers} @tab @tab
33550@item 'R' @tab 1 @tab type of tracepoint action
33551@item @emph{tracepoint action for collecting static trace data} @tab @tab
33552@item 'L' @tab 1 @tab type of tracepoint action
33553@item @emph{tracepoint action for expression evaluation} @tab @tab
33554@item 'X' @tab 1 @tab type of tracepoint action
33555@item agent expression @tab length of @tab @ref{agent expression object}
33556@item @emph{tracepoint object} @tab @tab
33557@item number @tab 4 @tab number of tracepoint
33558@item address @tab 8 @tab address of tracepoint inserted on
33559@item type @tab 4 @tab type of tracepoint
33560@item enabled @tab 1 @tab enable or disable of tracepoint
33561@item step_count @tab 8 @tab step
33562@item pass_count @tab 8 @tab pass
33563@item numactions @tab 4 @tab number of tracepoint actions
33564@item hit count @tab 8 @tab hit count
33565@item trace frame usage @tab 8 @tab trace frame usage
33566@item compiled_cond @tab 8 @tab compiled condition
33567@item orig_size @tab 8 @tab orig size
33568@item condition @tab 4 if condition is NULL otherwise length of
33569@ref{agent expression object}
33570@tab zero if condition is NULL, otherwise is
33571@ref{agent expression object}
33572@item actions @tab variable
33573@tab numactions number of @ref{tracepoint action object}
33574@end multitable
33575
33576@node IPA Protocol Commands
33577@subsection IPA Protocol Commands
33578@cindex ipa protocol commands
33579
33580The spaces in each command are delimiters to ease reading this commands
33581specification. They don't exist in real commands.
33582
33583@table @samp
33584
33585@item FastTrace:@var{tracepoint_object} @var{gdb_jump_pad_head}
33586Installs a new fast tracepoint described by @var{tracepoint_object}
33587(@pxref{tracepoint object}). @var{gdb_jump_pad_head}, 8-byte long, is the
33588head of @dfn{jumppad}, which is used to jump to data collection routine
33589in IPA finally.
33590
33591Replies:
33592@table @samp
33593@item OK @var{target_address} @var{gdb_jump_pad_head} @var{fjump_size} @var{fjump}
33594@var{target_address} is address of tracepoint in the inferior.
33595@var{gdb_jump_pad_head} is updated head of jumppad. Both of
33596@var{target_address} and @var{gdb_jump_pad_head} are 8-byte long.
33597@var{fjump} contains a sequence of instructions jump to jumppad entry.
33598@var{fjump_size}, 4-byte long, is the size of @var{fjump}.
33599@item E @var{NN}
33600for an error
33601
33602@end table
33603
33604@item qTfSTM
33605@xref{qTfSTM}.
33606@item qTsSTM
33607@xref{qTsSTM}.
33608@item qTSTMat
33609@xref{qTSTMat}.
33610@item probe_marker_at:@var{address}
33611Asks in-process agent to probe the marker at @var{address}.
33612
33613Replies:
33614@table @samp
33615@item E @var{NN}
33616for an error
33617@end table
33618@item unprobe_marker_at:@var{address}
33619Asks in-process agent to unprobe the marker at @var{address}.
33620@end table
33621
8e04817f
AC
33622@node GDB Bugs
33623@chapter Reporting Bugs in @value{GDBN}
33624@cindex bugs in @value{GDBN}
33625@cindex reporting bugs in @value{GDBN}
c906108c 33626
8e04817f 33627Your bug reports play an essential role in making @value{GDBN} reliable.
c906108c 33628
8e04817f
AC
33629Reporting a bug may help you by bringing a solution to your problem, or it
33630may not. But in any case the principal function of a bug report is to help
33631the entire community by making the next version of @value{GDBN} work better. Bug
33632reports are your contribution to the maintenance of @value{GDBN}.
c906108c 33633
8e04817f
AC
33634In order for a bug report to serve its purpose, you must include the
33635information that enables us to fix the bug.
c4555f82
SC
33636
33637@menu
8e04817f
AC
33638* Bug Criteria:: Have you found a bug?
33639* Bug Reporting:: How to report bugs
c4555f82
SC
33640@end menu
33641
8e04817f 33642@node Bug Criteria
79a6e687 33643@section Have You Found a Bug?
8e04817f 33644@cindex bug criteria
c4555f82 33645
8e04817f 33646If you are not sure whether you have found a bug, here are some guidelines:
c4555f82
SC
33647
33648@itemize @bullet
8e04817f
AC
33649@cindex fatal signal
33650@cindex debugger crash
33651@cindex crash of debugger
c4555f82 33652@item
8e04817f
AC
33653If the debugger gets a fatal signal, for any input whatever, that is a
33654@value{GDBN} bug. Reliable debuggers never crash.
33655
33656@cindex error on valid input
33657@item
33658If @value{GDBN} produces an error message for valid input, that is a
33659bug. (Note that if you're cross debugging, the problem may also be
33660somewhere in the connection to the target.)
c4555f82 33661
8e04817f 33662@cindex invalid input
c4555f82 33663@item
8e04817f
AC
33664If @value{GDBN} does not produce an error message for invalid input,
33665that is a bug. However, you should note that your idea of
33666``invalid input'' might be our idea of ``an extension'' or ``support
33667for traditional practice''.
33668
33669@item
33670If you are an experienced user of debugging tools, your suggestions
33671for improvement of @value{GDBN} are welcome in any case.
c4555f82
SC
33672@end itemize
33673
8e04817f 33674@node Bug Reporting
79a6e687 33675@section How to Report Bugs
8e04817f
AC
33676@cindex bug reports
33677@cindex @value{GDBN} bugs, reporting
33678
33679A number of companies and individuals offer support for @sc{gnu} products.
33680If you obtained @value{GDBN} from a support organization, we recommend you
33681contact that organization first.
33682
33683You can find contact information for many support companies and
33684individuals in the file @file{etc/SERVICE} in the @sc{gnu} Emacs
33685distribution.
33686@c should add a web page ref...
33687
c16158bc
JM
33688@ifset BUGURL
33689@ifset BUGURL_DEFAULT
129188f6 33690In any event, we also recommend that you submit bug reports for
d3e8051b 33691@value{GDBN}. The preferred method is to submit them directly using
129188f6
AC
33692@uref{http://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/bugs/, @value{GDBN}'s Bugs web
33693page}. Alternatively, the @email{bug-gdb@@gnu.org, e-mail gateway} can
33694be used.
8e04817f
AC
33695
33696@strong{Do not send bug reports to @samp{info-gdb}, or to
33697@samp{help-gdb}, or to any newsgroups.} Most users of @value{GDBN} do
33698not want to receive bug reports. Those that do have arranged to receive
33699@samp{bug-gdb}.
33700
33701The mailing list @samp{bug-gdb} has a newsgroup @samp{gnu.gdb.bug} which
33702serves as a repeater. The mailing list and the newsgroup carry exactly
33703the same messages. Often people think of posting bug reports to the
33704newsgroup instead of mailing them. This appears to work, but it has one
33705problem which can be crucial: a newsgroup posting often lacks a mail
33706path back to the sender. Thus, if we need to ask for more information,
33707we may be unable to reach you. For this reason, it is better to send
33708bug reports to the mailing list.
c16158bc
JM
33709@end ifset
33710@ifclear BUGURL_DEFAULT
33711In any event, we also recommend that you submit bug reports for
33712@value{GDBN} to @value{BUGURL}.
33713@end ifclear
33714@end ifset
c4555f82 33715
8e04817f
AC
33716The fundamental principle of reporting bugs usefully is this:
33717@strong{report all the facts}. If you are not sure whether to state a
33718fact or leave it out, state it!
c4555f82 33719
8e04817f
AC
33720Often people omit facts because they think they know what causes the
33721problem and assume that some details do not matter. Thus, you might
33722assume that the name of the variable you use in an example does not matter.
33723Well, probably it does not, but one cannot be sure. Perhaps the bug is a
33724stray memory reference which happens to fetch from the location where that
33725name is stored in memory; perhaps, if the name were different, the contents
33726of that location would fool the debugger into doing the right thing despite
33727the bug. Play it safe and give a specific, complete example. That is the
33728easiest thing for you to do, and the most helpful.
c4555f82 33729
8e04817f
AC
33730Keep in mind that the purpose of a bug report is to enable us to fix the
33731bug. It may be that the bug has been reported previously, but neither
33732you nor we can know that unless your bug report is complete and
33733self-contained.
c4555f82 33734
8e04817f
AC
33735Sometimes people give a few sketchy facts and ask, ``Does this ring a
33736bell?'' Those bug reports are useless, and we urge everyone to
33737@emph{refuse to respond to them} except to chide the sender to report
33738bugs properly.
33739
33740To enable us to fix the bug, you should include all these things:
c4555f82
SC
33741
33742@itemize @bullet
33743@item
8e04817f
AC
33744The version of @value{GDBN}. @value{GDBN} announces it if you start
33745with no arguments; you can also print it at any time using @code{show
33746version}.
c4555f82 33747
8e04817f
AC
33748Without this, we will not know whether there is any point in looking for
33749the bug in the current version of @value{GDBN}.
c4555f82
SC
33750
33751@item
8e04817f
AC
33752The type of machine you are using, and the operating system name and
33753version number.
c4555f82
SC
33754
33755@item
c1468174 33756What compiler (and its version) was used to compile @value{GDBN}---e.g.@:
8e04817f 33757``@value{GCC}--2.8.1''.
c4555f82
SC
33758
33759@item
8e04817f 33760What compiler (and its version) was used to compile the program you are
c1468174 33761debugging---e.g.@: ``@value{GCC}--2.8.1'', or ``HP92453-01 A.10.32.03 HP
3f94c067
BW
33762C Compiler''. For @value{NGCC}, you can say @kbd{@value{GCC} --version}
33763to get this information; for other compilers, see the documentation for
33764those compilers.
c4555f82 33765
8e04817f
AC
33766@item
33767The command arguments you gave the compiler to compile your example and
33768observe the bug. For example, did you use @samp{-O}? To guarantee
33769you will not omit something important, list them all. A copy of the
33770Makefile (or the output from make) is sufficient.
c4555f82 33771
8e04817f
AC
33772If we were to try to guess the arguments, we would probably guess wrong
33773and then we might not encounter the bug.
c4555f82 33774
8e04817f
AC
33775@item
33776A complete input script, and all necessary source files, that will
33777reproduce the bug.
c4555f82 33778
8e04817f
AC
33779@item
33780A description of what behavior you observe that you believe is
33781incorrect. For example, ``It gets a fatal signal.''
c4555f82 33782
8e04817f
AC
33783Of course, if the bug is that @value{GDBN} gets a fatal signal, then we
33784will certainly notice it. But if the bug is incorrect output, we might
33785not notice unless it is glaringly wrong. You might as well not give us
33786a chance to make a mistake.
c4555f82 33787
8e04817f
AC
33788Even if the problem you experience is a fatal signal, you should still
33789say so explicitly. Suppose something strange is going on, such as, your
33790copy of @value{GDBN} is out of synch, or you have encountered a bug in
33791the C library on your system. (This has happened!) Your copy might
33792crash and ours would not. If you told us to expect a crash, then when
33793ours fails to crash, we would know that the bug was not happening for
33794us. If you had not told us to expect a crash, then we would not be able
33795to draw any conclusion from our observations.
c4555f82 33796
e0c07bf0
MC
33797@pindex script
33798@cindex recording a session script
33799To collect all this information, you can use a session recording program
33800such as @command{script}, which is available on many Unix systems.
33801Just run your @value{GDBN} session inside @command{script} and then
33802include the @file{typescript} file with your bug report.
33803
33804Another way to record a @value{GDBN} session is to run @value{GDBN}
33805inside Emacs and then save the entire buffer to a file.
33806
8e04817f
AC
33807@item
33808If you wish to suggest changes to the @value{GDBN} source, send us context
33809diffs. If you even discuss something in the @value{GDBN} source, refer to
33810it by context, not by line number.
c4555f82 33811
8e04817f
AC
33812The line numbers in our development sources will not match those in your
33813sources. Your line numbers would convey no useful information to us.
c4555f82 33814
8e04817f 33815@end itemize
c4555f82 33816
8e04817f 33817Here are some things that are not necessary:
c4555f82 33818
8e04817f
AC
33819@itemize @bullet
33820@item
33821A description of the envelope of the bug.
c4555f82 33822
8e04817f
AC
33823Often people who encounter a bug spend a lot of time investigating
33824which changes to the input file will make the bug go away and which
33825changes will not affect it.
c4555f82 33826
8e04817f
AC
33827This is often time consuming and not very useful, because the way we
33828will find the bug is by running a single example under the debugger
33829with breakpoints, not by pure deduction from a series of examples.
33830We recommend that you save your time for something else.
c4555f82 33831
8e04817f
AC
33832Of course, if you can find a simpler example to report @emph{instead}
33833of the original one, that is a convenience for us. Errors in the
33834output will be easier to spot, running under the debugger will take
33835less time, and so on.
c4555f82 33836
8e04817f
AC
33837However, simplification is not vital; if you do not want to do this,
33838report the bug anyway and send us the entire test case you used.
c4555f82 33839
8e04817f
AC
33840@item
33841A patch for the bug.
c4555f82 33842
8e04817f
AC
33843A patch for the bug does help us if it is a good one. But do not omit
33844the necessary information, such as the test case, on the assumption that
33845a patch is all we need. We might see problems with your patch and decide
33846to fix the problem another way, or we might not understand it at all.
c4555f82 33847
8e04817f
AC
33848Sometimes with a program as complicated as @value{GDBN} it is very hard to
33849construct an example that will make the program follow a certain path
33850through the code. If you do not send us the example, we will not be able
33851to construct one, so we will not be able to verify that the bug is fixed.
c4555f82 33852
8e04817f
AC
33853And if we cannot understand what bug you are trying to fix, or why your
33854patch should be an improvement, we will not install it. A test case will
33855help us to understand.
c4555f82 33856
8e04817f
AC
33857@item
33858A guess about what the bug is or what it depends on.
c4555f82 33859
8e04817f
AC
33860Such guesses are usually wrong. Even we cannot guess right about such
33861things without first using the debugger to find the facts.
33862@end itemize
c4555f82 33863
8e04817f
AC
33864@c The readline documentation is distributed with the readline code
33865@c and consists of the two following files:
cc88a640
JK
33866@c rluser.texi
33867@c hsuser.texi
8e04817f
AC
33868@c Use -I with makeinfo to point to the appropriate directory,
33869@c environment var TEXINPUTS with TeX.
39037522 33870@ifclear SYSTEM_READLINE
5bdf8622 33871@include rluser.texi
cc88a640 33872@include hsuser.texi
39037522 33873@end ifclear
c4555f82 33874
4ceed123
JB
33875@node In Memoriam
33876@appendix In Memoriam
33877
9ed350ad
JB
33878The @value{GDBN} project mourns the loss of the following long-time
33879contributors:
4ceed123
JB
33880
33881@table @code
33882@item Fred Fish
9ed350ad
JB
33883Fred was a long-standing contributor to @value{GDBN} (1991-2006), and
33884to Free Software in general. Outside of @value{GDBN}, he was known in
33885the Amiga world for his series of Fish Disks, and the GeekGadget project.
4ceed123
JB
33886
33887@item Michael Snyder
9ed350ad
JB
33888Michael was one of the Global Maintainers of the @value{GDBN} project,
33889with contributions recorded as early as 1996, until 2011. In addition
33890to his day to day participation, he was a large driving force behind
33891adding Reverse Debugging to @value{GDBN}.
4ceed123
JB
33892@end table
33893
33894Beyond their technical contributions to the project, they were also
33895enjoyable members of the Free Software Community. We will miss them.
c4555f82 33896
8e04817f
AC
33897@node Formatting Documentation
33898@appendix Formatting Documentation
c4555f82 33899
8e04817f
AC
33900@cindex @value{GDBN} reference card
33901@cindex reference card
33902The @value{GDBN} 4 release includes an already-formatted reference card, ready
33903for printing with PostScript or Ghostscript, in the @file{gdb}
33904subdirectory of the main source directory@footnote{In
33905@file{gdb-@value{GDBVN}/gdb/refcard.ps} of the version @value{GDBVN}
33906release.}. If you can use PostScript or Ghostscript with your printer,
33907you can print the reference card immediately with @file{refcard.ps}.
c4555f82 33908
8e04817f
AC
33909The release also includes the source for the reference card. You
33910can format it, using @TeX{}, by typing:
c4555f82 33911
474c8240 33912@smallexample
8e04817f 33913make refcard.dvi
474c8240 33914@end smallexample
c4555f82 33915
8e04817f
AC
33916The @value{GDBN} reference card is designed to print in @dfn{landscape}
33917mode on US ``letter'' size paper;
33918that is, on a sheet 11 inches wide by 8.5 inches
33919high. You will need to specify this form of printing as an option to
33920your @sc{dvi} output program.
c4555f82 33921
8e04817f 33922@cindex documentation
c4555f82 33923
8e04817f
AC
33924All the documentation for @value{GDBN} comes as part of the machine-readable
33925distribution. The documentation is written in Texinfo format, which is
33926a documentation system that uses a single source file to produce both
33927on-line information and a printed manual. You can use one of the Info
33928formatting commands to create the on-line version of the documentation
33929and @TeX{} (or @code{texi2roff}) to typeset the printed version.
c4555f82 33930
8e04817f
AC
33931@value{GDBN} includes an already formatted copy of the on-line Info
33932version of this manual in the @file{gdb} subdirectory. The main Info
33933file is @file{gdb-@value{GDBVN}/gdb/gdb.info}, and it refers to
33934subordinate files matching @samp{gdb.info*} in the same directory. If
33935necessary, you can print out these files, or read them with any editor;
33936but they are easier to read using the @code{info} subsystem in @sc{gnu}
33937Emacs or the standalone @code{info} program, available as part of the
33938@sc{gnu} Texinfo distribution.
c4555f82 33939
8e04817f
AC
33940If you want to format these Info files yourself, you need one of the
33941Info formatting programs, such as @code{texinfo-format-buffer} or
33942@code{makeinfo}.
c4555f82 33943
8e04817f
AC
33944If you have @code{makeinfo} installed, and are in the top level
33945@value{GDBN} source directory (@file{gdb-@value{GDBVN}}, in the case of
33946version @value{GDBVN}), you can make the Info file by typing:
c4555f82 33947
474c8240 33948@smallexample
8e04817f
AC
33949cd gdb
33950make gdb.info
474c8240 33951@end smallexample
c4555f82 33952
8e04817f
AC
33953If you want to typeset and print copies of this manual, you need @TeX{},
33954a program to print its @sc{dvi} output files, and @file{texinfo.tex}, the
33955Texinfo definitions file.
c4555f82 33956
8e04817f
AC
33957@TeX{} is a typesetting program; it does not print files directly, but
33958produces output files called @sc{dvi} files. To print a typeset
33959document, you need a program to print @sc{dvi} files. If your system
33960has @TeX{} installed, chances are it has such a program. The precise
33961command to use depends on your system; @kbd{lpr -d} is common; another
33962(for PostScript devices) is @kbd{dvips}. The @sc{dvi} print command may
33963require a file name without any extension or a @samp{.dvi} extension.
c4555f82 33964
8e04817f
AC
33965@TeX{} also requires a macro definitions file called
33966@file{texinfo.tex}. This file tells @TeX{} how to typeset a document
33967written in Texinfo format. On its own, @TeX{} cannot either read or
33968typeset a Texinfo file. @file{texinfo.tex} is distributed with GDB
33969and is located in the @file{gdb-@var{version-number}/texinfo}
33970directory.
c4555f82 33971
8e04817f 33972If you have @TeX{} and a @sc{dvi} printer program installed, you can
d3e8051b 33973typeset and print this manual. First switch to the @file{gdb}
8e04817f
AC
33974subdirectory of the main source directory (for example, to
33975@file{gdb-@value{GDBVN}/gdb}) and type:
c4555f82 33976
474c8240 33977@smallexample
8e04817f 33978make gdb.dvi
474c8240 33979@end smallexample
c4555f82 33980
8e04817f 33981Then give @file{gdb.dvi} to your @sc{dvi} printing program.
c4555f82 33982
8e04817f
AC
33983@node Installing GDB
33984@appendix Installing @value{GDBN}
8e04817f 33985@cindex installation
c4555f82 33986
7fa2210b
DJ
33987@menu
33988* Requirements:: Requirements for building @value{GDBN}
db2e3e2e 33989* Running Configure:: Invoking the @value{GDBN} @file{configure} script
7fa2210b
DJ
33990* Separate Objdir:: Compiling @value{GDBN} in another directory
33991* Config Names:: Specifying names for hosts and targets
33992* Configure Options:: Summary of options for configure
098b41a6 33993* System-wide configuration:: Having a system-wide init file
7fa2210b
DJ
33994@end menu
33995
33996@node Requirements
79a6e687 33997@section Requirements for Building @value{GDBN}
7fa2210b
DJ
33998@cindex building @value{GDBN}, requirements for
33999
34000Building @value{GDBN} requires various tools and packages to be available.
34001Other packages will be used only if they are found.
34002
79a6e687 34003@heading Tools/Packages Necessary for Building @value{GDBN}
7fa2210b
DJ
34004@table @asis
34005@item ISO C90 compiler
34006@value{GDBN} is written in ISO C90. It should be buildable with any
34007working C90 compiler, e.g.@: GCC.
34008
34009@end table
34010
79a6e687 34011@heading Tools/Packages Optional for Building @value{GDBN}
7fa2210b
DJ
34012@table @asis
34013@item Expat
123dc839 34014@anchor{Expat}
7fa2210b
DJ
34015@value{GDBN} can use the Expat XML parsing library. This library may be
34016included with your operating system distribution; if it is not, you
34017can get the latest version from @url{http://expat.sourceforge.net}.
db2e3e2e 34018The @file{configure} script will search for this library in several
7fa2210b
DJ
34019standard locations; if it is installed in an unusual path, you can
34020use the @option{--with-libexpat-prefix} option to specify its location.
34021
9cceb671
DJ
34022Expat is used for:
34023
34024@itemize @bullet
34025@item
34026Remote protocol memory maps (@pxref{Memory Map Format})
34027@item
34028Target descriptions (@pxref{Target Descriptions})
34029@item
2268b414
JK
34030Remote shared library lists (@xref{Library List Format},
34031or alternatively @pxref{Library List Format for SVR4 Targets})
9cceb671
DJ
34032@item
34033MS-Windows shared libraries (@pxref{Shared Libraries})
b3b9301e
PA
34034@item
34035Traceframe info (@pxref{Traceframe Info Format})
9cceb671 34036@end itemize
7fa2210b 34037
31fffb02
CS
34038@item zlib
34039@cindex compressed debug sections
34040@value{GDBN} will use the @samp{zlib} library, if available, to read
34041compressed debug sections. Some linkers, such as GNU gold, are capable
34042of producing binaries with compressed debug sections. If @value{GDBN}
34043is compiled with @samp{zlib}, it will be able to read the debug
34044information in such binaries.
34045
34046The @samp{zlib} library is likely included with your operating system
34047distribution; if it is not, you can get the latest version from
34048@url{http://zlib.net}.
34049
6c7a06a3
TT
34050@item iconv
34051@value{GDBN}'s features related to character sets (@pxref{Character
34052Sets}) require a functioning @code{iconv} implementation. If you are
34053on a GNU system, then this is provided by the GNU C Library. Some
34054other systems also provide a working @code{iconv}.
34055
478aac75
DE
34056If @value{GDBN} is using the @code{iconv} program which is installed
34057in a non-standard place, you will need to tell @value{GDBN} where to find it.
34058This is done with @option{--with-iconv-bin} which specifies the
34059directory that contains the @code{iconv} program.
34060
34061On systems without @code{iconv}, you can install GNU Libiconv. If you
6c7a06a3
TT
34062have previously installed Libiconv, you can use the
34063@option{--with-libiconv-prefix} option to configure.
34064
34065@value{GDBN}'s top-level @file{configure} and @file{Makefile} will
34066arrange to build Libiconv if a directory named @file{libiconv} appears
34067in the top-most source directory. If Libiconv is built this way, and
34068if the operating system does not provide a suitable @code{iconv}
34069implementation, then the just-built library will automatically be used
34070by @value{GDBN}. One easy way to set this up is to download GNU
34071Libiconv, unpack it, and then rename the directory holding the
34072Libiconv source code to @samp{libiconv}.
7fa2210b
DJ
34073@end table
34074
34075@node Running Configure
db2e3e2e 34076@section Invoking the @value{GDBN} @file{configure} Script
7fa2210b 34077@cindex configuring @value{GDBN}
db2e3e2e 34078@value{GDBN} comes with a @file{configure} script that automates the process
8e04817f
AC
34079of preparing @value{GDBN} for installation; you can then use @code{make} to
34080build the @code{gdb} program.
34081@iftex
34082@c irrelevant in info file; it's as current as the code it lives with.
34083@footnote{If you have a more recent version of @value{GDBN} than @value{GDBVN},
34084look at the @file{README} file in the sources; we may have improved the
34085installation procedures since publishing this manual.}
34086@end iftex
c4555f82 34087
8e04817f
AC
34088The @value{GDBN} distribution includes all the source code you need for
34089@value{GDBN} in a single directory, whose name is usually composed by
34090appending the version number to @samp{gdb}.
c4555f82 34091
8e04817f
AC
34092For example, the @value{GDBN} version @value{GDBVN} distribution is in the
34093@file{gdb-@value{GDBVN}} directory. That directory contains:
c4555f82 34094
8e04817f
AC
34095@table @code
34096@item gdb-@value{GDBVN}/configure @r{(and supporting files)}
34097script for configuring @value{GDBN} and all its supporting libraries
c4555f82 34098
8e04817f
AC
34099@item gdb-@value{GDBVN}/gdb
34100the source specific to @value{GDBN} itself
c4555f82 34101
8e04817f
AC
34102@item gdb-@value{GDBVN}/bfd
34103source for the Binary File Descriptor library
c906108c 34104
8e04817f
AC
34105@item gdb-@value{GDBVN}/include
34106@sc{gnu} include files
c906108c 34107
8e04817f
AC
34108@item gdb-@value{GDBVN}/libiberty
34109source for the @samp{-liberty} free software library
c906108c 34110
8e04817f
AC
34111@item gdb-@value{GDBVN}/opcodes
34112source for the library of opcode tables and disassemblers
c906108c 34113
8e04817f
AC
34114@item gdb-@value{GDBVN}/readline
34115source for the @sc{gnu} command-line interface
c906108c 34116
8e04817f
AC
34117@item gdb-@value{GDBVN}/glob
34118source for the @sc{gnu} filename pattern-matching subroutine
c906108c 34119
8e04817f
AC
34120@item gdb-@value{GDBVN}/mmalloc
34121source for the @sc{gnu} memory-mapped malloc package
34122@end table
c906108c 34123
db2e3e2e 34124The simplest way to configure and build @value{GDBN} is to run @file{configure}
8e04817f
AC
34125from the @file{gdb-@var{version-number}} source directory, which in
34126this example is the @file{gdb-@value{GDBVN}} directory.
c906108c 34127
8e04817f 34128First switch to the @file{gdb-@var{version-number}} source directory
db2e3e2e 34129if you are not already in it; then run @file{configure}. Pass the
8e04817f
AC
34130identifier for the platform on which @value{GDBN} will run as an
34131argument.
c906108c 34132
8e04817f 34133For example:
c906108c 34134
474c8240 34135@smallexample
8e04817f
AC
34136cd gdb-@value{GDBVN}
34137./configure @var{host}
34138make
474c8240 34139@end smallexample
c906108c 34140
8e04817f
AC
34141@noindent
34142where @var{host} is an identifier such as @samp{sun4} or
34143@samp{decstation}, that identifies the platform where @value{GDBN} will run.
db2e3e2e 34144(You can often leave off @var{host}; @file{configure} tries to guess the
8e04817f 34145correct value by examining your system.)
c906108c 34146
8e04817f
AC
34147Running @samp{configure @var{host}} and then running @code{make} builds the
34148@file{bfd}, @file{readline}, @file{mmalloc}, and @file{libiberty}
34149libraries, then @code{gdb} itself. The configured source files, and the
34150binaries, are left in the corresponding source directories.
c906108c 34151
8e04817f 34152@need 750
db2e3e2e 34153@file{configure} is a Bourne-shell (@code{/bin/sh}) script; if your
8e04817f
AC
34154system does not recognize this automatically when you run a different
34155shell, you may need to run @code{sh} on it explicitly:
c906108c 34156
474c8240 34157@smallexample
8e04817f 34158sh configure @var{host}
474c8240 34159@end smallexample
c906108c 34160
db2e3e2e 34161If you run @file{configure} from a directory that contains source
8e04817f 34162directories for multiple libraries or programs, such as the
db2e3e2e
BW
34163@file{gdb-@value{GDBVN}} source directory for version @value{GDBVN},
34164@file{configure}
8e04817f
AC
34165creates configuration files for every directory level underneath (unless
34166you tell it not to, with the @samp{--norecursion} option).
34167
db2e3e2e 34168You should run the @file{configure} script from the top directory in the
94e91d6d 34169source tree, the @file{gdb-@var{version-number}} directory. If you run
db2e3e2e 34170@file{configure} from one of the subdirectories, you will configure only
94e91d6d 34171that subdirectory. That is usually not what you want. In particular,
db2e3e2e 34172if you run the first @file{configure} from the @file{gdb} subdirectory
94e91d6d
MC
34173of the @file{gdb-@var{version-number}} directory, you will omit the
34174configuration of @file{bfd}, @file{readline}, and other sibling
34175directories of the @file{gdb} subdirectory. This leads to build errors
34176about missing include files such as @file{bfd/bfd.h}.
c906108c 34177
8e04817f
AC
34178You can install @code{@value{GDBP}} anywhere; it has no hardwired paths.
34179However, you should make sure that the shell on your path (named by
34180the @samp{SHELL} environment variable) is publicly readable. Remember
34181that @value{GDBN} uses the shell to start your program---some systems refuse to
34182let @value{GDBN} debug child processes whose programs are not readable.
c906108c 34183
8e04817f 34184@node Separate Objdir
79a6e687 34185@section Compiling @value{GDBN} in Another Directory
c906108c 34186
8e04817f
AC
34187If you want to run @value{GDBN} versions for several host or target machines,
34188you need a different @code{gdb} compiled for each combination of
db2e3e2e 34189host and target. @file{configure} is designed to make this easy by
8e04817f
AC
34190allowing you to generate each configuration in a separate subdirectory,
34191rather than in the source directory. If your @code{make} program
34192handles the @samp{VPATH} feature (@sc{gnu} @code{make} does), running
34193@code{make} in each of these directories builds the @code{gdb}
34194program specified there.
c906108c 34195
db2e3e2e 34196To build @code{gdb} in a separate directory, run @file{configure}
8e04817f 34197with the @samp{--srcdir} option to specify where to find the source.
db2e3e2e
BW
34198(You also need to specify a path to find @file{configure}
34199itself from your working directory. If the path to @file{configure}
8e04817f
AC
34200would be the same as the argument to @samp{--srcdir}, you can leave out
34201the @samp{--srcdir} option; it is assumed.)
c906108c 34202
8e04817f
AC
34203For example, with version @value{GDBVN}, you can build @value{GDBN} in a
34204separate directory for a Sun 4 like this:
c906108c 34205
474c8240 34206@smallexample
8e04817f
AC
34207@group
34208cd gdb-@value{GDBVN}
34209mkdir ../gdb-sun4
34210cd ../gdb-sun4
34211../gdb-@value{GDBVN}/configure sun4
34212make
34213@end group
474c8240 34214@end smallexample
c906108c 34215
db2e3e2e 34216When @file{configure} builds a configuration using a remote source
8e04817f
AC
34217directory, it creates a tree for the binaries with the same structure
34218(and using the same names) as the tree under the source directory. In
34219the example, you'd find the Sun 4 library @file{libiberty.a} in the
34220directory @file{gdb-sun4/libiberty}, and @value{GDBN} itself in
34221@file{gdb-sun4/gdb}.
c906108c 34222
94e91d6d
MC
34223Make sure that your path to the @file{configure} script has just one
34224instance of @file{gdb} in it. If your path to @file{configure} looks
34225like @file{../gdb-@value{GDBVN}/gdb/configure}, you are configuring only
34226one subdirectory of @value{GDBN}, not the whole package. This leads to
34227build errors about missing include files such as @file{bfd/bfd.h}.
34228
8e04817f
AC
34229One popular reason to build several @value{GDBN} configurations in separate
34230directories is to configure @value{GDBN} for cross-compiling (where
34231@value{GDBN} runs on one machine---the @dfn{host}---while debugging
34232programs that run on another machine---the @dfn{target}).
34233You specify a cross-debugging target by
db2e3e2e 34234giving the @samp{--target=@var{target}} option to @file{configure}.
c906108c 34235
8e04817f
AC
34236When you run @code{make} to build a program or library, you must run
34237it in a configured directory---whatever directory you were in when you
db2e3e2e 34238called @file{configure} (or one of its subdirectories).
c906108c 34239
db2e3e2e 34240The @code{Makefile} that @file{configure} generates in each source
8e04817f
AC
34241directory also runs recursively. If you type @code{make} in a source
34242directory such as @file{gdb-@value{GDBVN}} (or in a separate configured
34243directory configured with @samp{--srcdir=@var{dirname}/gdb-@value{GDBVN}}), you
34244will build all the required libraries, and then build GDB.
c906108c 34245
8e04817f
AC
34246When you have multiple hosts or targets configured in separate
34247directories, you can run @code{make} on them in parallel (for example,
34248if they are NFS-mounted on each of the hosts); they will not interfere
34249with each other.
c906108c 34250
8e04817f 34251@node Config Names
79a6e687 34252@section Specifying Names for Hosts and Targets
c906108c 34253
db2e3e2e 34254The specifications used for hosts and targets in the @file{configure}
8e04817f
AC
34255script are based on a three-part naming scheme, but some short predefined
34256aliases are also supported. The full naming scheme encodes three pieces
34257of information in the following pattern:
c906108c 34258
474c8240 34259@smallexample
8e04817f 34260@var{architecture}-@var{vendor}-@var{os}
474c8240 34261@end smallexample
c906108c 34262
8e04817f
AC
34263For example, you can use the alias @code{sun4} as a @var{host} argument,
34264or as the value for @var{target} in a @code{--target=@var{target}}
34265option. The equivalent full name is @samp{sparc-sun-sunos4}.
c906108c 34266
db2e3e2e 34267The @file{configure} script accompanying @value{GDBN} does not provide
8e04817f 34268any query facility to list all supported host and target names or
db2e3e2e 34269aliases. @file{configure} calls the Bourne shell script
8e04817f
AC
34270@code{config.sub} to map abbreviations to full names; you can read the
34271script, if you wish, or you can use it to test your guesses on
34272abbreviations---for example:
c906108c 34273
8e04817f
AC
34274@smallexample
34275% sh config.sub i386-linux
34276i386-pc-linux-gnu
34277% sh config.sub alpha-linux
34278alpha-unknown-linux-gnu
34279% sh config.sub hp9k700
34280hppa1.1-hp-hpux
34281% sh config.sub sun4
34282sparc-sun-sunos4.1.1
34283% sh config.sub sun3
34284m68k-sun-sunos4.1.1
34285% sh config.sub i986v
34286Invalid configuration `i986v': machine `i986v' not recognized
34287@end smallexample
c906108c 34288
8e04817f
AC
34289@noindent
34290@code{config.sub} is also distributed in the @value{GDBN} source
34291directory (@file{gdb-@value{GDBVN}}, for version @value{GDBVN}).
d700128c 34292
8e04817f 34293@node Configure Options
db2e3e2e 34294@section @file{configure} Options
c906108c 34295
db2e3e2e
BW
34296Here is a summary of the @file{configure} options and arguments that
34297are most often useful for building @value{GDBN}. @file{configure} also has
8e04817f 34298several other options not listed here. @inforef{What Configure
db2e3e2e 34299Does,,configure.info}, for a full explanation of @file{configure}.
c906108c 34300
474c8240 34301@smallexample
8e04817f
AC
34302configure @r{[}--help@r{]}
34303 @r{[}--prefix=@var{dir}@r{]}
34304 @r{[}--exec-prefix=@var{dir}@r{]}
34305 @r{[}--srcdir=@var{dirname}@r{]}
34306 @r{[}--norecursion@r{]} @r{[}--rm@r{]}
34307 @r{[}--target=@var{target}@r{]}
34308 @var{host}
474c8240 34309@end smallexample
c906108c 34310
8e04817f
AC
34311@noindent
34312You may introduce options with a single @samp{-} rather than
34313@samp{--} if you prefer; but you may abbreviate option names if you use
34314@samp{--}.
c906108c 34315
8e04817f
AC
34316@table @code
34317@item --help
db2e3e2e 34318Display a quick summary of how to invoke @file{configure}.
c906108c 34319
8e04817f
AC
34320@item --prefix=@var{dir}
34321Configure the source to install programs and files under directory
34322@file{@var{dir}}.
c906108c 34323
8e04817f
AC
34324@item --exec-prefix=@var{dir}
34325Configure the source to install programs under directory
34326@file{@var{dir}}.
c906108c 34327
8e04817f
AC
34328@c avoid splitting the warning from the explanation:
34329@need 2000
34330@item --srcdir=@var{dirname}
34331@strong{Warning: using this option requires @sc{gnu} @code{make}, or another
34332@code{make} that implements the @code{VPATH} feature.}@*
34333Use this option to make configurations in directories separate from the
34334@value{GDBN} source directories. Among other things, you can use this to
34335build (or maintain) several configurations simultaneously, in separate
db2e3e2e 34336directories. @file{configure} writes configuration-specific files in
8e04817f 34337the current directory, but arranges for them to use the source in the
db2e3e2e 34338directory @var{dirname}. @file{configure} creates directories under
8e04817f
AC
34339the working directory in parallel to the source directories below
34340@var{dirname}.
c906108c 34341
8e04817f 34342@item --norecursion
db2e3e2e 34343Configure only the directory level where @file{configure} is executed; do not
8e04817f 34344propagate configuration to subdirectories.
c906108c 34345
8e04817f
AC
34346@item --target=@var{target}
34347Configure @value{GDBN} for cross-debugging programs running on the specified
34348@var{target}. Without this option, @value{GDBN} is configured to debug
34349programs that run on the same machine (@var{host}) as @value{GDBN} itself.
c906108c 34350
8e04817f 34351There is no convenient way to generate a list of all available targets.
c906108c 34352
8e04817f
AC
34353@item @var{host} @dots{}
34354Configure @value{GDBN} to run on the specified @var{host}.
c906108c 34355
8e04817f
AC
34356There is no convenient way to generate a list of all available hosts.
34357@end table
c906108c 34358
8e04817f
AC
34359There are many other options available as well, but they are generally
34360needed for special purposes only.
c906108c 34361
098b41a6
JG
34362@node System-wide configuration
34363@section System-wide configuration and settings
34364@cindex system-wide init file
34365
34366@value{GDBN} can be configured to have a system-wide init file;
34367this file will be read and executed at startup (@pxref{Startup, , What
34368@value{GDBN} does during startup}).
34369
34370Here is the corresponding configure option:
34371
34372@table @code
34373@item --with-system-gdbinit=@var{file}
34374Specify that the default location of the system-wide init file is
34375@var{file}.
34376@end table
34377
34378If @value{GDBN} has been configured with the option @option{--prefix=$prefix},
34379it may be subject to relocation. Two possible cases:
34380
34381@itemize @bullet
34382@item
34383If the default location of this init file contains @file{$prefix},
34384it will be subject to relocation. Suppose that the configure options
34385are @option{--prefix=$prefix --with-system-gdbinit=$prefix/etc/gdbinit};
34386if @value{GDBN} is moved from @file{$prefix} to @file{$install}, the system
34387init file is looked for as @file{$install/etc/gdbinit} instead of
34388@file{$prefix/etc/gdbinit}.
34389
34390@item
34391By contrast, if the default location does not contain the prefix,
34392it will not be relocated. E.g.@: if @value{GDBN} has been configured with
34393@option{--prefix=/usr/local --with-system-gdbinit=/usr/share/gdb/gdbinit},
34394then @value{GDBN} will always look for @file{/usr/share/gdb/gdbinit},
34395wherever @value{GDBN} is installed.
34396@end itemize
34397
8e04817f
AC
34398@node Maintenance Commands
34399@appendix Maintenance Commands
34400@cindex maintenance commands
34401@cindex internal commands
c906108c 34402
8e04817f 34403In addition to commands intended for @value{GDBN} users, @value{GDBN}
09d4efe1
EZ
34404includes a number of commands intended for @value{GDBN} developers,
34405that are not documented elsewhere in this manual. These commands are
da316a69
EZ
34406provided here for reference. (For commands that turn on debugging
34407messages, see @ref{Debugging Output}.)
c906108c 34408
8e04817f 34409@table @code
09d4efe1 34410@kindex maint agent
782b2b07 34411@kindex maint agent-eval
09d4efe1 34412@item maint agent @var{expression}
782b2b07 34413@itemx maint agent-eval @var{expression}
09d4efe1
EZ
34414Translate the given @var{expression} into remote agent bytecodes.
34415This command is useful for debugging the Agent Expression mechanism
782b2b07
SS
34416(@pxref{Agent Expressions}). The @samp{agent} version produces an
34417expression useful for data collection, such as by tracepoints, while
34418@samp{maint agent-eval} produces an expression that evaluates directly
34419to a result. For instance, a collection expression for @code{globa +
34420globb} will include bytecodes to record four bytes of memory at each
34421of the addresses of @code{globa} and @code{globb}, while discarding
34422the result of the addition, while an evaluation expression will do the
34423addition and return the sum.
09d4efe1 34424
8e04817f
AC
34425@kindex maint info breakpoints
34426@item @anchor{maint info breakpoints}maint info breakpoints
34427Using the same format as @samp{info breakpoints}, display both the
34428breakpoints you've set explicitly, and those @value{GDBN} is using for
34429internal purposes. Internal breakpoints are shown with negative
34430breakpoint numbers. The type column identifies what kind of breakpoint
34431is shown:
c906108c 34432
8e04817f
AC
34433@table @code
34434@item breakpoint
34435Normal, explicitly set breakpoint.
c906108c 34436
8e04817f
AC
34437@item watchpoint
34438Normal, explicitly set watchpoint.
c906108c 34439
8e04817f
AC
34440@item longjmp
34441Internal breakpoint, used to handle correctly stepping through
34442@code{longjmp} calls.
c906108c 34443
8e04817f
AC
34444@item longjmp resume
34445Internal breakpoint at the target of a @code{longjmp}.
c906108c 34446
8e04817f
AC
34447@item until
34448Temporary internal breakpoint used by the @value{GDBN} @code{until} command.
c906108c 34449
8e04817f
AC
34450@item finish
34451Temporary internal breakpoint used by the @value{GDBN} @code{finish} command.
c906108c 34452
8e04817f
AC
34453@item shlib events
34454Shared library events.
c906108c 34455
8e04817f 34456@end table
c906108c 34457
fff08868
HZ
34458@kindex set displaced-stepping
34459@kindex show displaced-stepping
237fc4c9
PA
34460@cindex displaced stepping support
34461@cindex out-of-line single-stepping
fff08868
HZ
34462@item set displaced-stepping
34463@itemx show displaced-stepping
237fc4c9 34464Control whether or not @value{GDBN} will do @dfn{displaced stepping}
fff08868
HZ
34465if the target supports it. Displaced stepping is a way to single-step
34466over breakpoints without removing them from the inferior, by executing
34467an out-of-line copy of the instruction that was originally at the
34468breakpoint location. It is also known as out-of-line single-stepping.
34469
34470@table @code
34471@item set displaced-stepping on
34472If the target architecture supports it, @value{GDBN} will use
34473displaced stepping to step over breakpoints.
34474
34475@item set displaced-stepping off
34476@value{GDBN} will not use displaced stepping to step over breakpoints,
34477even if such is supported by the target architecture.
34478
34479@cindex non-stop mode, and @samp{set displaced-stepping}
34480@item set displaced-stepping auto
34481This is the default mode. @value{GDBN} will use displaced stepping
34482only if non-stop mode is active (@pxref{Non-Stop Mode}) and the target
34483architecture supports displaced stepping.
34484@end table
237fc4c9 34485
09d4efe1
EZ
34486@kindex maint check-symtabs
34487@item maint check-symtabs
34488Check the consistency of psymtabs and symtabs.
34489
34490@kindex maint cplus first_component
34491@item maint cplus first_component @var{name}
34492Print the first C@t{++} class/namespace component of @var{name}.
34493
34494@kindex maint cplus namespace
34495@item maint cplus namespace
34496Print the list of possible C@t{++} namespaces.
34497
34498@kindex maint demangle
34499@item maint demangle @var{name}
d3e8051b 34500Demangle a C@t{++} or Objective-C mangled @var{name}.
09d4efe1
EZ
34501
34502@kindex maint deprecate
34503@kindex maint undeprecate
34504@cindex deprecated commands
34505@item maint deprecate @var{command} @r{[}@var{replacement}@r{]}
34506@itemx maint undeprecate @var{command}
34507Deprecate or undeprecate the named @var{command}. Deprecated commands
34508cause @value{GDBN} to issue a warning when you use them. The optional
34509argument @var{replacement} says which newer command should be used in
34510favor of the deprecated one; if it is given, @value{GDBN} will mention
34511the replacement as part of the warning.
34512
34513@kindex maint dump-me
34514@item maint dump-me
721c2651 34515@cindex @code{SIGQUIT} signal, dump core of @value{GDBN}
09d4efe1 34516Cause a fatal signal in the debugger and force it to dump its core.
721c2651
EZ
34517This is supported only on systems which support aborting a program
34518with the @code{SIGQUIT} signal.
09d4efe1 34519
8d30a00d
AC
34520@kindex maint internal-error
34521@kindex maint internal-warning
09d4efe1
EZ
34522@item maint internal-error @r{[}@var{message-text}@r{]}
34523@itemx maint internal-warning @r{[}@var{message-text}@r{]}
8d30a00d
AC
34524Cause @value{GDBN} to call the internal function @code{internal_error}
34525or @code{internal_warning} and hence behave as though an internal error
34526or internal warning has been detected. In addition to reporting the
34527internal problem, these functions give the user the opportunity to
34528either quit @value{GDBN} or create a core file of the current
34529@value{GDBN} session.
34530
09d4efe1
EZ
34531These commands take an optional parameter @var{message-text} that is
34532used as the text of the error or warning message.
34533
d3e8051b 34534Here's an example of using @code{internal-error}:
09d4efe1 34535
8d30a00d 34536@smallexample
f7dc1244 34537(@value{GDBP}) @kbd{maint internal-error testing, 1, 2}
8d30a00d
AC
34538@dots{}/maint.c:121: internal-error: testing, 1, 2
34539A problem internal to GDB has been detected. Further
34540debugging may prove unreliable.
34541Quit this debugging session? (y or n) @kbd{n}
34542Create a core file? (y or n) @kbd{n}
f7dc1244 34543(@value{GDBP})
8d30a00d
AC
34544@end smallexample
34545
3c16cced
PA
34546@cindex @value{GDBN} internal error
34547@cindex internal errors, control of @value{GDBN} behavior
34548
34549@kindex maint set internal-error
34550@kindex maint show internal-error
34551@kindex maint set internal-warning
34552@kindex maint show internal-warning
34553@item maint set internal-error @var{action} [ask|yes|no]
34554@itemx maint show internal-error @var{action}
34555@itemx maint set internal-warning @var{action} [ask|yes|no]
34556@itemx maint show internal-warning @var{action}
34557When @value{GDBN} reports an internal problem (error or warning) it
34558gives the user the opportunity to both quit @value{GDBN} and create a
34559core file of the current @value{GDBN} session. These commands let you
34560override the default behaviour for each particular @var{action},
34561described in the table below.
34562
34563@table @samp
34564@item quit
34565You can specify that @value{GDBN} should always (yes) or never (no)
34566quit. The default is to ask the user what to do.
34567
34568@item corefile
34569You can specify that @value{GDBN} should always (yes) or never (no)
34570create a core file. The default is to ask the user what to do.
34571@end table
34572
09d4efe1
EZ
34573@kindex maint packet
34574@item maint packet @var{text}
34575If @value{GDBN} is talking to an inferior via the serial protocol,
34576then this command sends the string @var{text} to the inferior, and
34577displays the response packet. @value{GDBN} supplies the initial
34578@samp{$} character, the terminating @samp{#} character, and the
34579checksum.
34580
34581@kindex maint print architecture
34582@item maint print architecture @r{[}@var{file}@r{]}
34583Print the entire architecture configuration. The optional argument
34584@var{file} names the file where the output goes.
8d30a00d 34585
81adfced
DJ
34586@kindex maint print c-tdesc
34587@item maint print c-tdesc
34588Print the current target description (@pxref{Target Descriptions}) as
34589a C source file. The created source file can be used in @value{GDBN}
34590when an XML parser is not available to parse the description.
34591
00905d52
AC
34592@kindex maint print dummy-frames
34593@item maint print dummy-frames
00905d52
AC
34594Prints the contents of @value{GDBN}'s internal dummy-frame stack.
34595
34596@smallexample
f7dc1244 34597(@value{GDBP}) @kbd{b add}
00905d52 34598@dots{}
f7dc1244 34599(@value{GDBP}) @kbd{print add(2,3)}
00905d52
AC
34600Breakpoint 2, add (a=2, b=3) at @dots{}
3460158 return (a + b);
34602The program being debugged stopped while in a function called from GDB.
34603@dots{}
f7dc1244 34604(@value{GDBP}) @kbd{maint print dummy-frames}
00905d52
AC
346050x1a57c80: pc=0x01014068 fp=0x0200bddc sp=0x0200bdd6
34606 top=0x0200bdd4 id=@{stack=0x200bddc,code=0x101405c@}
34607 call_lo=0x01014000 call_hi=0x01014001
f7dc1244 34608(@value{GDBP})
00905d52
AC
34609@end smallexample
34610
34611Takes an optional file parameter.
34612
0680b120
AC
34613@kindex maint print registers
34614@kindex maint print raw-registers
34615@kindex maint print cooked-registers
617073a9 34616@kindex maint print register-groups
c21236dc 34617@kindex maint print remote-registers
09d4efe1
EZ
34618@item maint print registers @r{[}@var{file}@r{]}
34619@itemx maint print raw-registers @r{[}@var{file}@r{]}
34620@itemx maint print cooked-registers @r{[}@var{file}@r{]}
34621@itemx maint print register-groups @r{[}@var{file}@r{]}
c21236dc 34622@itemx maint print remote-registers @r{[}@var{file}@r{]}
0680b120
AC
34623Print @value{GDBN}'s internal register data structures.
34624
617073a9 34625The command @code{maint print raw-registers} includes the contents of
c21236dc
PA
34626the raw register cache; the command @code{maint print
34627cooked-registers} includes the (cooked) value of all registers,
34628including registers which aren't available on the target nor visible
34629to user; the command @code{maint print register-groups} includes the
34630groups that each register is a member of; and the command @code{maint
34631print remote-registers} includes the remote target's register numbers
34632and offsets in the `G' packets. @xref{Registers,, Registers, gdbint,
617073a9 34633@value{GDBN} Internals}.
0680b120 34634
09d4efe1
EZ
34635These commands take an optional parameter, a file name to which to
34636write the information.
0680b120 34637
617073a9 34638@kindex maint print reggroups
09d4efe1
EZ
34639@item maint print reggroups @r{[}@var{file}@r{]}
34640Print @value{GDBN}'s internal register group data structures. The
34641optional argument @var{file} tells to what file to write the
34642information.
617073a9 34643
09d4efe1 34644The register groups info looks like this:
617073a9
AC
34645
34646@smallexample
f7dc1244 34647(@value{GDBP}) @kbd{maint print reggroups}
b383017d
RM
34648 Group Type
34649 general user
34650 float user
34651 all user
34652 vector user
34653 system user
34654 save internal
34655 restore internal
617073a9
AC
34656@end smallexample
34657
09d4efe1
EZ
34658@kindex flushregs
34659@item flushregs
34660This command forces @value{GDBN} to flush its internal register cache.
34661
34662@kindex maint print objfiles
34663@cindex info for known object files
34664@item maint print objfiles
34665Print a dump of all known object files. For each object file, this
34666command prints its name, address in memory, and all of its psymtabs
34667and symtabs.
34668
8a1ea21f
DE
34669@kindex maint print section-scripts
34670@cindex info for known .debug_gdb_scripts-loaded scripts
34671@item maint print section-scripts [@var{regexp}]
34672Print a dump of scripts specified in the @code{.debug_gdb_section} section.
34673If @var{regexp} is specified, only print scripts loaded by object files
34674matching @var{regexp}.
34675For each script, this command prints its name as specified in the objfile,
34676and the full path if known.
8e0583c8 34677@xref{dotdebug_gdb_scripts section}.
8a1ea21f 34678
09d4efe1
EZ
34679@kindex maint print statistics
34680@cindex bcache statistics
34681@item maint print statistics
34682This command prints, for each object file in the program, various data
34683about that object file followed by the byte cache (@dfn{bcache})
34684statistics for the object file. The objfile data includes the number
d3e8051b 34685of minimal, partial, full, and stabs symbols, the number of types
09d4efe1
EZ
34686defined by the objfile, the number of as yet unexpanded psym tables,
34687the number of line tables and string tables, and the amount of memory
34688used by the various tables. The bcache statistics include the counts,
34689sizes, and counts of duplicates of all and unique objects, max,
34690average, and median entry size, total memory used and its overhead and
34691savings, and various measures of the hash table size and chain
34692lengths.
34693
c7ba131e
JB
34694@kindex maint print target-stack
34695@cindex target stack description
34696@item maint print target-stack
34697A @dfn{target} is an interface between the debugger and a particular
34698kind of file or process. Targets can be stacked in @dfn{strata},
34699so that more than one target can potentially respond to a request.
34700In particular, memory accesses will walk down the stack of targets
34701until they find a target that is interested in handling that particular
34702address.
34703
34704This command prints a short description of each layer that was pushed on
34705the @dfn{target stack}, starting from the top layer down to the bottom one.
34706
09d4efe1
EZ
34707@kindex maint print type
34708@cindex type chain of a data type
34709@item maint print type @var{expr}
34710Print the type chain for a type specified by @var{expr}. The argument
34711can be either a type name or a symbol. If it is a symbol, the type of
34712that symbol is described. The type chain produced by this command is
34713a recursive definition of the data type as stored in @value{GDBN}'s
34714data structures, including its flags and contained types.
34715
9eae7c52
TT
34716@kindex maint set dwarf2 always-disassemble
34717@kindex maint show dwarf2 always-disassemble
34718@item maint set dwarf2 always-disassemble
34719@item maint show dwarf2 always-disassemble
34720Control the behavior of @code{info address} when using DWARF debugging
34721information.
34722
34723The default is @code{off}, which means that @value{GDBN} should try to
34724describe a variable's location in an easily readable format. When
34725@code{on}, @value{GDBN} will instead display the DWARF location
34726expression in an assembly-like format. Note that some locations are
34727too complex for @value{GDBN} to describe simply; in this case you will
34728always see the disassembly form.
34729
34730Here is an example of the resulting disassembly:
34731
34732@smallexample
34733(gdb) info addr argc
34734Symbol "argc" is a complex DWARF expression:
34735 1: DW_OP_fbreg 0
34736@end smallexample
34737
34738For more information on these expressions, see
34739@uref{http://www.dwarfstd.org/, the DWARF standard}.
34740
09d4efe1
EZ
34741@kindex maint set dwarf2 max-cache-age
34742@kindex maint show dwarf2 max-cache-age
34743@item maint set dwarf2 max-cache-age
34744@itemx maint show dwarf2 max-cache-age
34745Control the DWARF 2 compilation unit cache.
34746
34747@cindex DWARF 2 compilation units cache
34748In object files with inter-compilation-unit references, such as those
34749produced by the GCC option @samp{-feliminate-dwarf2-dups}, the DWARF 2
34750reader needs to frequently refer to previously read compilation units.
34751This setting controls how long a compilation unit will remain in the
34752cache if it is not referenced. A higher limit means that cached
34753compilation units will be stored in memory longer, and more total
34754memory will be used. Setting it to zero disables caching, which will
34755slow down @value{GDBN} startup, but reduce memory consumption.
34756
e7ba9c65
DJ
34757@kindex maint set profile
34758@kindex maint show profile
34759@cindex profiling GDB
34760@item maint set profile
34761@itemx maint show profile
34762Control profiling of @value{GDBN}.
34763
34764Profiling will be disabled until you use the @samp{maint set profile}
34765command to enable it. When you enable profiling, the system will begin
34766collecting timing and execution count data; when you disable profiling or
34767exit @value{GDBN}, the results will be written to a log file. Remember that
34768if you use profiling, @value{GDBN} will overwrite the profiling log file
34769(often called @file{gmon.out}). If you have a record of important profiling
34770data in a @file{gmon.out} file, be sure to move it to a safe location.
34771
34772Configuring with @samp{--enable-profiling} arranges for @value{GDBN} to be
b383017d 34773compiled with the @samp{-pg} compiler option.
e7ba9c65 34774
cbe54154
PA
34775@kindex maint set show-debug-regs
34776@kindex maint show show-debug-regs
eac35c4e 34777@cindex hardware debug registers
cbe54154
PA
34778@item maint set show-debug-regs
34779@itemx maint show show-debug-regs
eac35c4e 34780Control whether to show variables that mirror the hardware debug
09d4efe1 34781registers. Use @code{ON} to enable, @code{OFF} to disable. If
3f94c067 34782enabled, the debug registers values are shown when @value{GDBN} inserts or
09d4efe1
EZ
34783removes a hardware breakpoint or watchpoint, and when the inferior
34784triggers a hardware-assisted breakpoint or watchpoint.
34785
711e434b
PM
34786@kindex maint set show-all-tib
34787@kindex maint show show-all-tib
34788@item maint set show-all-tib
34789@itemx maint show show-all-tib
34790Control whether to show all non zero areas within a 1k block starting
34791at thread local base, when using the @samp{info w32 thread-information-block}
34792command.
34793
09d4efe1
EZ
34794@kindex maint space
34795@cindex memory used by commands
34796@item maint space
34797Control whether to display memory usage for each command. If set to a
34798nonzero value, @value{GDBN} will display how much memory each command
34799took, following the command's own output. This can also be requested
34800by invoking @value{GDBN} with the @option{--statistics} command-line
34801switch (@pxref{Mode Options}).
34802
34803@kindex maint time
34804@cindex time of command execution
34805@item maint time
0a1c4d10
DE
34806Control whether to display the execution time of @value{GDBN} for each command.
34807If set to a nonzero value, @value{GDBN} will display how much time it
09d4efe1 34808took to execute each command, following the command's own output.
0a1c4d10
DE
34809Both CPU time and wallclock time are printed.
34810Printing both is useful when trying to determine whether the cost is
34811CPU or, e.g., disk/network, latency.
34812Note that the CPU time printed is for @value{GDBN} only, it does not include
34813the execution time of the inferior because there's no mechanism currently
34814to compute how much time was spent by @value{GDBN} and how much time was
34815spent by the program been debugged.
09d4efe1
EZ
34816This can also be requested by invoking @value{GDBN} with the
34817@option{--statistics} command-line switch (@pxref{Mode Options}).
34818
34819@kindex maint translate-address
34820@item maint translate-address @r{[}@var{section}@r{]} @var{addr}
34821Find the symbol stored at the location specified by the address
34822@var{addr} and an optional section name @var{section}. If found,
34823@value{GDBN} prints the name of the closest symbol and an offset from
34824the symbol's location to the specified address. This is similar to
34825the @code{info address} command (@pxref{Symbols}), except that this
34826command also allows to find symbols in other sections.
ae038cb0 34827
c14c28ba
PP
34828If section was not specified, the section in which the symbol was found
34829is also printed. For dynamically linked executables, the name of
34830executable or shared library containing the symbol is printed as well.
34831
8e04817f 34832@end table
c906108c 34833
9c16f35a
EZ
34834The following command is useful for non-interactive invocations of
34835@value{GDBN}, such as in the test suite.
34836
34837@table @code
34838@item set watchdog @var{nsec}
34839@kindex set watchdog
34840@cindex watchdog timer
34841@cindex timeout for commands
34842Set the maximum number of seconds @value{GDBN} will wait for the
34843target operation to finish. If this time expires, @value{GDBN}
34844reports and error and the command is aborted.
34845
34846@item show watchdog
34847Show the current setting of the target wait timeout.
34848@end table
c906108c 34849
e0ce93ac 34850@node Remote Protocol
8e04817f 34851@appendix @value{GDBN} Remote Serial Protocol
c906108c 34852
ee2d5c50
AC
34853@menu
34854* Overview::
34855* Packets::
34856* Stop Reply Packets::
34857* General Query Packets::
a1dcb23a 34858* Architecture-Specific Protocol Details::
9d29849a 34859* Tracepoint Packets::
a6b151f1 34860* Host I/O Packets::
9a6253be 34861* Interrupts::
8b23ecc4
SL
34862* Notification Packets::
34863* Remote Non-Stop::
a6f3e723 34864* Packet Acknowledgment::
ee2d5c50 34865* Examples::
79a6e687 34866* File-I/O Remote Protocol Extension::
cfa9d6d9 34867* Library List Format::
2268b414 34868* Library List Format for SVR4 Targets::
79a6e687 34869* Memory Map Format::
dc146f7c 34870* Thread List Format::
b3b9301e 34871* Traceframe Info Format::
ee2d5c50
AC
34872@end menu
34873
34874@node Overview
34875@section Overview
34876
8e04817f
AC
34877There may be occasions when you need to know something about the
34878protocol---for example, if there is only one serial port to your target
34879machine, you might want your program to do something special if it
34880recognizes a packet meant for @value{GDBN}.
c906108c 34881
d2c6833e 34882In the examples below, @samp{->} and @samp{<-} are used to indicate
bf06d120 34883transmitted and received data, respectively.
c906108c 34884
8e04817f
AC
34885@cindex protocol, @value{GDBN} remote serial
34886@cindex serial protocol, @value{GDBN} remote
34887@cindex remote serial protocol
8b23ecc4
SL
34888All @value{GDBN} commands and responses (other than acknowledgments
34889and notifications, see @ref{Notification Packets}) are sent as a
34890@var{packet}. A @var{packet} is introduced with the character
8e04817f
AC
34891@samp{$}, the actual @var{packet-data}, and the terminating character
34892@samp{#} followed by a two-digit @var{checksum}:
c906108c 34893
474c8240 34894@smallexample
8e04817f 34895@code{$}@var{packet-data}@code{#}@var{checksum}
474c8240 34896@end smallexample
8e04817f 34897@noindent
c906108c 34898
8e04817f
AC
34899@cindex checksum, for @value{GDBN} remote
34900@noindent
34901The two-digit @var{checksum} is computed as the modulo 256 sum of all
34902characters between the leading @samp{$} and the trailing @samp{#} (an
34903eight bit unsigned checksum).
c906108c 34904
8e04817f
AC
34905Implementors should note that prior to @value{GDBN} 5.0 the protocol
34906specification also included an optional two-digit @var{sequence-id}:
c906108c 34907
474c8240 34908@smallexample
8e04817f 34909@code{$}@var{sequence-id}@code{:}@var{packet-data}@code{#}@var{checksum}
474c8240 34910@end smallexample
c906108c 34911
8e04817f
AC
34912@cindex sequence-id, for @value{GDBN} remote
34913@noindent
34914That @var{sequence-id} was appended to the acknowledgment. @value{GDBN}
34915has never output @var{sequence-id}s. Stubs that handle packets added
34916since @value{GDBN} 5.0 must not accept @var{sequence-id}.
c906108c 34917
8e04817f
AC
34918When either the host or the target machine receives a packet, the first
34919response expected is an acknowledgment: either @samp{+} (to indicate
34920the package was received correctly) or @samp{-} (to request
34921retransmission):
c906108c 34922
474c8240 34923@smallexample
d2c6833e
AC
34924-> @code{$}@var{packet-data}@code{#}@var{checksum}
34925<- @code{+}
474c8240 34926@end smallexample
8e04817f 34927@noindent
53a5351d 34928
a6f3e723
SL
34929The @samp{+}/@samp{-} acknowledgments can be disabled
34930once a connection is established.
34931@xref{Packet Acknowledgment}, for details.
34932
8e04817f
AC
34933The host (@value{GDBN}) sends @var{command}s, and the target (the
34934debugging stub incorporated in your program) sends a @var{response}. In
34935the case of step and continue @var{command}s, the response is only sent
8b23ecc4
SL
34936when the operation has completed, and the target has again stopped all
34937threads in all attached processes. This is the default all-stop mode
34938behavior, but the remote protocol also supports @value{GDBN}'s non-stop
34939execution mode; see @ref{Remote Non-Stop}, for details.
c906108c 34940
8e04817f
AC
34941@var{packet-data} consists of a sequence of characters with the
34942exception of @samp{#} and @samp{$} (see @samp{X} packet for additional
34943exceptions).
c906108c 34944
ee2d5c50 34945@cindex remote protocol, field separator
0876f84a 34946Fields within the packet should be separated using @samp{,} @samp{;} or
8e04817f 34947@samp{:}. Except where otherwise noted all numbers are represented in
ee2d5c50 34948@sc{hex} with leading zeros suppressed.
c906108c 34949
8e04817f
AC
34950Implementors should note that prior to @value{GDBN} 5.0, the character
34951@samp{:} could not appear as the third character in a packet (as it
34952would potentially conflict with the @var{sequence-id}).
c906108c 34953
0876f84a
DJ
34954@cindex remote protocol, binary data
34955@anchor{Binary Data}
34956Binary data in most packets is encoded either as two hexadecimal
34957digits per byte of binary data. This allowed the traditional remote
34958protocol to work over connections which were only seven-bit clean.
34959Some packets designed more recently assume an eight-bit clean
34960connection, and use a more efficient encoding to send and receive
34961binary data.
34962
34963The binary data representation uses @code{7d} (@sc{ascii} @samp{@}})
34964as an escape character. Any escaped byte is transmitted as the escape
34965character followed by the original character XORed with @code{0x20}.
34966For example, the byte @code{0x7d} would be transmitted as the two
34967bytes @code{0x7d 0x5d}. The bytes @code{0x23} (@sc{ascii} @samp{#}),
34968@code{0x24} (@sc{ascii} @samp{$}), and @code{0x7d} (@sc{ascii}
34969@samp{@}}) must always be escaped. Responses sent by the stub
34970must also escape @code{0x2a} (@sc{ascii} @samp{*}), so that it
34971is not interpreted as the start of a run-length encoded sequence
34972(described next).
34973
1d3811f6
DJ
34974Response @var{data} can be run-length encoded to save space.
34975Run-length encoding replaces runs of identical characters with one
34976instance of the repeated character, followed by a @samp{*} and a
34977repeat count. The repeat count is itself sent encoded, to avoid
34978binary characters in @var{data}: a value of @var{n} is sent as
34979@code{@var{n}+29}. For a repeat count greater or equal to 3, this
34980produces a printable @sc{ascii} character, e.g.@: a space (@sc{ascii}
34981code 32) for a repeat count of 3. (This is because run-length
34982encoding starts to win for counts 3 or more.) Thus, for example,
34983@samp{0* } is a run-length encoding of ``0000'': the space character
34984after @samp{*} means repeat the leading @code{0} @w{@code{32 - 29 =
349853}} more times.
34986
34987The printable characters @samp{#} and @samp{$} or with a numeric value
34988greater than 126 must not be used. Runs of six repeats (@samp{#}) or
34989seven repeats (@samp{$}) can be expanded using a repeat count of only
34990five (@samp{"}). For example, @samp{00000000} can be encoded as
34991@samp{0*"00}.
c906108c 34992
8e04817f
AC
34993The error response returned for some packets includes a two character
34994error number. That number is not well defined.
c906108c 34995
f8da2bff 34996@cindex empty response, for unsupported packets
8e04817f
AC
34997For any @var{command} not supported by the stub, an empty response
34998(@samp{$#00}) should be returned. That way it is possible to extend the
34999protocol. A newer @value{GDBN} can tell if a packet is supported based
35000on that response.
c906108c 35001
393eab54
PA
35002At a minimum, a stub is required to support the @samp{g} and @samp{G}
35003commands for register access, and the @samp{m} and @samp{M} commands
35004for memory access. Stubs that only control single-threaded targets
35005can implement run control with the @samp{c} (continue), and @samp{s}
35006(step) commands. Stubs that support multi-threading targets should
35007support the @samp{vCont} command. All other commands are optional.
c906108c 35008
ee2d5c50
AC
35009@node Packets
35010@section Packets
35011
35012The following table provides a complete list of all currently defined
35013@var{command}s and their corresponding response @var{data}.
79a6e687 35014@xref{File-I/O Remote Protocol Extension}, for details about the File
9c16f35a 35015I/O extension of the remote protocol.
ee2d5c50 35016
b8ff78ce
JB
35017Each packet's description has a template showing the packet's overall
35018syntax, followed by an explanation of the packet's meaning. We
35019include spaces in some of the templates for clarity; these are not
35020part of the packet's syntax. No @value{GDBN} packet uses spaces to
35021separate its components. For example, a template like @samp{foo
35022@var{bar} @var{baz}} describes a packet beginning with the three ASCII
35023bytes @samp{foo}, followed by a @var{bar}, followed directly by a
3f94c067 35024@var{baz}. @value{GDBN} does not transmit a space character between the
b8ff78ce
JB
35025@samp{foo} and the @var{bar}, or between the @var{bar} and the
35026@var{baz}.
35027
b90a069a
SL
35028@cindex @var{thread-id}, in remote protocol
35029@anchor{thread-id syntax}
35030Several packets and replies include a @var{thread-id} field to identify
35031a thread. Normally these are positive numbers with a target-specific
35032interpretation, formatted as big-endian hex strings. A @var{thread-id}
35033can also be a literal @samp{-1} to indicate all threads, or @samp{0} to
35034pick any thread.
35035
35036In addition, the remote protocol supports a multiprocess feature in
35037which the @var{thread-id} syntax is extended to optionally include both
35038process and thread ID fields, as @samp{p@var{pid}.@var{tid}}.
35039The @var{pid} (process) and @var{tid} (thread) components each have the
35040format described above: a positive number with target-specific
35041interpretation formatted as a big-endian hex string, literal @samp{-1}
35042to indicate all processes or threads (respectively), or @samp{0} to
35043indicate an arbitrary process or thread. Specifying just a process, as
35044@samp{p@var{pid}}, is equivalent to @samp{p@var{pid}.-1}. It is an
35045error to specify all processes but a specific thread, such as
35046@samp{p-1.@var{tid}}. Note that the @samp{p} prefix is @emph{not} used
35047for those packets and replies explicitly documented to include a process
35048ID, rather than a @var{thread-id}.
35049
35050The multiprocess @var{thread-id} syntax extensions are only used if both
35051@value{GDBN} and the stub report support for the @samp{multiprocess}
35052feature using @samp{qSupported}. @xref{multiprocess extensions}, for
35053more information.
35054
8ffe2530
JB
35055Note that all packet forms beginning with an upper- or lower-case
35056letter, other than those described here, are reserved for future use.
35057
b8ff78ce 35058Here are the packet descriptions.
ee2d5c50 35059
b8ff78ce 35060@table @samp
ee2d5c50 35061
b8ff78ce
JB
35062@item !
35063@cindex @samp{!} packet
2d717e4f 35064@anchor{extended mode}
8e04817f
AC
35065Enable extended mode. In extended mode, the remote server is made
35066persistent. The @samp{R} packet is used to restart the program being
35067debugged.
ee2d5c50
AC
35068
35069Reply:
35070@table @samp
35071@item OK
8e04817f 35072The remote target both supports and has enabled extended mode.
ee2d5c50 35073@end table
c906108c 35074
b8ff78ce
JB
35075@item ?
35076@cindex @samp{?} packet
ee2d5c50 35077Indicate the reason the target halted. The reply is the same as for
8b23ecc4
SL
35078step and continue. This packet has a special interpretation when the
35079target is in non-stop mode; see @ref{Remote Non-Stop}.
c906108c 35080
ee2d5c50
AC
35081Reply:
35082@xref{Stop Reply Packets}, for the reply specifications.
35083
b8ff78ce
JB
35084@item A @var{arglen},@var{argnum},@var{arg},@dots{}
35085@cindex @samp{A} packet
35086Initialized @code{argv[]} array passed into program. @var{arglen}
35087specifies the number of bytes in the hex encoded byte stream
35088@var{arg}. See @code{gdbserver} for more details.
ee2d5c50
AC
35089
35090Reply:
35091@table @samp
35092@item OK
b8ff78ce
JB
35093The arguments were set.
35094@item E @var{NN}
35095An error occurred.
ee2d5c50
AC
35096@end table
35097
b8ff78ce
JB
35098@item b @var{baud}
35099@cindex @samp{b} packet
35100(Don't use this packet; its behavior is not well-defined.)
ee2d5c50
AC
35101Change the serial line speed to @var{baud}.
35102
35103JTC: @emph{When does the transport layer state change? When it's
35104received, or after the ACK is transmitted. In either case, there are
35105problems if the command or the acknowledgment packet is dropped.}
35106
35107Stan: @emph{If people really wanted to add something like this, and get
35108it working for the first time, they ought to modify ser-unix.c to send
35109some kind of out-of-band message to a specially-setup stub and have the
35110switch happen "in between" packets, so that from remote protocol's point
35111of view, nothing actually happened.}
35112
b8ff78ce
JB
35113@item B @var{addr},@var{mode}
35114@cindex @samp{B} packet
8e04817f 35115Set (@var{mode} is @samp{S}) or clear (@var{mode} is @samp{C}) a
2f870471
AC
35116breakpoint at @var{addr}.
35117
b8ff78ce 35118Don't use this packet. Use the @samp{Z} and @samp{z} packets instead
2f870471 35119(@pxref{insert breakpoint or watchpoint packet}).
c906108c 35120
bacec72f 35121@cindex @samp{bc} packet
0d772ac9
MS
35122@anchor{bc}
35123@item bc
bacec72f
MS
35124Backward continue. Execute the target system in reverse. No parameter.
35125@xref{Reverse Execution}, for more information.
35126
35127Reply:
35128@xref{Stop Reply Packets}, for the reply specifications.
35129
bacec72f 35130@cindex @samp{bs} packet
0d772ac9
MS
35131@anchor{bs}
35132@item bs
bacec72f
MS
35133Backward single step. Execute one instruction in reverse. No parameter.
35134@xref{Reverse Execution}, for more information.
35135
35136Reply:
35137@xref{Stop Reply Packets}, for the reply specifications.
35138
4f553f88 35139@item c @r{[}@var{addr}@r{]}
b8ff78ce
JB
35140@cindex @samp{c} packet
35141Continue. @var{addr} is address to resume. If @var{addr} is omitted,
35142resume at current address.
c906108c 35143
393eab54
PA
35144This packet is deprecated for multi-threading support. @xref{vCont
35145packet}.
35146
ee2d5c50
AC
35147Reply:
35148@xref{Stop Reply Packets}, for the reply specifications.
35149
4f553f88 35150@item C @var{sig}@r{[};@var{addr}@r{]}
b8ff78ce 35151@cindex @samp{C} packet
8e04817f 35152Continue with signal @var{sig} (hex signal number). If
b8ff78ce 35153@samp{;@var{addr}} is omitted, resume at same address.
c906108c 35154
393eab54
PA
35155This packet is deprecated for multi-threading support. @xref{vCont
35156packet}.
35157
ee2d5c50
AC
35158Reply:
35159@xref{Stop Reply Packets}, for the reply specifications.
c906108c 35160
b8ff78ce
JB
35161@item d
35162@cindex @samp{d} packet
ee2d5c50
AC
35163Toggle debug flag.
35164
b8ff78ce
JB
35165Don't use this packet; instead, define a general set packet
35166(@pxref{General Query Packets}).
ee2d5c50 35167
b8ff78ce 35168@item D
b90a069a 35169@itemx D;@var{pid}
b8ff78ce 35170@cindex @samp{D} packet
b90a069a
SL
35171The first form of the packet is used to detach @value{GDBN} from the
35172remote system. It is sent to the remote target
07f31aa6 35173before @value{GDBN} disconnects via the @code{detach} command.
ee2d5c50 35174
b90a069a
SL
35175The second form, including a process ID, is used when multiprocess
35176protocol extensions are enabled (@pxref{multiprocess extensions}), to
35177detach only a specific process. The @var{pid} is specified as a
35178big-endian hex string.
35179
ee2d5c50
AC
35180Reply:
35181@table @samp
10fac096
NW
35182@item OK
35183for success
b8ff78ce 35184@item E @var{NN}
10fac096 35185for an error
ee2d5c50 35186@end table
c906108c 35187
b8ff78ce
JB
35188@item F @var{RC},@var{EE},@var{CF};@var{XX}
35189@cindex @samp{F} packet
35190A reply from @value{GDBN} to an @samp{F} packet sent by the target.
35191This is part of the File-I/O protocol extension. @xref{File-I/O
79a6e687 35192Remote Protocol Extension}, for the specification.
ee2d5c50 35193
b8ff78ce 35194@item g
ee2d5c50 35195@anchor{read registers packet}
b8ff78ce 35196@cindex @samp{g} packet
ee2d5c50
AC
35197Read general registers.
35198
35199Reply:
35200@table @samp
35201@item @var{XX@dots{}}
8e04817f
AC
35202Each byte of register data is described by two hex digits. The bytes
35203with the register are transmitted in target byte order. The size of
b8ff78ce 35204each register and their position within the @samp{g} packet are
4a9bb1df
UW
35205determined by the @value{GDBN} internal gdbarch functions
35206@code{DEPRECATED_REGISTER_RAW_SIZE} and @code{gdbarch_register_name}. The
b8ff78ce 35207specification of several standard @samp{g} packets is specified below.
ad196637
PA
35208
35209When reading registers from a trace frame (@pxref{Analyze Collected
35210Data,,Using the Collected Data}), the stub may also return a string of
35211literal @samp{x}'s in place of the register data digits, to indicate
35212that the corresponding register has not been collected, thus its value
35213is unavailable. For example, for an architecture with 4 registers of
352144 bytes each, the following reply indicates to @value{GDBN} that
35215registers 0 and 2 have not been collected, while registers 1 and 3
35216have been collected, and both have zero value:
35217
35218@smallexample
35219-> @code{g}
35220<- @code{xxxxxxxx00000000xxxxxxxx00000000}
35221@end smallexample
35222
b8ff78ce 35223@item E @var{NN}
ee2d5c50
AC
35224for an error.
35225@end table
c906108c 35226
b8ff78ce
JB
35227@item G @var{XX@dots{}}
35228@cindex @samp{G} packet
35229Write general registers. @xref{read registers packet}, for a
35230description of the @var{XX@dots{}} data.
ee2d5c50
AC
35231
35232Reply:
35233@table @samp
35234@item OK
35235for success
b8ff78ce 35236@item E @var{NN}
ee2d5c50
AC
35237for an error
35238@end table
35239
393eab54 35240@item H @var{op} @var{thread-id}
b8ff78ce 35241@cindex @samp{H} packet
8e04817f 35242Set thread for subsequent operations (@samp{m}, @samp{M}, @samp{g},
393eab54
PA
35243@samp{G}, et.al.). @var{op} depends on the operation to be performed:
35244it should be @samp{c} for step and continue operations (note that this
35245is deprecated, supporting the @samp{vCont} command is a better
35246option), @samp{g} for other operations. The thread designator
35247@var{thread-id} has the format and interpretation described in
35248@ref{thread-id syntax}.
ee2d5c50
AC
35249
35250Reply:
35251@table @samp
35252@item OK
35253for success
b8ff78ce 35254@item E @var{NN}
ee2d5c50
AC
35255for an error
35256@end table
c906108c 35257
8e04817f
AC
35258@c FIXME: JTC:
35259@c 'H': How restrictive (or permissive) is the thread model. If a
35260@c thread is selected and stopped, are other threads allowed
35261@c to continue to execute? As I mentioned above, I think the
35262@c semantics of each command when a thread is selected must be
35263@c described. For example:
35264@c
35265@c 'g': If the stub supports threads and a specific thread is
35266@c selected, returns the register block from that thread;
35267@c otherwise returns current registers.
35268@c
35269@c 'G' If the stub supports threads and a specific thread is
35270@c selected, sets the registers of the register block of
35271@c that thread; otherwise sets current registers.
c906108c 35272
b8ff78ce 35273@item i @r{[}@var{addr}@r{[},@var{nnn}@r{]]}
ee2d5c50 35274@anchor{cycle step packet}
b8ff78ce
JB
35275@cindex @samp{i} packet
35276Step the remote target by a single clock cycle. If @samp{,@var{nnn}} is
8e04817f
AC
35277present, cycle step @var{nnn} cycles. If @var{addr} is present, cycle
35278step starting at that address.
c906108c 35279
b8ff78ce
JB
35280@item I
35281@cindex @samp{I} packet
35282Signal, then cycle step. @xref{step with signal packet}. @xref{cycle
35283step packet}.
ee2d5c50 35284
b8ff78ce
JB
35285@item k
35286@cindex @samp{k} packet
35287Kill request.
c906108c 35288
ac282366 35289FIXME: @emph{There is no description of how to operate when a specific
ee2d5c50
AC
35290thread context has been selected (i.e.@: does 'k' kill only that
35291thread?)}.
c906108c 35292
b8ff78ce
JB
35293@item m @var{addr},@var{length}
35294@cindex @samp{m} packet
8e04817f 35295Read @var{length} bytes of memory starting at address @var{addr}.
fb031cdf
JB
35296Note that @var{addr} may not be aligned to any particular boundary.
35297
35298The stub need not use any particular size or alignment when gathering
35299data from memory for the response; even if @var{addr} is word-aligned
35300and @var{length} is a multiple of the word size, the stub is free to
35301use byte accesses, or not. For this reason, this packet may not be
35302suitable for accessing memory-mapped I/O devices.
c43c5473
JB
35303@cindex alignment of remote memory accesses
35304@cindex size of remote memory accesses
35305@cindex memory, alignment and size of remote accesses
c906108c 35306
ee2d5c50
AC
35307Reply:
35308@table @samp
35309@item @var{XX@dots{}}
599b237a 35310Memory contents; each byte is transmitted as a two-digit hexadecimal
b8ff78ce
JB
35311number. The reply may contain fewer bytes than requested if the
35312server was able to read only part of the region of memory.
35313@item E @var{NN}
ee2d5c50
AC
35314@var{NN} is errno
35315@end table
35316
b8ff78ce
JB
35317@item M @var{addr},@var{length}:@var{XX@dots{}}
35318@cindex @samp{M} packet
8e04817f 35319Write @var{length} bytes of memory starting at address @var{addr}.
b8ff78ce 35320@var{XX@dots{}} is the data; each byte is transmitted as a two-digit
599b237a 35321hexadecimal number.
ee2d5c50
AC
35322
35323Reply:
35324@table @samp
35325@item OK
35326for success
b8ff78ce 35327@item E @var{NN}
8e04817f
AC
35328for an error (this includes the case where only part of the data was
35329written).
ee2d5c50 35330@end table
c906108c 35331
b8ff78ce
JB
35332@item p @var{n}
35333@cindex @samp{p} packet
35334Read the value of register @var{n}; @var{n} is in hex.
2e868123
AC
35335@xref{read registers packet}, for a description of how the returned
35336register value is encoded.
ee2d5c50
AC
35337
35338Reply:
35339@table @samp
2e868123
AC
35340@item @var{XX@dots{}}
35341the register's value
b8ff78ce 35342@item E @var{NN}
2e868123
AC
35343for an error
35344@item
35345Indicating an unrecognized @var{query}.
ee2d5c50
AC
35346@end table
35347
b8ff78ce 35348@item P @var{n@dots{}}=@var{r@dots{}}
ee2d5c50 35349@anchor{write register packet}
b8ff78ce
JB
35350@cindex @samp{P} packet
35351Write register @var{n@dots{}} with value @var{r@dots{}}. The register
599b237a 35352number @var{n} is in hexadecimal, and @var{r@dots{}} contains two hex
8e04817f 35353digits for each byte in the register (target byte order).
c906108c 35354
ee2d5c50
AC
35355Reply:
35356@table @samp
35357@item OK
35358for success
b8ff78ce 35359@item E @var{NN}
ee2d5c50
AC
35360for an error
35361@end table
35362
5f3bebba
JB
35363@item q @var{name} @var{params}@dots{}
35364@itemx Q @var{name} @var{params}@dots{}
b8ff78ce 35365@cindex @samp{q} packet
b8ff78ce 35366@cindex @samp{Q} packet
5f3bebba
JB
35367General query (@samp{q}) and set (@samp{Q}). These packets are
35368described fully in @ref{General Query Packets}.
c906108c 35369
b8ff78ce
JB
35370@item r
35371@cindex @samp{r} packet
8e04817f 35372Reset the entire system.
c906108c 35373
b8ff78ce 35374Don't use this packet; use the @samp{R} packet instead.
ee2d5c50 35375
b8ff78ce
JB
35376@item R @var{XX}
35377@cindex @samp{R} packet
8e04817f 35378Restart the program being debugged. @var{XX}, while needed, is ignored.
2d717e4f 35379This packet is only available in extended mode (@pxref{extended mode}).
ee2d5c50 35380
8e04817f 35381The @samp{R} packet has no reply.
ee2d5c50 35382
4f553f88 35383@item s @r{[}@var{addr}@r{]}
b8ff78ce
JB
35384@cindex @samp{s} packet
35385Single step. @var{addr} is the address at which to resume. If
35386@var{addr} is omitted, resume at same address.
c906108c 35387
393eab54
PA
35388This packet is deprecated for multi-threading support. @xref{vCont
35389packet}.
35390
ee2d5c50
AC
35391Reply:
35392@xref{Stop Reply Packets}, for the reply specifications.
35393
4f553f88 35394@item S @var{sig}@r{[};@var{addr}@r{]}
ee2d5c50 35395@anchor{step with signal packet}
b8ff78ce
JB
35396@cindex @samp{S} packet
35397Step with signal. This is analogous to the @samp{C} packet, but
35398requests a single-step, rather than a normal resumption of execution.
c906108c 35399
393eab54
PA
35400This packet is deprecated for multi-threading support. @xref{vCont
35401packet}.
35402
ee2d5c50
AC
35403Reply:
35404@xref{Stop Reply Packets}, for the reply specifications.
35405
b8ff78ce
JB
35406@item t @var{addr}:@var{PP},@var{MM}
35407@cindex @samp{t} packet
8e04817f 35408Search backwards starting at address @var{addr} for a match with pattern
ee2d5c50
AC
35409@var{PP} and mask @var{MM}. @var{PP} and @var{MM} are 4 bytes.
35410@var{addr} must be at least 3 digits.
c906108c 35411
b90a069a 35412@item T @var{thread-id}
b8ff78ce 35413@cindex @samp{T} packet
b90a069a 35414Find out if the thread @var{thread-id} is alive. @xref{thread-id syntax}.
c906108c 35415
ee2d5c50
AC
35416Reply:
35417@table @samp
35418@item OK
35419thread is still alive
b8ff78ce 35420@item E @var{NN}
ee2d5c50
AC
35421thread is dead
35422@end table
35423
b8ff78ce
JB
35424@item v
35425Packets starting with @samp{v} are identified by a multi-letter name,
35426up to the first @samp{;} or @samp{?} (or the end of the packet).
86d30acc 35427
2d717e4f
DJ
35428@item vAttach;@var{pid}
35429@cindex @samp{vAttach} packet
8b23ecc4
SL
35430Attach to a new process with the specified process ID @var{pid}.
35431The process ID is a
35432hexadecimal integer identifying the process. In all-stop mode, all
35433threads in the attached process are stopped; in non-stop mode, it may be
35434attached without being stopped if that is supported by the target.
35435
35436@c In non-stop mode, on a successful vAttach, the stub should set the
35437@c current thread to a thread of the newly-attached process. After
35438@c attaching, GDB queries for the attached process's thread ID with qC.
35439@c Also note that, from a user perspective, whether or not the
35440@c target is stopped on attach in non-stop mode depends on whether you
35441@c use the foreground or background version of the attach command, not
35442@c on what vAttach does; GDB does the right thing with respect to either
35443@c stopping or restarting threads.
2d717e4f
DJ
35444
35445This packet is only available in extended mode (@pxref{extended mode}).
35446
35447Reply:
35448@table @samp
35449@item E @var{nn}
35450for an error
35451@item @r{Any stop packet}
8b23ecc4
SL
35452for success in all-stop mode (@pxref{Stop Reply Packets})
35453@item OK
35454for success in non-stop mode (@pxref{Remote Non-Stop})
2d717e4f
DJ
35455@end table
35456
b90a069a 35457@item vCont@r{[};@var{action}@r{[}:@var{thread-id}@r{]]}@dots{}
b8ff78ce 35458@cindex @samp{vCont} packet
393eab54 35459@anchor{vCont packet}
b8ff78ce 35460Resume the inferior, specifying different actions for each thread.
b90a069a 35461If an action is specified with no @var{thread-id}, then it is applied to any
86d30acc 35462threads that don't have a specific action specified; if no default action is
8b23ecc4
SL
35463specified then other threads should remain stopped in all-stop mode and
35464in their current state in non-stop mode.
35465Specifying multiple
86d30acc 35466default actions is an error; specifying no actions is also an error.
b90a069a
SL
35467Thread IDs are specified using the syntax described in @ref{thread-id syntax}.
35468
35469Currently supported actions are:
86d30acc 35470
b8ff78ce 35471@table @samp
86d30acc
DJ
35472@item c
35473Continue.
b8ff78ce 35474@item C @var{sig}
8b23ecc4 35475Continue with signal @var{sig}. The signal @var{sig} should be two hex digits.
86d30acc
DJ
35476@item s
35477Step.
b8ff78ce 35478@item S @var{sig}
8b23ecc4
SL
35479Step with signal @var{sig}. The signal @var{sig} should be two hex digits.
35480@item t
35481Stop.
86d30acc
DJ
35482@end table
35483
8b23ecc4
SL
35484The optional argument @var{addr} normally associated with the
35485@samp{c}, @samp{C}, @samp{s}, and @samp{S} packets is
b8ff78ce 35486not supported in @samp{vCont}.
86d30acc 35487
08a0efd0
PA
35488The @samp{t} action is only relevant in non-stop mode
35489(@pxref{Remote Non-Stop}) and may be ignored by the stub otherwise.
8b23ecc4
SL
35490A stop reply should be generated for any affected thread not already stopped.
35491When a thread is stopped by means of a @samp{t} action,
35492the corresponding stop reply should indicate that the thread has stopped with
35493signal @samp{0}, regardless of whether the target uses some other signal
35494as an implementation detail.
35495
4220b2f8
TS
35496The stub must support @samp{vCont} if it reports support for
35497multiprocess extensions (@pxref{multiprocess extensions}). Note that in
35498this case @samp{vCont} actions can be specified to apply to all threads
35499in a process by using the @samp{p@var{pid}.-1} form of the
35500@var{thread-id}.
35501
86d30acc
DJ
35502Reply:
35503@xref{Stop Reply Packets}, for the reply specifications.
35504
b8ff78ce
JB
35505@item vCont?
35506@cindex @samp{vCont?} packet
d3e8051b 35507Request a list of actions supported by the @samp{vCont} packet.
86d30acc
DJ
35508
35509Reply:
35510@table @samp
b8ff78ce
JB
35511@item vCont@r{[};@var{action}@dots{}@r{]}
35512The @samp{vCont} packet is supported. Each @var{action} is a supported
35513command in the @samp{vCont} packet.
86d30acc 35514@item
b8ff78ce 35515The @samp{vCont} packet is not supported.
86d30acc 35516@end table
ee2d5c50 35517
a6b151f1
DJ
35518@item vFile:@var{operation}:@var{parameter}@dots{}
35519@cindex @samp{vFile} packet
35520Perform a file operation on the target system. For details,
35521see @ref{Host I/O Packets}.
35522
68437a39
DJ
35523@item vFlashErase:@var{addr},@var{length}
35524@cindex @samp{vFlashErase} packet
35525Direct the stub to erase @var{length} bytes of flash starting at
35526@var{addr}. The region may enclose any number of flash blocks, but
35527its start and end must fall on block boundaries, as indicated by the
79a6e687
BW
35528flash block size appearing in the memory map (@pxref{Memory Map
35529Format}). @value{GDBN} groups flash memory programming operations
68437a39
DJ
35530together, and sends a @samp{vFlashDone} request after each group; the
35531stub is allowed to delay erase operation until the @samp{vFlashDone}
35532packet is received.
35533
35534Reply:
35535@table @samp
35536@item OK
35537for success
35538@item E @var{NN}
35539for an error
35540@end table
35541
35542@item vFlashWrite:@var{addr}:@var{XX@dots{}}
35543@cindex @samp{vFlashWrite} packet
35544Direct the stub to write data to flash address @var{addr}. The data
35545is passed in binary form using the same encoding as for the @samp{X}
35546packet (@pxref{Binary Data}). The memory ranges specified by
35547@samp{vFlashWrite} packets preceding a @samp{vFlashDone} packet must
35548not overlap, and must appear in order of increasing addresses
35549(although @samp{vFlashErase} packets for higher addresses may already
35550have been received; the ordering is guaranteed only between
35551@samp{vFlashWrite} packets). If a packet writes to an address that was
35552neither erased by a preceding @samp{vFlashErase} packet nor by some other
35553target-specific method, the results are unpredictable.
35554
35555
35556Reply:
35557@table @samp
35558@item OK
35559for success
35560@item E.memtype
35561for vFlashWrite addressing non-flash memory
35562@item E @var{NN}
35563for an error
35564@end table
35565
35566@item vFlashDone
35567@cindex @samp{vFlashDone} packet
35568Indicate to the stub that flash programming operation is finished.
35569The stub is permitted to delay or batch the effects of a group of
35570@samp{vFlashErase} and @samp{vFlashWrite} packets until a
35571@samp{vFlashDone} packet is received. The contents of the affected
35572regions of flash memory are unpredictable until the @samp{vFlashDone}
35573request is completed.
35574
b90a069a
SL
35575@item vKill;@var{pid}
35576@cindex @samp{vKill} packet
35577Kill the process with the specified process ID. @var{pid} is a
35578hexadecimal integer identifying the process. This packet is used in
35579preference to @samp{k} when multiprocess protocol extensions are
35580supported; see @ref{multiprocess extensions}.
35581
35582Reply:
35583@table @samp
35584@item E @var{nn}
35585for an error
35586@item OK
35587for success
35588@end table
35589
2d717e4f
DJ
35590@item vRun;@var{filename}@r{[};@var{argument}@r{]}@dots{}
35591@cindex @samp{vRun} packet
35592Run the program @var{filename}, passing it each @var{argument} on its
35593command line. The file and arguments are hex-encoded strings. If
35594@var{filename} is an empty string, the stub may use a default program
35595(e.g.@: the last program run). The program is created in the stopped
9b562ab8 35596state.
2d717e4f 35597
8b23ecc4
SL
35598@c FIXME: What about non-stop mode?
35599
2d717e4f
DJ
35600This packet is only available in extended mode (@pxref{extended mode}).
35601
35602Reply:
35603@table @samp
35604@item E @var{nn}
35605for an error
35606@item @r{Any stop packet}
35607for success (@pxref{Stop Reply Packets})
35608@end table
35609
8b23ecc4
SL
35610@item vStopped
35611@anchor{vStopped packet}
35612@cindex @samp{vStopped} packet
35613
35614In non-stop mode (@pxref{Remote Non-Stop}), acknowledge a previous stop
35615reply and prompt for the stub to report another one.
35616
35617Reply:
35618@table @samp
35619@item @r{Any stop packet}
35620if there is another unreported stop event (@pxref{Stop Reply Packets})
35621@item OK
35622if there are no unreported stop events
35623@end table
35624
b8ff78ce 35625@item X @var{addr},@var{length}:@var{XX@dots{}}
9a6253be 35626@anchor{X packet}
b8ff78ce
JB
35627@cindex @samp{X} packet
35628Write data to memory, where the data is transmitted in binary.
35629@var{addr} is address, @var{length} is number of bytes,
0876f84a 35630@samp{@var{XX}@dots{}} is binary data (@pxref{Binary Data}).
c906108c 35631
ee2d5c50
AC
35632Reply:
35633@table @samp
35634@item OK
35635for success
b8ff78ce 35636@item E @var{NN}
ee2d5c50
AC
35637for an error
35638@end table
35639
a1dcb23a
DJ
35640@item z @var{type},@var{addr},@var{kind}
35641@itemx Z @var{type},@var{addr},@var{kind}
2f870471 35642@anchor{insert breakpoint or watchpoint packet}
b8ff78ce
JB
35643@cindex @samp{z} packet
35644@cindex @samp{Z} packets
35645Insert (@samp{Z}) or remove (@samp{z}) a @var{type} breakpoint or
a1dcb23a 35646watchpoint starting at address @var{address} of kind @var{kind}.
ee2d5c50 35647
2f870471
AC
35648Each breakpoint and watchpoint packet @var{type} is documented
35649separately.
35650
512217c7
AC
35651@emph{Implementation notes: A remote target shall return an empty string
35652for an unrecognized breakpoint or watchpoint packet @var{type}. A
35653remote target shall support either both or neither of a given
b8ff78ce 35654@samp{Z@var{type}@dots{}} and @samp{z@var{type}@dots{}} packet pair. To
2f870471
AC
35655avoid potential problems with duplicate packets, the operations should
35656be implemented in an idempotent way.}
35657
a1dcb23a 35658@item z0,@var{addr},@var{kind}
83364271 35659@itemx Z0,@var{addr},@var{kind}@r{[};@var{cond_list}@dots{}@r{]}
b8ff78ce
JB
35660@cindex @samp{z0} packet
35661@cindex @samp{Z0} packet
35662Insert (@samp{Z0}) or remove (@samp{z0}) a memory breakpoint at address
a1dcb23a 35663@var{addr} of type @var{kind}.
2f870471
AC
35664
35665A memory breakpoint is implemented by replacing the instruction at
35666@var{addr} with a software breakpoint or trap instruction. The
a1dcb23a
DJ
35667@var{kind} is target-specific and typically indicates the size of
35668the breakpoint in bytes that should be inserted. E.g., the @sc{arm}
35669and @sc{mips} can insert either a 2 or 4 byte breakpoint. Some
35670architectures have additional meanings for @var{kind};
83364271
LM
35671@var{cond_list} is an optional list of conditional expressions in bytecode
35672form that should be evaluated on the target's side. These are the
35673conditions that should be taken into consideration when deciding if
35674the breakpoint trigger should be reported back to @var{GDBN}.
35675
35676The @var{cond_list} parameter is comprised of a series of expressions,
35677concatenated without separators. Each expression has the following form:
35678
35679@table @samp
35680
35681@item X @var{len},@var{expr}
35682@var{len} is the length of the bytecode expression and @var{expr} is the
35683actual conditional expression in bytecode form.
35684
35685@end table
35686
a1dcb23a 35687see @ref{Architecture-Specific Protocol Details}.
c906108c 35688
2f870471
AC
35689@emph{Implementation note: It is possible for a target to copy or move
35690code that contains memory breakpoints (e.g., when implementing
35691overlays). The behavior of this packet, in the presence of such a
35692target, is not defined.}
c906108c 35693
ee2d5c50
AC
35694Reply:
35695@table @samp
2f870471
AC
35696@item OK
35697success
35698@item
35699not supported
b8ff78ce 35700@item E @var{NN}
ee2d5c50 35701for an error
2f870471
AC
35702@end table
35703
a1dcb23a 35704@item z1,@var{addr},@var{kind}
83364271 35705@itemx Z1,@var{addr},@var{kind}@r{[};@var{cond_list}@dots{}@r{]}
b8ff78ce
JB
35706@cindex @samp{z1} packet
35707@cindex @samp{Z1} packet
35708Insert (@samp{Z1}) or remove (@samp{z1}) a hardware breakpoint at
a1dcb23a 35709address @var{addr}.
2f870471
AC
35710
35711A hardware breakpoint is implemented using a mechanism that is not
a1dcb23a 35712dependant on being able to modify the target's memory. @var{kind}
83364271 35713and @var{cond_list} have the same meaning as in @samp{Z0} packets.
2f870471
AC
35714
35715@emph{Implementation note: A hardware breakpoint is not affected by code
35716movement.}
35717
35718Reply:
35719@table @samp
ee2d5c50 35720@item OK
2f870471
AC
35721success
35722@item
35723not supported
b8ff78ce 35724@item E @var{NN}
2f870471
AC
35725for an error
35726@end table
35727
a1dcb23a
DJ
35728@item z2,@var{addr},@var{kind}
35729@itemx Z2,@var{addr},@var{kind}
b8ff78ce
JB
35730@cindex @samp{z2} packet
35731@cindex @samp{Z2} packet
a1dcb23a
DJ
35732Insert (@samp{Z2}) or remove (@samp{z2}) a write watchpoint at @var{addr}.
35733@var{kind} is interpreted as the number of bytes to watch.
2f870471
AC
35734
35735Reply:
35736@table @samp
35737@item OK
35738success
35739@item
35740not supported
b8ff78ce 35741@item E @var{NN}
2f870471
AC
35742for an error
35743@end table
35744
a1dcb23a
DJ
35745@item z3,@var{addr},@var{kind}
35746@itemx Z3,@var{addr},@var{kind}
b8ff78ce
JB
35747@cindex @samp{z3} packet
35748@cindex @samp{Z3} packet
a1dcb23a
DJ
35749Insert (@samp{Z3}) or remove (@samp{z3}) a read watchpoint at @var{addr}.
35750@var{kind} is interpreted as the number of bytes to watch.
2f870471
AC
35751
35752Reply:
35753@table @samp
35754@item OK
35755success
35756@item
35757not supported
b8ff78ce 35758@item E @var{NN}
2f870471
AC
35759for an error
35760@end table
35761
a1dcb23a
DJ
35762@item z4,@var{addr},@var{kind}
35763@itemx Z4,@var{addr},@var{kind}
b8ff78ce
JB
35764@cindex @samp{z4} packet
35765@cindex @samp{Z4} packet
a1dcb23a
DJ
35766Insert (@samp{Z4}) or remove (@samp{z4}) an access watchpoint at @var{addr}.
35767@var{kind} is interpreted as the number of bytes to watch.
2f870471
AC
35768
35769Reply:
35770@table @samp
35771@item OK
35772success
35773@item
35774not supported
b8ff78ce 35775@item E @var{NN}
2f870471 35776for an error
ee2d5c50
AC
35777@end table
35778
35779@end table
c906108c 35780
ee2d5c50
AC
35781@node Stop Reply Packets
35782@section Stop Reply Packets
35783@cindex stop reply packets
c906108c 35784
8b23ecc4
SL
35785The @samp{C}, @samp{c}, @samp{S}, @samp{s}, @samp{vCont},
35786@samp{vAttach}, @samp{vRun}, @samp{vStopped}, and @samp{?} packets can
35787receive any of the below as a reply. Except for @samp{?}
35788and @samp{vStopped}, that reply is only returned
b8ff78ce 35789when the target halts. In the below the exact meaning of @dfn{signal
89be2091
DJ
35790number} is defined by the header @file{include/gdb/signals.h} in the
35791@value{GDBN} source code.
c906108c 35792
b8ff78ce
JB
35793As in the description of request packets, we include spaces in the
35794reply templates for clarity; these are not part of the reply packet's
35795syntax. No @value{GDBN} stop reply packet uses spaces to separate its
35796components.
c906108c 35797
b8ff78ce 35798@table @samp
ee2d5c50 35799
b8ff78ce 35800@item S @var{AA}
599b237a 35801The program received signal number @var{AA} (a two-digit hexadecimal
940178d3
JB
35802number). This is equivalent to a @samp{T} response with no
35803@var{n}:@var{r} pairs.
c906108c 35804
b8ff78ce
JB
35805@item T @var{AA} @var{n1}:@var{r1};@var{n2}:@var{r2};@dots{}
35806@cindex @samp{T} packet reply
599b237a 35807The program received signal number @var{AA} (a two-digit hexadecimal
940178d3
JB
35808number). This is equivalent to an @samp{S} response, except that the
35809@samp{@var{n}:@var{r}} pairs can carry values of important registers
35810and other information directly in the stop reply packet, reducing
35811round-trip latency. Single-step and breakpoint traps are reported
35812this way. Each @samp{@var{n}:@var{r}} pair is interpreted as follows:
cfa9d6d9
DJ
35813
35814@itemize @bullet
b8ff78ce 35815@item
599b237a 35816If @var{n} is a hexadecimal number, it is a register number, and the
b8ff78ce
JB
35817corresponding @var{r} gives that register's value. @var{r} is a
35818series of bytes in target byte order, with each byte given by a
35819two-digit hex number.
cfa9d6d9 35820
b8ff78ce 35821@item
b90a069a
SL
35822If @var{n} is @samp{thread}, then @var{r} is the @var{thread-id} of
35823the stopped thread, as specified in @ref{thread-id syntax}.
cfa9d6d9 35824
dc146f7c
VP
35825@item
35826If @var{n} is @samp{core}, then @var{r} is the hexadecimal number of
35827the core on which the stop event was detected.
35828
b8ff78ce 35829@item
cfa9d6d9
DJ
35830If @var{n} is a recognized @dfn{stop reason}, it describes a more
35831specific event that stopped the target. The currently defined stop
35832reasons are listed below. @var{aa} should be @samp{05}, the trap
35833signal. At most one stop reason should be present.
35834
b8ff78ce
JB
35835@item
35836Otherwise, @value{GDBN} should ignore this @samp{@var{n}:@var{r}} pair
35837and go on to the next; this allows us to extend the protocol in the
35838future.
cfa9d6d9
DJ
35839@end itemize
35840
35841The currently defined stop reasons are:
35842
35843@table @samp
35844@item watch
35845@itemx rwatch
35846@itemx awatch
35847The packet indicates a watchpoint hit, and @var{r} is the data address, in
35848hex.
35849
35850@cindex shared library events, remote reply
35851@item library
35852The packet indicates that the loaded libraries have changed.
35853@value{GDBN} should use @samp{qXfer:libraries:read} to fetch a new
35854list of loaded libraries. @var{r} is ignored.
bacec72f
MS
35855
35856@cindex replay log events, remote reply
35857@item replaylog
35858The packet indicates that the target cannot continue replaying
35859logged execution events, because it has reached the end (or the
35860beginning when executing backward) of the log. The value of @var{r}
35861will be either @samp{begin} or @samp{end}. @xref{Reverse Execution},
35862for more information.
cfa9d6d9 35863@end table
ee2d5c50 35864
b8ff78ce 35865@item W @var{AA}
b90a069a 35866@itemx W @var{AA} ; process:@var{pid}
8e04817f 35867The process exited, and @var{AA} is the exit status. This is only
ee2d5c50
AC
35868applicable to certain targets.
35869
b90a069a
SL
35870The second form of the response, including the process ID of the exited
35871process, can be used only when @value{GDBN} has reported support for
35872multiprocess protocol extensions; see @ref{multiprocess extensions}.
35873The @var{pid} is formatted as a big-endian hex string.
35874
b8ff78ce 35875@item X @var{AA}
b90a069a 35876@itemx X @var{AA} ; process:@var{pid}
8e04817f 35877The process terminated with signal @var{AA}.
c906108c 35878
b90a069a
SL
35879The second form of the response, including the process ID of the
35880terminated process, can be used only when @value{GDBN} has reported
35881support for multiprocess protocol extensions; see @ref{multiprocess
35882extensions}. The @var{pid} is formatted as a big-endian hex string.
35883
b8ff78ce
JB
35884@item O @var{XX}@dots{}
35885@samp{@var{XX}@dots{}} is hex encoding of @sc{ascii} data, to be
35886written as the program's console output. This can happen at any time
35887while the program is running and the debugger should continue to wait
8b23ecc4 35888for @samp{W}, @samp{T}, etc. This reply is not permitted in non-stop mode.
0ce1b118 35889
b8ff78ce 35890@item F @var{call-id},@var{parameter}@dots{}
0ce1b118
CV
35891@var{call-id} is the identifier which says which host system call should
35892be called. This is just the name of the function. Translation into the
35893correct system call is only applicable as it's defined in @value{GDBN}.
79a6e687 35894@xref{File-I/O Remote Protocol Extension}, for a list of implemented
0ce1b118
CV
35895system calls.
35896
b8ff78ce
JB
35897@samp{@var{parameter}@dots{}} is a list of parameters as defined for
35898this very system call.
0ce1b118 35899
b8ff78ce
JB
35900The target replies with this packet when it expects @value{GDBN} to
35901call a host system call on behalf of the target. @value{GDBN} replies
35902with an appropriate @samp{F} packet and keeps up waiting for the next
35903reply packet from the target. The latest @samp{C}, @samp{c}, @samp{S}
79a6e687
BW
35904or @samp{s} action is expected to be continued. @xref{File-I/O Remote
35905Protocol Extension}, for more details.
0ce1b118 35906
ee2d5c50
AC
35907@end table
35908
35909@node General Query Packets
35910@section General Query Packets
9c16f35a 35911@cindex remote query requests
c906108c 35912
5f3bebba
JB
35913Packets starting with @samp{q} are @dfn{general query packets};
35914packets starting with @samp{Q} are @dfn{general set packets}. General
35915query and set packets are a semi-unified form for retrieving and
35916sending information to and from the stub.
35917
35918The initial letter of a query or set packet is followed by a name
35919indicating what sort of thing the packet applies to. For example,
35920@value{GDBN} may use a @samp{qSymbol} packet to exchange symbol
35921definitions with the stub. These packet names follow some
35922conventions:
35923
35924@itemize @bullet
35925@item
35926The name must not contain commas, colons or semicolons.
35927@item
35928Most @value{GDBN} query and set packets have a leading upper case
35929letter.
35930@item
35931The names of custom vendor packets should use a company prefix, in
35932lower case, followed by a period. For example, packets designed at
35933the Acme Corporation might begin with @samp{qacme.foo} (for querying
35934foos) or @samp{Qacme.bar} (for setting bars).
35935@end itemize
35936
aa56d27a
JB
35937The name of a query or set packet should be separated from any
35938parameters by a @samp{:}; the parameters themselves should be
35939separated by @samp{,} or @samp{;}. Stubs must be careful to match the
369af7bd
DJ
35940full packet name, and check for a separator or the end of the packet,
35941in case two packet names share a common prefix. New packets should not begin
35942with @samp{qC}, @samp{qP}, or @samp{qL}@footnote{The @samp{qP} and @samp{qL}
35943packets predate these conventions, and have arguments without any terminator
35944for the packet name; we suspect they are in widespread use in places that
35945are difficult to upgrade. The @samp{qC} packet has no arguments, but some
35946existing stubs (e.g.@: RedBoot) are known to not check for the end of the
35947packet.}.
c906108c 35948
b8ff78ce
JB
35949Like the descriptions of the other packets, each description here
35950has a template showing the packet's overall syntax, followed by an
35951explanation of the packet's meaning. We include spaces in some of the
35952templates for clarity; these are not part of the packet's syntax. No
35953@value{GDBN} packet uses spaces to separate its components.
35954
5f3bebba
JB
35955Here are the currently defined query and set packets:
35956
b8ff78ce 35957@table @samp
c906108c 35958
d1feda86
YQ
35959@item QAgent:1
35960@item QAgent:0
35961Turn on or off the agent as a helper to perform some debugging operations
35962delegated from @value{GDBN} (@pxref{Control Agent}).
35963
d914c394
SS
35964@item QAllow:@var{op}:@var{val}@dots{}
35965@cindex @samp{QAllow} packet
35966Specify which operations @value{GDBN} expects to request of the
35967target, as a semicolon-separated list of operation name and value
35968pairs. Possible values for @var{op} include @samp{WriteReg},
35969@samp{WriteMem}, @samp{InsertBreak}, @samp{InsertTrace},
35970@samp{InsertFastTrace}, and @samp{Stop}. @var{val} is either 0,
35971indicating that @value{GDBN} will not request the operation, or 1,
35972indicating that it may. (The target can then use this to set up its
35973own internals optimally, for instance if the debugger never expects to
35974insert breakpoints, it may not need to install its own trap handler.)
35975
b8ff78ce 35976@item qC
9c16f35a 35977@cindex current thread, remote request
b8ff78ce 35978@cindex @samp{qC} packet
b90a069a 35979Return the current thread ID.
ee2d5c50
AC
35980
35981Reply:
35982@table @samp
b90a069a
SL
35983@item QC @var{thread-id}
35984Where @var{thread-id} is a thread ID as documented in
35985@ref{thread-id syntax}.
b8ff78ce 35986@item @r{(anything else)}
b90a069a 35987Any other reply implies the old thread ID.
ee2d5c50
AC
35988@end table
35989
b8ff78ce 35990@item qCRC:@var{addr},@var{length}
ff2587ec 35991@cindex CRC of memory block, remote request
b8ff78ce 35992@cindex @samp{qCRC} packet
99e008fe
EZ
35993Compute the CRC checksum of a block of memory using CRC-32 defined in
35994IEEE 802.3. The CRC is computed byte at a time, taking the most
35995significant bit of each byte first. The initial pattern code
35996@code{0xffffffff} is used to ensure leading zeros affect the CRC.
35997
35998@emph{Note:} This is the same CRC used in validating separate debug
35999files (@pxref{Separate Debug Files, , Debugging Information in Separate
36000Files}). However the algorithm is slightly different. When validating
36001separate debug files, the CRC is computed taking the @emph{least}
36002significant bit of each byte first, and the final result is inverted to
36003detect trailing zeros.
36004
ff2587ec
WZ
36005Reply:
36006@table @samp
b8ff78ce 36007@item E @var{NN}
ff2587ec 36008An error (such as memory fault)
b8ff78ce
JB
36009@item C @var{crc32}
36010The specified memory region's checksum is @var{crc32}.
ff2587ec
WZ
36011@end table
36012
03583c20
UW
36013@item QDisableRandomization:@var{value}
36014@cindex disable address space randomization, remote request
36015@cindex @samp{QDisableRandomization} packet
36016Some target operating systems will randomize the virtual address space
36017of the inferior process as a security feature, but provide a feature
36018to disable such randomization, e.g.@: to allow for a more deterministic
36019debugging experience. On such systems, this packet with a @var{value}
36020of 1 directs the target to disable address space randomization for
36021processes subsequently started via @samp{vRun} packets, while a packet
36022with a @var{value} of 0 tells the target to enable address space
36023randomization.
36024
36025This packet is only available in extended mode (@pxref{extended mode}).
36026
36027Reply:
36028@table @samp
36029@item OK
36030The request succeeded.
36031
36032@item E @var{nn}
36033An error occurred. @var{nn} are hex digits.
36034
36035@item
36036An empty reply indicates that @samp{QDisableRandomization} is not supported
36037by the stub.
36038@end table
36039
36040This packet is not probed by default; the remote stub must request it,
36041by supplying an appropriate @samp{qSupported} response (@pxref{qSupported}).
36042This should only be done on targets that actually support disabling
36043address space randomization.
36044
b8ff78ce
JB
36045@item qfThreadInfo
36046@itemx qsThreadInfo
9c16f35a 36047@cindex list active threads, remote request
b8ff78ce
JB
36048@cindex @samp{qfThreadInfo} packet
36049@cindex @samp{qsThreadInfo} packet
b90a069a 36050Obtain a list of all active thread IDs from the target (OS). Since there
8e04817f
AC
36051may be too many active threads to fit into one reply packet, this query
36052works iteratively: it may require more than one query/reply sequence to
36053obtain the entire list of threads. The first query of the sequence will
b8ff78ce
JB
36054be the @samp{qfThreadInfo} query; subsequent queries in the
36055sequence will be the @samp{qsThreadInfo} query.
ee2d5c50 36056
b8ff78ce 36057NOTE: This packet replaces the @samp{qL} query (see below).
ee2d5c50
AC
36058
36059Reply:
36060@table @samp
b90a069a
SL
36061@item m @var{thread-id}
36062A single thread ID
36063@item m @var{thread-id},@var{thread-id}@dots{}
36064a comma-separated list of thread IDs
b8ff78ce
JB
36065@item l
36066(lower case letter @samp{L}) denotes end of list.
ee2d5c50
AC
36067@end table
36068
36069In response to each query, the target will reply with a list of one or
b90a069a 36070more thread IDs, separated by commas.
e1aac25b 36071@value{GDBN} will respond to each reply with a request for more thread
b8ff78ce 36072ids (using the @samp{qs} form of the query), until the target responds
501994c0 36073with @samp{l} (lower-case ell, for @dfn{last}).
b90a069a
SL
36074Refer to @ref{thread-id syntax}, for the format of the @var{thread-id}
36075fields.
c906108c 36076
b8ff78ce 36077@item qGetTLSAddr:@var{thread-id},@var{offset},@var{lm}
ff2587ec 36078@cindex get thread-local storage address, remote request
b8ff78ce 36079@cindex @samp{qGetTLSAddr} packet
ff2587ec
WZ
36080Fetch the address associated with thread local storage specified
36081by @var{thread-id}, @var{offset}, and @var{lm}.
36082
b90a069a
SL
36083@var{thread-id} is the thread ID associated with the
36084thread for which to fetch the TLS address. @xref{thread-id syntax}.
ff2587ec
WZ
36085
36086@var{offset} is the (big endian, hex encoded) offset associated with the
36087thread local variable. (This offset is obtained from the debug
36088information associated with the variable.)
36089
db2e3e2e 36090@var{lm} is the (big endian, hex encoded) OS/ABI-specific encoding of the
7a9dd1b2 36091load module associated with the thread local storage. For example,
ff2587ec
WZ
36092a @sc{gnu}/Linux system will pass the link map address of the shared
36093object associated with the thread local storage under consideration.
36094Other operating environments may choose to represent the load module
36095differently, so the precise meaning of this parameter will vary.
ee2d5c50
AC
36096
36097Reply:
b8ff78ce
JB
36098@table @samp
36099@item @var{XX}@dots{}
ff2587ec
WZ
36100Hex encoded (big endian) bytes representing the address of the thread
36101local storage requested.
36102
b8ff78ce
JB
36103@item E @var{nn}
36104An error occurred. @var{nn} are hex digits.
ff2587ec 36105
b8ff78ce
JB
36106@item
36107An empty reply indicates that @samp{qGetTLSAddr} is not supported by the stub.
ee2d5c50
AC
36108@end table
36109
711e434b
PM
36110@item qGetTIBAddr:@var{thread-id}
36111@cindex get thread information block address
36112@cindex @samp{qGetTIBAddr} packet
36113Fetch address of the Windows OS specific Thread Information Block.
36114
36115@var{thread-id} is the thread ID associated with the thread.
36116
36117Reply:
36118@table @samp
36119@item @var{XX}@dots{}
36120Hex encoded (big endian) bytes representing the linear address of the
36121thread information block.
36122
36123@item E @var{nn}
36124An error occured. This means that either the thread was not found, or the
36125address could not be retrieved.
36126
36127@item
36128An empty reply indicates that @samp{qGetTIBAddr} is not supported by the stub.
36129@end table
36130
b8ff78ce 36131@item qL @var{startflag} @var{threadcount} @var{nextthread}
8e04817f
AC
36132Obtain thread information from RTOS. Where: @var{startflag} (one hex
36133digit) is one to indicate the first query and zero to indicate a
36134subsequent query; @var{threadcount} (two hex digits) is the maximum
36135number of threads the response packet can contain; and @var{nextthread}
36136(eight hex digits), for subsequent queries (@var{startflag} is zero), is
36137returned in the response as @var{argthread}.
ee2d5c50 36138
b8ff78ce 36139Don't use this packet; use the @samp{qfThreadInfo} query instead (see above).
ee2d5c50
AC
36140
36141Reply:
36142@table @samp
b8ff78ce 36143@item qM @var{count} @var{done} @var{argthread} @var{thread}@dots{}
8e04817f
AC
36144Where: @var{count} (two hex digits) is the number of threads being
36145returned; @var{done} (one hex digit) is zero to indicate more threads
36146and one indicates no further threads; @var{argthreadid} (eight hex
b8ff78ce 36147digits) is @var{nextthread} from the request packet; @var{thread}@dots{}
ee2d5c50 36148is a sequence of thread IDs from the target. @var{threadid} (eight hex
8e04817f 36149digits). See @code{remote.c:parse_threadlist_response()}.
ee2d5c50 36150@end table
c906108c 36151
b8ff78ce 36152@item qOffsets
9c16f35a 36153@cindex section offsets, remote request
b8ff78ce 36154@cindex @samp{qOffsets} packet
31d99776
DJ
36155Get section offsets that the target used when relocating the downloaded
36156image.
c906108c 36157
ee2d5c50
AC
36158Reply:
36159@table @samp
31d99776
DJ
36160@item Text=@var{xxx};Data=@var{yyy}@r{[};Bss=@var{zzz}@r{]}
36161Relocate the @code{Text} section by @var{xxx} from its original address.
36162Relocate the @code{Data} section by @var{yyy} from its original address.
36163If the object file format provides segment information (e.g.@: @sc{elf}
36164@samp{PT_LOAD} program headers), @value{GDBN} will relocate entire
36165segments by the supplied offsets.
36166
36167@emph{Note: while a @code{Bss} offset may be included in the response,
36168@value{GDBN} ignores this and instead applies the @code{Data} offset
36169to the @code{Bss} section.}
36170
36171@item TextSeg=@var{xxx}@r{[};DataSeg=@var{yyy}@r{]}
36172Relocate the first segment of the object file, which conventionally
36173contains program code, to a starting address of @var{xxx}. If
36174@samp{DataSeg} is specified, relocate the second segment, which
36175conventionally contains modifiable data, to a starting address of
36176@var{yyy}. @value{GDBN} will report an error if the object file
36177does not contain segment information, or does not contain at least
36178as many segments as mentioned in the reply. Extra segments are
36179kept at fixed offsets relative to the last relocated segment.
ee2d5c50
AC
36180@end table
36181
b90a069a 36182@item qP @var{mode} @var{thread-id}
9c16f35a 36183@cindex thread information, remote request
b8ff78ce 36184@cindex @samp{qP} packet
b90a069a
SL
36185Returns information on @var{thread-id}. Where: @var{mode} is a hex
36186encoded 32 bit mode; @var{thread-id} is a thread ID
36187(@pxref{thread-id syntax}).
ee2d5c50 36188
aa56d27a
JB
36189Don't use this packet; use the @samp{qThreadExtraInfo} query instead
36190(see below).
36191
b8ff78ce 36192Reply: see @code{remote.c:remote_unpack_thread_info_response()}.
c906108c 36193
8b23ecc4
SL
36194@item QNonStop:1
36195@item QNonStop:0
36196@cindex non-stop mode, remote request
36197@cindex @samp{QNonStop} packet
36198@anchor{QNonStop}
36199Enter non-stop (@samp{QNonStop:1}) or all-stop (@samp{QNonStop:0}) mode.
36200@xref{Remote Non-Stop}, for more information.
36201
36202Reply:
36203@table @samp
36204@item OK
36205The request succeeded.
36206
36207@item E @var{nn}
36208An error occurred. @var{nn} are hex digits.
36209
36210@item
36211An empty reply indicates that @samp{QNonStop} is not supported by
36212the stub.
36213@end table
36214
36215This packet is not probed by default; the remote stub must request it,
36216by supplying an appropriate @samp{qSupported} response (@pxref{qSupported}).
36217Use of this packet is controlled by the @code{set non-stop} command;
36218@pxref{Non-Stop Mode}.
36219
89be2091
DJ
36220@item QPassSignals: @var{signal} @r{[};@var{signal}@r{]}@dots{}
36221@cindex pass signals to inferior, remote request
36222@cindex @samp{QPassSignals} packet
23181151 36223@anchor{QPassSignals}
89be2091
DJ
36224Each listed @var{signal} should be passed directly to the inferior process.
36225Signals are numbered identically to continue packets and stop replies
36226(@pxref{Stop Reply Packets}). Each @var{signal} list item should be
36227strictly greater than the previous item. These signals do not need to stop
36228the inferior, or be reported to @value{GDBN}. All other signals should be
36229reported to @value{GDBN}. Multiple @samp{QPassSignals} packets do not
36230combine; any earlier @samp{QPassSignals} list is completely replaced by the
36231new list. This packet improves performance when using @samp{handle
36232@var{signal} nostop noprint pass}.
36233
36234Reply:
36235@table @samp
36236@item OK
36237The request succeeded.
36238
36239@item E @var{nn}
36240An error occurred. @var{nn} are hex digits.
36241
36242@item
36243An empty reply indicates that @samp{QPassSignals} is not supported by
36244the stub.
36245@end table
36246
36247Use of this packet is controlled by the @code{set remote pass-signals}
79a6e687 36248command (@pxref{Remote Configuration, set remote pass-signals}).
89be2091
DJ
36249This packet is not probed by default; the remote stub must request it,
36250by supplying an appropriate @samp{qSupported} response (@pxref{qSupported}).
36251
9b224c5e
PA
36252@item QProgramSignals: @var{signal} @r{[};@var{signal}@r{]}@dots{}
36253@cindex signals the inferior may see, remote request
36254@cindex @samp{QProgramSignals} packet
36255@anchor{QProgramSignals}
36256Each listed @var{signal} may be delivered to the inferior process.
36257Others should be silently discarded.
36258
36259In some cases, the remote stub may need to decide whether to deliver a
36260signal to the program or not without @value{GDBN} involvement. One
36261example of that is while detaching --- the program's threads may have
36262stopped for signals that haven't yet had a chance of being reported to
36263@value{GDBN}, and so the remote stub can use the signal list specified
36264by this packet to know whether to deliver or ignore those pending
36265signals.
36266
36267This does not influence whether to deliver a signal as requested by a
36268resumption packet (@pxref{vCont packet}).
36269
36270Signals are numbered identically to continue packets and stop replies
36271(@pxref{Stop Reply Packets}). Each @var{signal} list item should be
36272strictly greater than the previous item. Multiple
36273@samp{QProgramSignals} packets do not combine; any earlier
36274@samp{QProgramSignals} list is completely replaced by the new list.
36275
36276Reply:
36277@table @samp
36278@item OK
36279The request succeeded.
36280
36281@item E @var{nn}
36282An error occurred. @var{nn} are hex digits.
36283
36284@item
36285An empty reply indicates that @samp{QProgramSignals} is not supported
36286by the stub.
36287@end table
36288
36289Use of this packet is controlled by the @code{set remote program-signals}
36290command (@pxref{Remote Configuration, set remote program-signals}).
36291This packet is not probed by default; the remote stub must request it,
36292by supplying an appropriate @samp{qSupported} response (@pxref{qSupported}).
36293
b8ff78ce 36294@item qRcmd,@var{command}
ff2587ec 36295@cindex execute remote command, remote request
b8ff78ce 36296@cindex @samp{qRcmd} packet
ff2587ec 36297@var{command} (hex encoded) is passed to the local interpreter for
b8ff78ce
JB
36298execution. Invalid commands should be reported using the output
36299string. Before the final result packet, the target may also respond
36300with a number of intermediate @samp{O@var{output}} console output
36301packets. @emph{Implementors should note that providing access to a
36302stubs's interpreter may have security implications}.
fa93a9d8 36303
ff2587ec
WZ
36304Reply:
36305@table @samp
36306@item OK
36307A command response with no output.
36308@item @var{OUTPUT}
36309A command response with the hex encoded output string @var{OUTPUT}.
b8ff78ce 36310@item E @var{NN}
ff2587ec 36311Indicate a badly formed request.
b8ff78ce
JB
36312@item
36313An empty reply indicates that @samp{qRcmd} is not recognized.
ff2587ec 36314@end table
fa93a9d8 36315
aa56d27a
JB
36316(Note that the @code{qRcmd} packet's name is separated from the
36317command by a @samp{,}, not a @samp{:}, contrary to the naming
36318conventions above. Please don't use this packet as a model for new
36319packets.)
36320
08388c79
DE
36321@item qSearch:memory:@var{address};@var{length};@var{search-pattern}
36322@cindex searching memory, in remote debugging
36323@cindex @samp{qSearch:memory} packet
36324@anchor{qSearch memory}
36325Search @var{length} bytes at @var{address} for @var{search-pattern}.
36326@var{address} and @var{length} are encoded in hex.
36327@var{search-pattern} is a sequence of bytes, hex encoded.
36328
36329Reply:
36330@table @samp
36331@item 0
36332The pattern was not found.
36333@item 1,address
36334The pattern was found at @var{address}.
36335@item E @var{NN}
36336A badly formed request or an error was encountered while searching memory.
36337@item
36338An empty reply indicates that @samp{qSearch:memory} is not recognized.
36339@end table
36340
a6f3e723
SL
36341@item QStartNoAckMode
36342@cindex @samp{QStartNoAckMode} packet
36343@anchor{QStartNoAckMode}
36344Request that the remote stub disable the normal @samp{+}/@samp{-}
36345protocol acknowledgments (@pxref{Packet Acknowledgment}).
36346
36347Reply:
36348@table @samp
36349@item OK
36350The stub has switched to no-acknowledgment mode.
36351@value{GDBN} acknowledges this reponse,
36352but neither the stub nor @value{GDBN} shall send or expect further
36353@samp{+}/@samp{-} acknowledgments in the current connection.
36354@item
36355An empty reply indicates that the stub does not support no-acknowledgment mode.
36356@end table
36357
be2a5f71
DJ
36358@item qSupported @r{[}:@var{gdbfeature} @r{[};@var{gdbfeature}@r{]}@dots{} @r{]}
36359@cindex supported packets, remote query
36360@cindex features of the remote protocol
36361@cindex @samp{qSupported} packet
0876f84a 36362@anchor{qSupported}
be2a5f71
DJ
36363Tell the remote stub about features supported by @value{GDBN}, and
36364query the stub for features it supports. This packet allows
36365@value{GDBN} and the remote stub to take advantage of each others'
36366features. @samp{qSupported} also consolidates multiple feature probes
36367at startup, to improve @value{GDBN} performance---a single larger
36368packet performs better than multiple smaller probe packets on
36369high-latency links. Some features may enable behavior which must not
36370be on by default, e.g.@: because it would confuse older clients or
36371stubs. Other features may describe packets which could be
36372automatically probed for, but are not. These features must be
36373reported before @value{GDBN} will use them. This ``default
36374unsupported'' behavior is not appropriate for all packets, but it
36375helps to keep the initial connection time under control with new
36376versions of @value{GDBN} which support increasing numbers of packets.
36377
36378Reply:
36379@table @samp
36380@item @var{stubfeature} @r{[};@var{stubfeature}@r{]}@dots{}
36381The stub supports or does not support each returned @var{stubfeature},
36382depending on the form of each @var{stubfeature} (see below for the
36383possible forms).
36384@item
36385An empty reply indicates that @samp{qSupported} is not recognized,
36386or that no features needed to be reported to @value{GDBN}.
36387@end table
36388
36389The allowed forms for each feature (either a @var{gdbfeature} in the
36390@samp{qSupported} packet, or a @var{stubfeature} in the response)
36391are:
36392
36393@table @samp
36394@item @var{name}=@var{value}
36395The remote protocol feature @var{name} is supported, and associated
36396with the specified @var{value}. The format of @var{value} depends
36397on the feature, but it must not include a semicolon.
36398@item @var{name}+
36399The remote protocol feature @var{name} is supported, and does not
36400need an associated value.
36401@item @var{name}-
36402The remote protocol feature @var{name} is not supported.
36403@item @var{name}?
36404The remote protocol feature @var{name} may be supported, and
36405@value{GDBN} should auto-detect support in some other way when it is
36406needed. This form will not be used for @var{gdbfeature} notifications,
36407but may be used for @var{stubfeature} responses.
36408@end table
36409
36410Whenever the stub receives a @samp{qSupported} request, the
36411supplied set of @value{GDBN} features should override any previous
36412request. This allows @value{GDBN} to put the stub in a known
36413state, even if the stub had previously been communicating with
36414a different version of @value{GDBN}.
36415
b90a069a
SL
36416The following values of @var{gdbfeature} (for the packet sent by @value{GDBN})
36417are defined:
36418
36419@table @samp
36420@item multiprocess
36421This feature indicates whether @value{GDBN} supports multiprocess
36422extensions to the remote protocol. @value{GDBN} does not use such
36423extensions unless the stub also reports that it supports them by
36424including @samp{multiprocess+} in its @samp{qSupported} reply.
36425@xref{multiprocess extensions}, for details.
c8d5aac9
L
36426
36427@item xmlRegisters
36428This feature indicates that @value{GDBN} supports the XML target
36429description. If the stub sees @samp{xmlRegisters=} with target
36430specific strings separated by a comma, it will report register
36431description.
dde08ee1
PA
36432
36433@item qRelocInsn
36434This feature indicates whether @value{GDBN} supports the
36435@samp{qRelocInsn} packet (@pxref{Tracepoint Packets,,Relocate
36436instruction reply packet}).
b90a069a
SL
36437@end table
36438
36439Stubs should ignore any unknown values for
be2a5f71
DJ
36440@var{gdbfeature}. Any @value{GDBN} which sends a @samp{qSupported}
36441packet supports receiving packets of unlimited length (earlier
b90a069a 36442versions of @value{GDBN} may reject overly long responses). Additional values
be2a5f71
DJ
36443for @var{gdbfeature} may be defined in the future to let the stub take
36444advantage of new features in @value{GDBN}, e.g.@: incompatible
b90a069a
SL
36445improvements in the remote protocol---the @samp{multiprocess} feature is
36446an example of such a feature. The stub's reply should be independent
be2a5f71
DJ
36447of the @var{gdbfeature} entries sent by @value{GDBN}; first @value{GDBN}
36448describes all the features it supports, and then the stub replies with
36449all the features it supports.
36450
36451Similarly, @value{GDBN} will silently ignore unrecognized stub feature
36452responses, as long as each response uses one of the standard forms.
36453
36454Some features are flags. A stub which supports a flag feature
36455should respond with a @samp{+} form response. Other features
36456require values, and the stub should respond with an @samp{=}
36457form response.
36458
36459Each feature has a default value, which @value{GDBN} will use if
36460@samp{qSupported} is not available or if the feature is not mentioned
36461in the @samp{qSupported} response. The default values are fixed; a
36462stub is free to omit any feature responses that match the defaults.
36463
36464Not all features can be probed, but for those which can, the probing
36465mechanism is useful: in some cases, a stub's internal
36466architecture may not allow the protocol layer to know some information
36467about the underlying target in advance. This is especially common in
36468stubs which may be configured for multiple targets.
36469
36470These are the currently defined stub features and their properties:
36471
cfa9d6d9 36472@multitable @columnfractions 0.35 0.2 0.12 0.2
be2a5f71
DJ
36473@c NOTE: The first row should be @headitem, but we do not yet require
36474@c a new enough version of Texinfo (4.7) to use @headitem.
0876f84a 36475@item Feature Name
be2a5f71
DJ
36476@tab Value Required
36477@tab Default
36478@tab Probe Allowed
36479
36480@item @samp{PacketSize}
36481@tab Yes
36482@tab @samp{-}
36483@tab No
36484
0876f84a
DJ
36485@item @samp{qXfer:auxv:read}
36486@tab No
36487@tab @samp{-}
36488@tab Yes
36489
23181151
DJ
36490@item @samp{qXfer:features:read}
36491@tab No
36492@tab @samp{-}
36493@tab Yes
36494
cfa9d6d9
DJ
36495@item @samp{qXfer:libraries:read}
36496@tab No
36497@tab @samp{-}
36498@tab Yes
36499
68437a39
DJ
36500@item @samp{qXfer:memory-map:read}
36501@tab No
36502@tab @samp{-}
36503@tab Yes
36504
0fb4aa4b
PA
36505@item @samp{qXfer:sdata:read}
36506@tab No
36507@tab @samp{-}
36508@tab Yes
36509
0e7f50da
UW
36510@item @samp{qXfer:spu:read}
36511@tab No
36512@tab @samp{-}
36513@tab Yes
36514
36515@item @samp{qXfer:spu:write}
36516@tab No
36517@tab @samp{-}
36518@tab Yes
36519
4aa995e1
PA
36520@item @samp{qXfer:siginfo:read}
36521@tab No
36522@tab @samp{-}
36523@tab Yes
36524
36525@item @samp{qXfer:siginfo:write}
36526@tab No
36527@tab @samp{-}
36528@tab Yes
36529
dc146f7c
VP
36530@item @samp{qXfer:threads:read}
36531@tab No
36532@tab @samp{-}
36533@tab Yes
36534
b3b9301e
PA
36535@item @samp{qXfer:traceframe-info:read}
36536@tab No
36537@tab @samp{-}
36538@tab Yes
36539
169081d0
TG
36540@item @samp{qXfer:uib:read}
36541@tab No
36542@tab @samp{-}
36543@tab Yes
36544
78d85199
YQ
36545@item @samp{qXfer:fdpic:read}
36546@tab No
36547@tab @samp{-}
36548@tab Yes
dc146f7c 36549
8b23ecc4
SL
36550@item @samp{QNonStop}
36551@tab No
36552@tab @samp{-}
36553@tab Yes
36554
89be2091
DJ
36555@item @samp{QPassSignals}
36556@tab No
36557@tab @samp{-}
36558@tab Yes
36559
a6f3e723
SL
36560@item @samp{QStartNoAckMode}
36561@tab No
36562@tab @samp{-}
36563@tab Yes
36564
b90a069a
SL
36565@item @samp{multiprocess}
36566@tab No
36567@tab @samp{-}
36568@tab No
36569
83364271
LM
36570@item @samp{ConditionalBreakpoints}
36571@tab No
36572@tab @samp{-}
36573@tab No
36574
782b2b07
SS
36575@item @samp{ConditionalTracepoints}
36576@tab No
36577@tab @samp{-}
36578@tab No
36579
0d772ac9
MS
36580@item @samp{ReverseContinue}
36581@tab No
2f8132f3 36582@tab @samp{-}
0d772ac9
MS
36583@tab No
36584
36585@item @samp{ReverseStep}
36586@tab No
2f8132f3 36587@tab @samp{-}
0d772ac9
MS
36588@tab No
36589
409873ef
SS
36590@item @samp{TracepointSource}
36591@tab No
36592@tab @samp{-}
36593@tab No
36594
d1feda86
YQ
36595@item @samp{QAgent}
36596@tab No
36597@tab @samp{-}
36598@tab No
36599
d914c394
SS
36600@item @samp{QAllow}
36601@tab No
36602@tab @samp{-}
36603@tab No
36604
03583c20
UW
36605@item @samp{QDisableRandomization}
36606@tab No
36607@tab @samp{-}
36608@tab No
36609
d248b706
KY
36610@item @samp{EnableDisableTracepoints}
36611@tab No
36612@tab @samp{-}
36613@tab No
36614
3065dfb6
SS
36615@item @samp{tracenz}
36616@tab No
36617@tab @samp{-}
36618@tab No
36619
be2a5f71
DJ
36620@end multitable
36621
36622These are the currently defined stub features, in more detail:
36623
36624@table @samp
36625@cindex packet size, remote protocol
36626@item PacketSize=@var{bytes}
36627The remote stub can accept packets up to at least @var{bytes} in
36628length. @value{GDBN} will send packets up to this size for bulk
36629transfers, and will never send larger packets. This is a limit on the
36630data characters in the packet, including the frame and checksum.
36631There is no trailing NUL byte in a remote protocol packet; if the stub
36632stores packets in a NUL-terminated format, it should allow an extra
36633byte in its buffer for the NUL. If this stub feature is not supported,
36634@value{GDBN} guesses based on the size of the @samp{g} packet response.
36635
0876f84a
DJ
36636@item qXfer:auxv:read
36637The remote stub understands the @samp{qXfer:auxv:read} packet
36638(@pxref{qXfer auxiliary vector read}).
36639
23181151
DJ
36640@item qXfer:features:read
36641The remote stub understands the @samp{qXfer:features:read} packet
36642(@pxref{qXfer target description read}).
36643
cfa9d6d9
DJ
36644@item qXfer:libraries:read
36645The remote stub understands the @samp{qXfer:libraries:read} packet
36646(@pxref{qXfer library list read}).
36647
2268b414
JK
36648@item qXfer:libraries-svr4:read
36649The remote stub understands the @samp{qXfer:libraries-svr4:read} packet
36650(@pxref{qXfer svr4 library list read}).
36651
23181151
DJ
36652@item qXfer:memory-map:read
36653The remote stub understands the @samp{qXfer:memory-map:read} packet
36654(@pxref{qXfer memory map read}).
36655
0fb4aa4b
PA
36656@item qXfer:sdata:read
36657The remote stub understands the @samp{qXfer:sdata:read} packet
36658(@pxref{qXfer sdata read}).
36659
0e7f50da
UW
36660@item qXfer:spu:read
36661The remote stub understands the @samp{qXfer:spu:read} packet
36662(@pxref{qXfer spu read}).
36663
36664@item qXfer:spu:write
36665The remote stub understands the @samp{qXfer:spu:write} packet
36666(@pxref{qXfer spu write}).
36667
4aa995e1
PA
36668@item qXfer:siginfo:read
36669The remote stub understands the @samp{qXfer:siginfo:read} packet
36670(@pxref{qXfer siginfo read}).
36671
36672@item qXfer:siginfo:write
36673The remote stub understands the @samp{qXfer:siginfo:write} packet
36674(@pxref{qXfer siginfo write}).
36675
dc146f7c
VP
36676@item qXfer:threads:read
36677The remote stub understands the @samp{qXfer:threads:read} packet
36678(@pxref{qXfer threads read}).
36679
b3b9301e
PA
36680@item qXfer:traceframe-info:read
36681The remote stub understands the @samp{qXfer:traceframe-info:read}
36682packet (@pxref{qXfer traceframe info read}).
36683
169081d0
TG
36684@item qXfer:uib:read
36685The remote stub understands the @samp{qXfer:uib:read}
36686packet (@pxref{qXfer unwind info block}).
36687
78d85199
YQ
36688@item qXfer:fdpic:read
36689The remote stub understands the @samp{qXfer:fdpic:read}
36690packet (@pxref{qXfer fdpic loadmap read}).
36691
8b23ecc4
SL
36692@item QNonStop
36693The remote stub understands the @samp{QNonStop} packet
36694(@pxref{QNonStop}).
36695
23181151
DJ
36696@item QPassSignals
36697The remote stub understands the @samp{QPassSignals} packet
36698(@pxref{QPassSignals}).
36699
a6f3e723
SL
36700@item QStartNoAckMode
36701The remote stub understands the @samp{QStartNoAckMode} packet and
36702prefers to operate in no-acknowledgment mode. @xref{Packet Acknowledgment}.
36703
b90a069a
SL
36704@item multiprocess
36705@anchor{multiprocess extensions}
36706@cindex multiprocess extensions, in remote protocol
36707The remote stub understands the multiprocess extensions to the remote
36708protocol syntax. The multiprocess extensions affect the syntax of
36709thread IDs in both packets and replies (@pxref{thread-id syntax}), and
36710add process IDs to the @samp{D} packet and @samp{W} and @samp{X}
36711replies. Note that reporting this feature indicates support for the
36712syntactic extensions only, not that the stub necessarily supports
36713debugging of more than one process at a time. The stub must not use
36714multiprocess extensions in packet replies unless @value{GDBN} has also
36715indicated it supports them in its @samp{qSupported} request.
36716
07e059b5
VP
36717@item qXfer:osdata:read
36718The remote stub understands the @samp{qXfer:osdata:read} packet
36719((@pxref{qXfer osdata read}).
36720
83364271
LM
36721@item ConditionalBreakpoints
36722The target accepts and implements evaluation of conditional expressions
36723defined for breakpoints. The target will only report breakpoint triggers
36724when such conditions are true (@pxref{Conditions, ,Break Conditions}).
36725
782b2b07
SS
36726@item ConditionalTracepoints
36727The remote stub accepts and implements conditional expressions defined
36728for tracepoints (@pxref{Tracepoint Conditions}).
36729
0d772ac9
MS
36730@item ReverseContinue
36731The remote stub accepts and implements the reverse continue packet
36732(@pxref{bc}).
36733
36734@item ReverseStep
36735The remote stub accepts and implements the reverse step packet
36736(@pxref{bs}).
36737
409873ef
SS
36738@item TracepointSource
36739The remote stub understands the @samp{QTDPsrc} packet that supplies
36740the source form of tracepoint definitions.
36741
d1feda86
YQ
36742@item QAgent
36743The remote stub understands the @samp{QAgent} packet.
36744
d914c394
SS
36745@item QAllow
36746The remote stub understands the @samp{QAllow} packet.
36747
03583c20
UW
36748@item QDisableRandomization
36749The remote stub understands the @samp{QDisableRandomization} packet.
36750
0fb4aa4b
PA
36751@item StaticTracepoint
36752@cindex static tracepoints, in remote protocol
36753The remote stub supports static tracepoints.
36754
1e4d1764
YQ
36755@item InstallInTrace
36756@anchor{install tracepoint in tracing}
36757The remote stub supports installing tracepoint in tracing.
36758
d248b706
KY
36759@item EnableDisableTracepoints
36760The remote stub supports the @samp{QTEnable} (@pxref{QTEnable}) and
36761@samp{QTDisable} (@pxref{QTDisable}) packets that allow tracepoints
36762to be enabled and disabled while a trace experiment is running.
36763
3065dfb6
SS
36764@item tracenz
36765@cindex string tracing, in remote protocol
36766The remote stub supports the @samp{tracenz} bytecode for collecting strings.
36767See @ref{Bytecode Descriptions} for details about the bytecode.
36768
be2a5f71
DJ
36769@end table
36770
b8ff78ce 36771@item qSymbol::
ff2587ec 36772@cindex symbol lookup, remote request
b8ff78ce 36773@cindex @samp{qSymbol} packet
ff2587ec
WZ
36774Notify the target that @value{GDBN} is prepared to serve symbol lookup
36775requests. Accept requests from the target for the values of symbols.
fa93a9d8
JB
36776
36777Reply:
ff2587ec 36778@table @samp
b8ff78ce 36779@item OK
ff2587ec 36780The target does not need to look up any (more) symbols.
b8ff78ce 36781@item qSymbol:@var{sym_name}
ff2587ec
WZ
36782The target requests the value of symbol @var{sym_name} (hex encoded).
36783@value{GDBN} may provide the value by using the
b8ff78ce
JB
36784@samp{qSymbol:@var{sym_value}:@var{sym_name}} message, described
36785below.
ff2587ec 36786@end table
83761cbd 36787
b8ff78ce 36788@item qSymbol:@var{sym_value}:@var{sym_name}
ff2587ec
WZ
36789Set the value of @var{sym_name} to @var{sym_value}.
36790
36791@var{sym_name} (hex encoded) is the name of a symbol whose value the
36792target has previously requested.
36793
36794@var{sym_value} (hex) is the value for symbol @var{sym_name}. If
36795@value{GDBN} cannot supply a value for @var{sym_name}, then this field
36796will be empty.
36797
36798Reply:
36799@table @samp
b8ff78ce 36800@item OK
ff2587ec 36801The target does not need to look up any (more) symbols.
b8ff78ce 36802@item qSymbol:@var{sym_name}
ff2587ec
WZ
36803The target requests the value of a new symbol @var{sym_name} (hex
36804encoded). @value{GDBN} will continue to supply the values of symbols
36805(if available), until the target ceases to request them.
fa93a9d8 36806@end table
0abb7bc7 36807
00bf0b85 36808@item qTBuffer
4daf5ac0 36809@item QTBuffer
d5551862
SS
36810@item QTDisconnected
36811@itemx QTDP
409873ef 36812@itemx QTDPsrc
d5551862 36813@itemx QTDV
00bf0b85
SS
36814@itemx qTfP
36815@itemx qTfV
9d29849a 36816@itemx QTFrame
405f8e94
SS
36817@itemx qTMinFTPILen
36818
9d29849a
JB
36819@xref{Tracepoint Packets}.
36820
b90a069a 36821@item qThreadExtraInfo,@var{thread-id}
ff2587ec 36822@cindex thread attributes info, remote request
b8ff78ce
JB
36823@cindex @samp{qThreadExtraInfo} packet
36824Obtain a printable string description of a thread's attributes from
b90a069a
SL
36825the target OS. @var{thread-id} is a thread ID;
36826see @ref{thread-id syntax}. This
b8ff78ce
JB
36827string may contain anything that the target OS thinks is interesting
36828for @value{GDBN} to tell the user about the thread. The string is
36829displayed in @value{GDBN}'s @code{info threads} display. Some
36830examples of possible thread extra info strings are @samp{Runnable}, or
36831@samp{Blocked on Mutex}.
ff2587ec
WZ
36832
36833Reply:
36834@table @samp
b8ff78ce
JB
36835@item @var{XX}@dots{}
36836Where @samp{@var{XX}@dots{}} is a hex encoding of @sc{ascii} data,
36837comprising the printable string containing the extra information about
36838the thread's attributes.
ff2587ec 36839@end table
814e32d7 36840
aa56d27a
JB
36841(Note that the @code{qThreadExtraInfo} packet's name is separated from
36842the command by a @samp{,}, not a @samp{:}, contrary to the naming
36843conventions above. Please don't use this packet as a model for new
36844packets.)
36845
f196051f
SS
36846@item QTNotes
36847@item qTP
00bf0b85
SS
36848@item QTSave
36849@item qTsP
36850@item qTsV
d5551862 36851@itemx QTStart
9d29849a 36852@itemx QTStop
d248b706
KY
36853@itemx QTEnable
36854@itemx QTDisable
9d29849a
JB
36855@itemx QTinit
36856@itemx QTro
36857@itemx qTStatus
d5551862 36858@itemx qTV
0fb4aa4b
PA
36859@itemx qTfSTM
36860@itemx qTsSTM
36861@itemx qTSTMat
9d29849a
JB
36862@xref{Tracepoint Packets}.
36863
0876f84a
DJ
36864@item qXfer:@var{object}:read:@var{annex}:@var{offset},@var{length}
36865@cindex read special object, remote request
36866@cindex @samp{qXfer} packet
68437a39 36867@anchor{qXfer read}
0876f84a
DJ
36868Read uninterpreted bytes from the target's special data area
36869identified by the keyword @var{object}. Request @var{length} bytes
36870starting at @var{offset} bytes into the data. The content and
0e7f50da 36871encoding of @var{annex} is specific to @var{object}; it can supply
0876f84a
DJ
36872additional details about what data to access.
36873
36874Here are the specific requests of this form defined so far. All
36875@samp{qXfer:@var{object}:read:@dots{}} requests use the same reply
36876formats, listed below.
36877
36878@table @samp
36879@item qXfer:auxv:read::@var{offset},@var{length}
36880@anchor{qXfer auxiliary vector read}
36881Access the target's @dfn{auxiliary vector}. @xref{OS Information,
427c3a89 36882auxiliary vector}. Note @var{annex} must be empty.
0876f84a
DJ
36883
36884This packet is not probed by default; the remote stub must request it,
89be2091 36885by supplying an appropriate @samp{qSupported} response (@pxref{qSupported}).
0876f84a 36886
23181151
DJ
36887@item qXfer:features:read:@var{annex}:@var{offset},@var{length}
36888@anchor{qXfer target description read}
36889Access the @dfn{target description}. @xref{Target Descriptions}. The
36890annex specifies which XML document to access. The main description is
36891always loaded from the @samp{target.xml} annex.
36892
36893This packet is not probed by default; the remote stub must request it,
36894by supplying an appropriate @samp{qSupported} response (@pxref{qSupported}).
36895
cfa9d6d9
DJ
36896@item qXfer:libraries:read:@var{annex}:@var{offset},@var{length}
36897@anchor{qXfer library list read}
36898Access the target's list of loaded libraries. @xref{Library List Format}.
36899The annex part of the generic @samp{qXfer} packet must be empty
36900(@pxref{qXfer read}).
36901
36902Targets which maintain a list of libraries in the program's memory do
36903not need to implement this packet; it is designed for platforms where
36904the operating system manages the list of loaded libraries.
36905
36906This packet is not probed by default; the remote stub must request it,
36907by supplying an appropriate @samp{qSupported} response (@pxref{qSupported}).
36908
2268b414
JK
36909@item qXfer:libraries-svr4:read:@var{annex}:@var{offset},@var{length}
36910@anchor{qXfer svr4 library list read}
36911Access the target's list of loaded libraries when the target is an SVR4
36912platform. @xref{Library List Format for SVR4 Targets}. The annex part
36913of the generic @samp{qXfer} packet must be empty (@pxref{qXfer read}).
36914
36915This packet is optional for better performance on SVR4 targets.
36916@value{GDBN} uses memory read packets to read the SVR4 library list otherwise.
36917
36918This packet is not probed by default; the remote stub must request it,
36919by supplying an appropriate @samp{qSupported} response (@pxref{qSupported}).
36920
68437a39
DJ
36921@item qXfer:memory-map:read::@var{offset},@var{length}
36922@anchor{qXfer memory map read}
79a6e687 36923Access the target's @dfn{memory-map}. @xref{Memory Map Format}. The
68437a39
DJ
36924annex part of the generic @samp{qXfer} packet must be empty
36925(@pxref{qXfer read}).
36926
0e7f50da
UW
36927This packet is not probed by default; the remote stub must request it,
36928by supplying an appropriate @samp{qSupported} response (@pxref{qSupported}).
36929
0fb4aa4b
PA
36930@item qXfer:sdata:read::@var{offset},@var{length}
36931@anchor{qXfer sdata read}
36932
36933Read contents of the extra collected static tracepoint marker
36934information. The annex part of the generic @samp{qXfer} packet must
36935be empty (@pxref{qXfer read}). @xref{Tracepoint Actions,,Tracepoint
36936Action Lists}.
36937
36938This packet is not probed by default; the remote stub must request it,
36939by supplying an appropriate @samp{qSupported} response
36940(@pxref{qSupported}).
36941
4aa995e1
PA
36942@item qXfer:siginfo:read::@var{offset},@var{length}
36943@anchor{qXfer siginfo read}
36944Read contents of the extra signal information on the target
36945system. The annex part of the generic @samp{qXfer} packet must be
36946empty (@pxref{qXfer read}).
36947
36948This packet is not probed by default; the remote stub must request it,
36949by supplying an appropriate @samp{qSupported} response
36950(@pxref{qSupported}).
36951
0e7f50da
UW
36952@item qXfer:spu:read:@var{annex}:@var{offset},@var{length}
36953@anchor{qXfer spu read}
36954Read contents of an @code{spufs} file on the target system. The
36955annex specifies which file to read; it must be of the form
36956@file{@var{id}/@var{name}}, where @var{id} specifies an SPU context ID
36957in the target process, and @var{name} identifes the @code{spufs} file
36958in that context to be accessed.
36959
68437a39 36960This packet is not probed by default; the remote stub must request it,
07e059b5
VP
36961by supplying an appropriate @samp{qSupported} response
36962(@pxref{qSupported}).
36963
dc146f7c
VP
36964@item qXfer:threads:read::@var{offset},@var{length}
36965@anchor{qXfer threads read}
36966Access the list of threads on target. @xref{Thread List Format}. The
36967annex part of the generic @samp{qXfer} packet must be empty
36968(@pxref{qXfer read}).
36969
36970This packet is not probed by default; the remote stub must request it,
36971by supplying an appropriate @samp{qSupported} response (@pxref{qSupported}).
36972
b3b9301e
PA
36973@item qXfer:traceframe-info:read::@var{offset},@var{length}
36974@anchor{qXfer traceframe info read}
36975
36976Return a description of the current traceframe's contents.
36977@xref{Traceframe Info Format}. The annex part of the generic
36978@samp{qXfer} packet must be empty (@pxref{qXfer read}).
36979
36980This packet is not probed by default; the remote stub must request it,
36981by supplying an appropriate @samp{qSupported} response (@pxref{qSupported}).
36982
169081d0
TG
36983@item qXfer:uib:read:@var{pc}:@var{offset},@var{length}
36984@anchor{qXfer unwind info block}
36985
36986Return the unwind information block for @var{pc}. This packet is used
36987on OpenVMS/ia64 to ask the kernel unwind information.
36988
36989This packet is not probed by default.
36990
78d85199
YQ
36991@item qXfer:fdpic:read:@var{annex}:@var{offset},@var{length}
36992@anchor{qXfer fdpic loadmap read}
36993Read contents of @code{loadmap}s on the target system. The
36994annex, either @samp{exec} or @samp{interp}, specifies which @code{loadmap},
36995executable @code{loadmap} or interpreter @code{loadmap} to read.
36996
36997This packet is not probed by default; the remote stub must request it,
36998by supplying an appropriate @samp{qSupported} response (@pxref{qSupported}).
36999
07e059b5
VP
37000@item qXfer:osdata:read::@var{offset},@var{length}
37001@anchor{qXfer osdata read}
37002Access the target's @dfn{operating system information}.
37003@xref{Operating System Information}.
37004
68437a39
DJ
37005@end table
37006
0876f84a
DJ
37007Reply:
37008@table @samp
37009@item m @var{data}
37010Data @var{data} (@pxref{Binary Data}) has been read from the
37011target. There may be more data at a higher address (although
37012it is permitted to return @samp{m} even for the last valid
37013block of data, as long as at least one byte of data was read).
37014@var{data} may have fewer bytes than the @var{length} in the
37015request.
37016
37017@item l @var{data}
37018Data @var{data} (@pxref{Binary Data}) has been read from the target.
37019There is no more data to be read. @var{data} may have fewer bytes
37020than the @var{length} in the request.
37021
37022@item l
37023The @var{offset} in the request is at the end of the data.
37024There is no more data to be read.
37025
37026@item E00
37027The request was malformed, or @var{annex} was invalid.
37028
37029@item E @var{nn}
37030The offset was invalid, or there was an error encountered reading the data.
37031@var{nn} is a hex-encoded @code{errno} value.
37032
37033@item
37034An empty reply indicates the @var{object} string was not recognized by
37035the stub, or that the object does not support reading.
37036@end table
37037
37038@item qXfer:@var{object}:write:@var{annex}:@var{offset}:@var{data}@dots{}
37039@cindex write data into object, remote request
4aa995e1 37040@anchor{qXfer write}
0876f84a
DJ
37041Write uninterpreted bytes into the target's special data area
37042identified by the keyword @var{object}, starting at @var{offset} bytes
0e7f50da 37043into the data. @var{data}@dots{} is the binary-encoded data
0876f84a 37044(@pxref{Binary Data}) to be written. The content and encoding of @var{annex}
0e7f50da 37045is specific to @var{object}; it can supply additional details about what data
0876f84a
DJ
37046to access.
37047
0e7f50da
UW
37048Here are the specific requests of this form defined so far. All
37049@samp{qXfer:@var{object}:write:@dots{}} requests use the same reply
37050formats, listed below.
37051
37052@table @samp
4aa995e1
PA
37053@item qXfer:siginfo:write::@var{offset}:@var{data}@dots{}
37054@anchor{qXfer siginfo write}
37055Write @var{data} to the extra signal information on the target system.
37056The annex part of the generic @samp{qXfer} packet must be
37057empty (@pxref{qXfer write}).
37058
37059This packet is not probed by default; the remote stub must request it,
37060by supplying an appropriate @samp{qSupported} response
37061(@pxref{qSupported}).
37062
84fcdf95 37063@item qXfer:spu:write:@var{annex}:@var{offset}:@var{data}@dots{}
0e7f50da
UW
37064@anchor{qXfer spu write}
37065Write @var{data} to an @code{spufs} file on the target system. The
37066annex specifies which file to write; it must be of the form
37067@file{@var{id}/@var{name}}, where @var{id} specifies an SPU context ID
37068in the target process, and @var{name} identifes the @code{spufs} file
37069in that context to be accessed.
37070
37071This packet is not probed by default; the remote stub must request it,
37072by supplying an appropriate @samp{qSupported} response (@pxref{qSupported}).
37073@end table
0876f84a
DJ
37074
37075Reply:
37076@table @samp
37077@item @var{nn}
37078@var{nn} (hex encoded) is the number of bytes written.
37079This may be fewer bytes than supplied in the request.
37080
37081@item E00
37082The request was malformed, or @var{annex} was invalid.
37083
37084@item E @var{nn}
37085The offset was invalid, or there was an error encountered writing the data.
37086@var{nn} is a hex-encoded @code{errno} value.
37087
37088@item
37089An empty reply indicates the @var{object} string was not
37090recognized by the stub, or that the object does not support writing.
37091@end table
37092
37093@item qXfer:@var{object}:@var{operation}:@dots{}
37094Requests of this form may be added in the future. When a stub does
37095not recognize the @var{object} keyword, or its support for
37096@var{object} does not recognize the @var{operation} keyword, the stub
37097must respond with an empty packet.
37098
0b16c5cf
PA
37099@item qAttached:@var{pid}
37100@cindex query attached, remote request
37101@cindex @samp{qAttached} packet
37102Return an indication of whether the remote server attached to an
37103existing process or created a new process. When the multiprocess
37104protocol extensions are supported (@pxref{multiprocess extensions}),
37105@var{pid} is an integer in hexadecimal format identifying the target
37106process. Otherwise, @value{GDBN} will omit the @var{pid} field and
37107the query packet will be simplified as @samp{qAttached}.
37108
37109This query is used, for example, to know whether the remote process
37110should be detached or killed when a @value{GDBN} session is ended with
37111the @code{quit} command.
37112
37113Reply:
37114@table @samp
37115@item 1
37116The remote server attached to an existing process.
37117@item 0
37118The remote server created a new process.
37119@item E @var{NN}
37120A badly formed request or an error was encountered.
37121@end table
37122
ee2d5c50
AC
37123@end table
37124
a1dcb23a
DJ
37125@node Architecture-Specific Protocol Details
37126@section Architecture-Specific Protocol Details
37127
37128This section describes how the remote protocol is applied to specific
37129target architectures. Also see @ref{Standard Target Features}, for
37130details of XML target descriptions for each architecture.
37131
02b67415
MR
37132@menu
37133* ARM-Specific Protocol Details::
37134* MIPS-Specific Protocol Details::
37135@end menu
37136
37137@node ARM-Specific Protocol Details
37138@subsection @acronym{ARM}-specific Protocol Details
37139
37140@menu
37141* ARM Breakpoint Kinds::
37142@end menu
a1dcb23a 37143
02b67415
MR
37144@node ARM Breakpoint Kinds
37145@subsubsection @acronym{ARM} Breakpoint Kinds
37146@cindex breakpoint kinds, @acronym{ARM}
a1dcb23a
DJ
37147
37148These breakpoint kinds are defined for the @samp{Z0} and @samp{Z1} packets.
37149
37150@table @r
37151
37152@item 2
3715316-bit Thumb mode breakpoint.
37154
37155@item 3
3715632-bit Thumb mode (Thumb-2) breakpoint.
37157
37158@item 4
02b67415 3715932-bit @acronym{ARM} mode breakpoint.
a1dcb23a
DJ
37160
37161@end table
37162
02b67415
MR
37163@node MIPS-Specific Protocol Details
37164@subsection @acronym{MIPS}-specific Protocol Details
37165
37166@menu
37167* MIPS Register packet Format::
4cc0665f 37168* MIPS Breakpoint Kinds::
02b67415 37169@end menu
a1dcb23a 37170
02b67415
MR
37171@node MIPS Register packet Format
37172@subsubsection @acronym{MIPS} Register Packet Format
eb17f351 37173@cindex register packet format, @acronym{MIPS}
eb12ee30 37174
b8ff78ce 37175The following @code{g}/@code{G} packets have previously been defined.
ee2d5c50
AC
37176In the below, some thirty-two bit registers are transferred as
37177sixty-four bits. Those registers should be zero/sign extended (which?)
599b237a
BW
37178to fill the space allocated. Register bytes are transferred in target
37179byte order. The two nibbles within a register byte are transferred
02b67415 37180most-significant -- least-significant.
eb12ee30 37181
ee2d5c50 37182@table @r
eb12ee30 37183
8e04817f 37184@item MIPS32
599b237a 37185All registers are transferred as thirty-two bit quantities in the order:
8e04817f
AC
3718632 general-purpose; sr; lo; hi; bad; cause; pc; 32 floating-point
37187registers; fsr; fir; fp.
eb12ee30 37188
8e04817f 37189@item MIPS64
599b237a 37190All registers are transferred as sixty-four bit quantities (including
8e04817f
AC
37191thirty-two bit registers such as @code{sr}). The ordering is the same
37192as @code{MIPS32}.
eb12ee30 37193
ee2d5c50
AC
37194@end table
37195
4cc0665f
MR
37196@node MIPS Breakpoint Kinds
37197@subsubsection @acronym{MIPS} Breakpoint Kinds
37198@cindex breakpoint kinds, @acronym{MIPS}
37199
37200These breakpoint kinds are defined for the @samp{Z0} and @samp{Z1} packets.
37201
37202@table @r
37203
37204@item 2
3720516-bit @acronym{MIPS16} mode breakpoint.
37206
37207@item 3
3720816-bit @acronym{microMIPS} mode breakpoint.
37209
37210@item 4
3721132-bit standard @acronym{MIPS} mode breakpoint.
37212
37213@item 5
3721432-bit @acronym{microMIPS} mode breakpoint.
37215
37216@end table
37217
9d29849a
JB
37218@node Tracepoint Packets
37219@section Tracepoint Packets
37220@cindex tracepoint packets
37221@cindex packets, tracepoint
37222
37223Here we describe the packets @value{GDBN} uses to implement
37224tracepoints (@pxref{Tracepoints}).
37225
37226@table @samp
37227
7a697b8d 37228@item QTDP:@var{n}:@var{addr}:@var{ena}:@var{step}:@var{pass}[:F@var{flen}][:X@var{len},@var{bytes}]@r{[}-@r{]}
c614397c 37229@cindex @samp{QTDP} packet
9d29849a
JB
37230Create a new tracepoint, number @var{n}, at @var{addr}. If @var{ena}
37231is @samp{E}, then the tracepoint is enabled; if it is @samp{D}, then
37232the tracepoint is disabled. @var{step} is the tracepoint's step
7a697b8d
SS
37233count, and @var{pass} is its pass count. If an @samp{F} is present,
37234then the tracepoint is to be a fast tracepoint, and the @var{flen} is
37235the number of bytes that the target should copy elsewhere to make room
37236for the tracepoint. If an @samp{X} is present, it introduces a
37237tracepoint condition, which consists of a hexadecimal length, followed
37238by a comma and hex-encoded bytes, in a manner similar to action
37239encodings as described below. If the trailing @samp{-} is present,
37240further @samp{QTDP} packets will follow to specify this tracepoint's
37241actions.
9d29849a
JB
37242
37243Replies:
37244@table @samp
37245@item OK
37246The packet was understood and carried out.
dde08ee1
PA
37247@item qRelocInsn
37248@xref{Tracepoint Packets,,Relocate instruction reply packet}.
9d29849a
JB
37249@item
37250The packet was not recognized.
37251@end table
37252
37253@item QTDP:-@var{n}:@var{addr}:@r{[}S@r{]}@var{action}@dots{}@r{[}-@r{]}
37254Define actions to be taken when a tracepoint is hit. @var{n} and
37255@var{addr} must be the same as in the initial @samp{QTDP} packet for
37256this tracepoint. This packet may only be sent immediately after
37257another @samp{QTDP} packet that ended with a @samp{-}. If the
37258trailing @samp{-} is present, further @samp{QTDP} packets will follow,
37259specifying more actions for this tracepoint.
37260
37261In the series of action packets for a given tracepoint, at most one
37262can have an @samp{S} before its first @var{action}. If such a packet
37263is sent, it and the following packets define ``while-stepping''
37264actions. Any prior packets define ordinary actions --- that is, those
37265taken when the tracepoint is first hit. If no action packet has an
37266@samp{S}, then all the packets in the series specify ordinary
37267tracepoint actions.
37268
37269The @samp{@var{action}@dots{}} portion of the packet is a series of
37270actions, concatenated without separators. Each action has one of the
37271following forms:
37272
37273@table @samp
37274
37275@item R @var{mask}
37276Collect the registers whose bits are set in @var{mask}. @var{mask} is
599b237a 37277a hexadecimal number whose @var{i}'th bit is set if register number
9d29849a
JB
37278@var{i} should be collected. (The least significant bit is numbered
37279zero.) Note that @var{mask} may be any number of digits long; it may
37280not fit in a 32-bit word.
37281
37282@item M @var{basereg},@var{offset},@var{len}
37283Collect @var{len} bytes of memory starting at the address in register
37284number @var{basereg}, plus @var{offset}. If @var{basereg} is
37285@samp{-1}, then the range has a fixed address: @var{offset} is the
37286address of the lowest byte to collect. The @var{basereg},
599b237a 37287@var{offset}, and @var{len} parameters are all unsigned hexadecimal
9d29849a
JB
37288values (the @samp{-1} value for @var{basereg} is a special case).
37289
37290@item X @var{len},@var{expr}
37291Evaluate @var{expr}, whose length is @var{len}, and collect memory as
37292it directs. @var{expr} is an agent expression, as described in
37293@ref{Agent Expressions}. Each byte of the expression is encoded as a
37294two-digit hex number in the packet; @var{len} is the number of bytes
37295in the expression (and thus one-half the number of hex digits in the
37296packet).
37297
37298@end table
37299
37300Any number of actions may be packed together in a single @samp{QTDP}
37301packet, as long as the packet does not exceed the maximum packet
c1947b85
JB
37302length (400 bytes, for many stubs). There may be only one @samp{R}
37303action per tracepoint, and it must precede any @samp{M} or @samp{X}
37304actions. Any registers referred to by @samp{M} and @samp{X} actions
37305must be collected by a preceding @samp{R} action. (The
37306``while-stepping'' actions are treated as if they were attached to a
37307separate tracepoint, as far as these restrictions are concerned.)
9d29849a
JB
37308
37309Replies:
37310@table @samp
37311@item OK
37312The packet was understood and carried out.
dde08ee1
PA
37313@item qRelocInsn
37314@xref{Tracepoint Packets,,Relocate instruction reply packet}.
9d29849a
JB
37315@item
37316The packet was not recognized.
37317@end table
37318
409873ef
SS
37319@item QTDPsrc:@var{n}:@var{addr}:@var{type}:@var{start}:@var{slen}:@var{bytes}
37320@cindex @samp{QTDPsrc} packet
37321Specify a source string of tracepoint @var{n} at address @var{addr}.
37322This is useful to get accurate reproduction of the tracepoints
37323originally downloaded at the beginning of the trace run. @var{type}
37324is the name of the tracepoint part, such as @samp{cond} for the
37325tracepoint's conditional expression (see below for a list of types), while
37326@var{bytes} is the string, encoded in hexadecimal.
37327
37328@var{start} is the offset of the @var{bytes} within the overall source
37329string, while @var{slen} is the total length of the source string.
37330This is intended for handling source strings that are longer than will
37331fit in a single packet.
37332@c Add detailed example when this info is moved into a dedicated
37333@c tracepoint descriptions section.
37334
37335The available string types are @samp{at} for the location,
37336@samp{cond} for the conditional, and @samp{cmd} for an action command.
37337@value{GDBN} sends a separate packet for each command in the action
37338list, in the same order in which the commands are stored in the list.
37339
37340The target does not need to do anything with source strings except
37341report them back as part of the replies to the @samp{qTfP}/@samp{qTsP}
37342query packets.
37343
37344Although this packet is optional, and @value{GDBN} will only send it
37345if the target replies with @samp{TracepointSource} @xref{General
37346Query Packets}, it makes both disconnected tracing and trace files
37347much easier to use. Otherwise the user must be careful that the
37348tracepoints in effect while looking at trace frames are identical to
37349the ones in effect during the trace run; even a small discrepancy
37350could cause @samp{tdump} not to work, or a particular trace frame not
37351be found.
37352
f61e138d
SS
37353@item QTDV:@var{n}:@var{value}
37354@cindex define trace state variable, remote request
37355@cindex @samp{QTDV} packet
37356Create a new trace state variable, number @var{n}, with an initial
37357value of @var{value}, which is a 64-bit signed integer. Both @var{n}
37358and @var{value} are encoded as hexadecimal values. @value{GDBN} has
37359the option of not using this packet for initial values of zero; the
37360target should simply create the trace state variables as they are
37361mentioned in expressions.
37362
9d29849a 37363@item QTFrame:@var{n}
c614397c 37364@cindex @samp{QTFrame} packet
9d29849a
JB
37365Select the @var{n}'th tracepoint frame from the buffer, and use the
37366register and memory contents recorded there to answer subsequent
37367request packets from @value{GDBN}.
37368
37369A successful reply from the stub indicates that the stub has found the
37370requested frame. The response is a series of parts, concatenated
37371without separators, describing the frame we selected. Each part has
37372one of the following forms:
37373
37374@table @samp
37375@item F @var{f}
37376The selected frame is number @var{n} in the trace frame buffer;
599b237a 37377@var{f} is a hexadecimal number. If @var{f} is @samp{-1}, then there
9d29849a
JB
37378was no frame matching the criteria in the request packet.
37379
37380@item T @var{t}
37381The selected trace frame records a hit of tracepoint number @var{t};
599b237a 37382@var{t} is a hexadecimal number.
9d29849a
JB
37383
37384@end table
37385
37386@item QTFrame:pc:@var{addr}
37387Like @samp{QTFrame:@var{n}}, but select the first tracepoint frame after the
37388currently selected frame whose PC is @var{addr};
599b237a 37389@var{addr} is a hexadecimal number.
9d29849a
JB
37390
37391@item QTFrame:tdp:@var{t}
37392Like @samp{QTFrame:@var{n}}, but select the first tracepoint frame after the
37393currently selected frame that is a hit of tracepoint @var{t}; @var{t}
599b237a 37394is a hexadecimal number.
9d29849a
JB
37395
37396@item QTFrame:range:@var{start}:@var{end}
37397Like @samp{QTFrame:@var{n}}, but select the first tracepoint frame after the
37398currently selected frame whose PC is between @var{start} (inclusive)
081dfbf7 37399and @var{end} (inclusive); @var{start} and @var{end} are hexadecimal
9d29849a
JB
37400numbers.
37401
37402@item QTFrame:outside:@var{start}:@var{end}
37403Like @samp{QTFrame:range:@var{start}:@var{end}}, but select the first
081dfbf7 37404frame @emph{outside} the given range of addresses (exclusive).
9d29849a 37405
405f8e94 37406@item qTMinFTPILen
c614397c 37407@cindex @samp{qTMinFTPILen} packet
405f8e94
SS
37408This packet requests the minimum length of instruction at which a fast
37409tracepoint (@pxref{Set Tracepoints}) may be placed. For instance, on
37410the 32-bit x86 architecture, it is possible to use a 4-byte jump, but
37411it depends on the target system being able to create trampolines in
37412the first 64K of memory, which might or might not be possible for that
37413system. So the reply to this packet will be 4 if it is able to
37414arrange for that.
37415
37416Replies:
37417
37418@table @samp
37419@item 0
37420The minimum instruction length is currently unknown.
37421@item @var{length}
37422The minimum instruction length is @var{length}, where @var{length} is greater
37423or equal to 1. @var{length} is a hexadecimal number. A reply of 1 means
37424that a fast tracepoint may be placed on any instruction regardless of size.
37425@item E
37426An error has occurred.
37427@item
37428An empty reply indicates that the request is not supported by the stub.
37429@end table
37430
9d29849a 37431@item QTStart
c614397c 37432@cindex @samp{QTStart} packet
dde08ee1
PA
37433Begin the tracepoint experiment. Begin collecting data from
37434tracepoint hits in the trace frame buffer. This packet supports the
37435@samp{qRelocInsn} reply (@pxref{Tracepoint Packets,,Relocate
37436instruction reply packet}).
9d29849a
JB
37437
37438@item QTStop
c614397c 37439@cindex @samp{QTStop} packet
9d29849a
JB
37440End the tracepoint experiment. Stop collecting trace frames.
37441
d248b706
KY
37442@item QTEnable:@var{n}:@var{addr}
37443@anchor{QTEnable}
c614397c 37444@cindex @samp{QTEnable} packet
d248b706
KY
37445Enable tracepoint @var{n} at address @var{addr} in a started tracepoint
37446experiment. If the tracepoint was previously disabled, then collection
37447of data from it will resume.
37448
37449@item QTDisable:@var{n}:@var{addr}
37450@anchor{QTDisable}
c614397c 37451@cindex @samp{QTDisable} packet
d248b706
KY
37452Disable tracepoint @var{n} at address @var{addr} in a started tracepoint
37453experiment. No more data will be collected from the tracepoint unless
37454@samp{QTEnable:@var{n}:@var{addr}} is subsequently issued.
37455
9d29849a 37456@item QTinit
c614397c 37457@cindex @samp{QTinit} packet
9d29849a
JB
37458Clear the table of tracepoints, and empty the trace frame buffer.
37459
37460@item QTro:@var{start1},@var{end1}:@var{start2},@var{end2}:@dots{}
c614397c 37461@cindex @samp{QTro} packet
9d29849a
JB
37462Establish the given ranges of memory as ``transparent''. The stub
37463will answer requests for these ranges from memory's current contents,
37464if they were not collected as part of the tracepoint hit.
37465
37466@value{GDBN} uses this to mark read-only regions of memory, like those
37467containing program code. Since these areas never change, they should
37468still have the same contents they did when the tracepoint was hit, so
37469there's no reason for the stub to refuse to provide their contents.
37470
d5551862 37471@item QTDisconnected:@var{value}
c614397c 37472@cindex @samp{QTDisconnected} packet
d5551862
SS
37473Set the choice to what to do with the tracing run when @value{GDBN}
37474disconnects from the target. A @var{value} of 1 directs the target to
37475continue the tracing run, while 0 tells the target to stop tracing if
37476@value{GDBN} is no longer in the picture.
37477
9d29849a 37478@item qTStatus
c614397c 37479@cindex @samp{qTStatus} packet
9d29849a
JB
37480Ask the stub if there is a trace experiment running right now.
37481
4daf5ac0
SS
37482The reply has the form:
37483
37484@table @samp
37485
37486@item T@var{running}@r{[};@var{field}@r{]}@dots{}
37487@var{running} is a single digit @code{1} if the trace is presently
37488running, or @code{0} if not. It is followed by semicolon-separated
37489optional fields that an agent may use to report additional status.
37490
37491@end table
37492
37493If the trace is not running, the agent may report any of several
37494explanations as one of the optional fields:
37495
37496@table @samp
37497
37498@item tnotrun:0
37499No trace has been run yet.
37500
f196051f
SS
37501@item tstop[:@var{text}]:0
37502The trace was stopped by a user-originated stop command. The optional
37503@var{text} field is a user-supplied string supplied as part of the
37504stop command (for instance, an explanation of why the trace was
37505stopped manually). It is hex-encoded.
4daf5ac0
SS
37506
37507@item tfull:0
37508The trace stopped because the trace buffer filled up.
37509
37510@item tdisconnected:0
37511The trace stopped because @value{GDBN} disconnected from the target.
37512
37513@item tpasscount:@var{tpnum}
37514The trace stopped because tracepoint @var{tpnum} exceeded its pass count.
37515
6c28cbf2
SS
37516@item terror:@var{text}:@var{tpnum}
37517The trace stopped because tracepoint @var{tpnum} had an error. The
37518string @var{text} is available to describe the nature of the error
37519(for instance, a divide by zero in the condition expression).
99b5e152 37520@var{text} is hex encoded.
6c28cbf2 37521
4daf5ac0
SS
37522@item tunknown:0
37523The trace stopped for some other reason.
37524
37525@end table
37526
33da3f1c
SS
37527Additional optional fields supply statistical and other information.
37528Although not required, they are extremely useful for users monitoring
37529the progress of a trace run. If a trace has stopped, and these
37530numbers are reported, they must reflect the state of the just-stopped
37531trace.
4daf5ac0 37532
9d29849a 37533@table @samp
4daf5ac0
SS
37534
37535@item tframes:@var{n}
37536The number of trace frames in the buffer.
37537
37538@item tcreated:@var{n}
37539The total number of trace frames created during the run. This may
37540be larger than the trace frame count, if the buffer is circular.
37541
37542@item tsize:@var{n}
37543The total size of the trace buffer, in bytes.
37544
37545@item tfree:@var{n}
37546The number of bytes still unused in the buffer.
37547
33da3f1c
SS
37548@item circular:@var{n}
37549The value of the circular trace buffer flag. @code{1} means that the
37550trace buffer is circular and old trace frames will be discarded if
37551necessary to make room, @code{0} means that the trace buffer is linear
37552and may fill up.
37553
37554@item disconn:@var{n}
37555The value of the disconnected tracing flag. @code{1} means that
37556tracing will continue after @value{GDBN} disconnects, @code{0} means
37557that the trace run will stop.
37558
9d29849a
JB
37559@end table
37560
f196051f
SS
37561@item qTP:@var{tp}:@var{addr}
37562@cindex tracepoint status, remote request
37563@cindex @samp{qTP} packet
37564Ask the stub for the current state of tracepoint number @var{tp} at
37565address @var{addr}.
37566
37567Replies:
37568@table @samp
37569@item V@var{hits}:@var{usage}
37570The tracepoint has been hit @var{hits} times so far during the trace
37571run, and accounts for @var{usage} in the trace buffer. Note that
37572@code{while-stepping} steps are not counted as separate hits, but the
37573steps' space consumption is added into the usage number.
37574
37575@end table
37576
f61e138d
SS
37577@item qTV:@var{var}
37578@cindex trace state variable value, remote request
37579@cindex @samp{qTV} packet
37580Ask the stub for the value of the trace state variable number @var{var}.
37581
37582Replies:
37583@table @samp
37584@item V@var{value}
37585The value of the variable is @var{value}. This will be the current
37586value of the variable if the user is examining a running target, or a
37587saved value if the variable was collected in the trace frame that the
37588user is looking at. Note that multiple requests may result in
37589different reply values, such as when requesting values while the
37590program is running.
37591
37592@item U
37593The value of the variable is unknown. This would occur, for example,
37594if the user is examining a trace frame in which the requested variable
37595was not collected.
9d29849a
JB
37596@end table
37597
d5551862 37598@item qTfP
c614397c 37599@cindex @samp{qTfP} packet
d5551862 37600@itemx qTsP
c614397c 37601@cindex @samp{qTsP} packet
d5551862
SS
37602These packets request data about tracepoints that are being used by
37603the target. @value{GDBN} sends @code{qTfP} to get the first piece
37604of data, and multiple @code{qTsP} to get additional pieces. Replies
37605to these packets generally take the form of the @code{QTDP} packets
37606that define tracepoints. (FIXME add detailed syntax)
37607
00bf0b85 37608@item qTfV
c614397c 37609@cindex @samp{qTfV} packet
00bf0b85 37610@itemx qTsV
c614397c 37611@cindex @samp{qTsV} packet
00bf0b85
SS
37612These packets request data about trace state variables that are on the
37613target. @value{GDBN} sends @code{qTfV} to get the first vari of data,
37614and multiple @code{qTsV} to get additional variables. Replies to
37615these packets follow the syntax of the @code{QTDV} packets that define
37616trace state variables.
37617
0fb4aa4b
PA
37618@item qTfSTM
37619@itemx qTsSTM
16bdd41f
YQ
37620@anchor{qTfSTM}
37621@anchor{qTsSTM}
c614397c
YQ
37622@cindex @samp{qTfSTM} packet
37623@cindex @samp{qTsSTM} packet
0fb4aa4b
PA
37624These packets request data about static tracepoint markers that exist
37625in the target program. @value{GDBN} sends @code{qTfSTM} to get the
37626first piece of data, and multiple @code{qTsSTM} to get additional
37627pieces. Replies to these packets take the following form:
37628
37629Reply:
37630@table @samp
37631@item m @var{address}:@var{id}:@var{extra}
37632A single marker
37633@item m @var{address}:@var{id}:@var{extra},@var{address}:@var{id}:@var{extra}@dots{}
37634a comma-separated list of markers
37635@item l
37636(lower case letter @samp{L}) denotes end of list.
37637@item E @var{nn}
37638An error occurred. @var{nn} are hex digits.
37639@item
37640An empty reply indicates that the request is not supported by the
37641stub.
37642@end table
37643
37644@var{address} is encoded in hex.
37645@var{id} and @var{extra} are strings encoded in hex.
37646
37647In response to each query, the target will reply with a list of one or
37648more markers, separated by commas. @value{GDBN} will respond to each
37649reply with a request for more markers (using the @samp{qs} form of the
37650query), until the target responds with @samp{l} (lower-case ell, for
37651@dfn{last}).
37652
37653@item qTSTMat:@var{address}
16bdd41f 37654@anchor{qTSTMat}
c614397c 37655@cindex @samp{qTSTMat} packet
0fb4aa4b
PA
37656This packets requests data about static tracepoint markers in the
37657target program at @var{address}. Replies to this packet follow the
37658syntax of the @samp{qTfSTM} and @code{qTsSTM} packets that list static
37659tracepoint markers.
37660
00bf0b85 37661@item QTSave:@var{filename}
c614397c 37662@cindex @samp{QTSave} packet
00bf0b85
SS
37663This packet directs the target to save trace data to the file name
37664@var{filename} in the target's filesystem. @var{filename} is encoded
37665as a hex string; the interpretation of the file name (relative vs
37666absolute, wild cards, etc) is up to the target.
37667
37668@item qTBuffer:@var{offset},@var{len}
c614397c 37669@cindex @samp{qTBuffer} packet
00bf0b85
SS
37670Return up to @var{len} bytes of the current contents of trace buffer,
37671starting at @var{offset}. The trace buffer is treated as if it were
37672a contiguous collection of traceframes, as per the trace file format.
37673The reply consists as many hex-encoded bytes as the target can deliver
37674in a packet; it is not an error to return fewer than were asked for.
37675A reply consisting of just @code{l} indicates that no bytes are
37676available.
37677
4daf5ac0
SS
37678@item QTBuffer:circular:@var{value}
37679This packet directs the target to use a circular trace buffer if
37680@var{value} is 1, or a linear buffer if the value is 0.
37681
f196051f 37682@item QTNotes:@r{[}@var{type}:@var{text}@r{]}@r{[};@var{type}:@var{text}@r{]}@dots{}
c614397c 37683@cindex @samp{QTNotes} packet
f196051f
SS
37684This packet adds optional textual notes to the trace run. Allowable
37685types include @code{user}, @code{notes}, and @code{tstop}, the
37686@var{text} fields are arbitrary strings, hex-encoded.
37687
f61e138d 37688@end table
9d29849a 37689
dde08ee1
PA
37690@subsection Relocate instruction reply packet
37691When installing fast tracepoints in memory, the target may need to
37692relocate the instruction currently at the tracepoint address to a
37693different address in memory. For most instructions, a simple copy is
37694enough, but, for example, call instructions that implicitly push the
37695return address on the stack, and relative branches or other
37696PC-relative instructions require offset adjustment, so that the effect
37697of executing the instruction at a different address is the same as if
37698it had executed in the original location.
37699
37700In response to several of the tracepoint packets, the target may also
37701respond with a number of intermediate @samp{qRelocInsn} request
37702packets before the final result packet, to have @value{GDBN} handle
37703this relocation operation. If a packet supports this mechanism, its
37704documentation will explicitly say so. See for example the above
37705descriptions for the @samp{QTStart} and @samp{QTDP} packets. The
37706format of the request is:
37707
37708@table @samp
37709@item qRelocInsn:@var{from};@var{to}
37710
37711This requests @value{GDBN} to copy instruction at address @var{from}
37712to address @var{to}, possibly adjusted so that executing the
37713instruction at @var{to} has the same effect as executing it at
37714@var{from}. @value{GDBN} writes the adjusted instruction to target
37715memory starting at @var{to}.
37716@end table
37717
37718Replies:
37719@table @samp
37720@item qRelocInsn:@var{adjusted_size}
37721Informs the stub the relocation is complete. @var{adjusted_size} is
37722the length in bytes of resulting relocated instruction sequence.
37723@item E @var{NN}
37724A badly formed request was detected, or an error was encountered while
37725relocating the instruction.
37726@end table
37727
a6b151f1
DJ
37728@node Host I/O Packets
37729@section Host I/O Packets
37730@cindex Host I/O, remote protocol
37731@cindex file transfer, remote protocol
37732
37733The @dfn{Host I/O} packets allow @value{GDBN} to perform I/O
37734operations on the far side of a remote link. For example, Host I/O is
37735used to upload and download files to a remote target with its own
37736filesystem. Host I/O uses the same constant values and data structure
37737layout as the target-initiated File-I/O protocol. However, the
37738Host I/O packets are structured differently. The target-initiated
37739protocol relies on target memory to store parameters and buffers.
37740Host I/O requests are initiated by @value{GDBN}, and the
37741target's memory is not involved. @xref{File-I/O Remote Protocol
37742Extension}, for more details on the target-initiated protocol.
37743
37744The Host I/O request packets all encode a single operation along with
37745its arguments. They have this format:
37746
37747@table @samp
37748
37749@item vFile:@var{operation}: @var{parameter}@dots{}
37750@var{operation} is the name of the particular request; the target
37751should compare the entire packet name up to the second colon when checking
37752for a supported operation. The format of @var{parameter} depends on
37753the operation. Numbers are always passed in hexadecimal. Negative
37754numbers have an explicit minus sign (i.e.@: two's complement is not
37755used). Strings (e.g.@: filenames) are encoded as a series of
37756hexadecimal bytes. The last argument to a system call may be a
37757buffer of escaped binary data (@pxref{Binary Data}).
37758
37759@end table
37760
37761The valid responses to Host I/O packets are:
37762
37763@table @samp
37764
37765@item F @var{result} [, @var{errno}] [; @var{attachment}]
37766@var{result} is the integer value returned by this operation, usually
37767non-negative for success and -1 for errors. If an error has occured,
37768@var{errno} will be included in the result. @var{errno} will have a
37769value defined by the File-I/O protocol (@pxref{Errno Values}). For
37770operations which return data, @var{attachment} supplies the data as a
37771binary buffer. Binary buffers in response packets are escaped in the
37772normal way (@pxref{Binary Data}). See the individual packet
37773documentation for the interpretation of @var{result} and
37774@var{attachment}.
37775
37776@item
37777An empty response indicates that this operation is not recognized.
37778
37779@end table
37780
37781These are the supported Host I/O operations:
37782
37783@table @samp
37784@item vFile:open: @var{pathname}, @var{flags}, @var{mode}
37785Open a file at @var{pathname} and return a file descriptor for it, or
37786return -1 if an error occurs. @var{pathname} is a string,
37787@var{flags} is an integer indicating a mask of open flags
37788(@pxref{Open Flags}), and @var{mode} is an integer indicating a mask
37789of mode bits to use if the file is created (@pxref{mode_t Values}).
c1c25a1a 37790@xref{open}, for details of the open flags and mode values.
a6b151f1
DJ
37791
37792@item vFile:close: @var{fd}
37793Close the open file corresponding to @var{fd} and return 0, or
37794-1 if an error occurs.
37795
37796@item vFile:pread: @var{fd}, @var{count}, @var{offset}
37797Read data from the open file corresponding to @var{fd}. Up to
37798@var{count} bytes will be read from the file, starting at @var{offset}
37799relative to the start of the file. The target may read fewer bytes;
37800common reasons include packet size limits and an end-of-file
37801condition. The number of bytes read is returned. Zero should only be
37802returned for a successful read at the end of the file, or if
37803@var{count} was zero.
37804
37805The data read should be returned as a binary attachment on success.
37806If zero bytes were read, the response should include an empty binary
37807attachment (i.e.@: a trailing semicolon). The return value is the
37808number of target bytes read; the binary attachment may be longer if
37809some characters were escaped.
37810
37811@item vFile:pwrite: @var{fd}, @var{offset}, @var{data}
37812Write @var{data} (a binary buffer) to the open file corresponding
37813to @var{fd}. Start the write at @var{offset} from the start of the
37814file. Unlike many @code{write} system calls, there is no
37815separate @var{count} argument; the length of @var{data} in the
37816packet is used. @samp{vFile:write} returns the number of bytes written,
37817which may be shorter than the length of @var{data}, or -1 if an
37818error occurred.
37819
37820@item vFile:unlink: @var{pathname}
37821Delete the file at @var{pathname} on the target. Return 0,
37822or -1 if an error occurs. @var{pathname} is a string.
37823
b9e7b9c3
UW
37824@item vFile:readlink: @var{filename}
37825Read value of symbolic link @var{filename} on the target. Return
37826the number of bytes read, or -1 if an error occurs.
37827
37828The data read should be returned as a binary attachment on success.
37829If zero bytes were read, the response should include an empty binary
37830attachment (i.e.@: a trailing semicolon). The return value is the
37831number of target bytes read; the binary attachment may be longer if
37832some characters were escaped.
37833
a6b151f1
DJ
37834@end table
37835
9a6253be
KB
37836@node Interrupts
37837@section Interrupts
37838@cindex interrupts (remote protocol)
37839
37840When a program on the remote target is running, @value{GDBN} may
9a7071a8
JB
37841attempt to interrupt it by sending a @samp{Ctrl-C}, @code{BREAK} or
37842a @code{BREAK} followed by @code{g},
37843control of which is specified via @value{GDBN}'s @samp{interrupt-sequence}.
9a6253be
KB
37844
37845The precise meaning of @code{BREAK} is defined by the transport
8775bb90
MS
37846mechanism and may, in fact, be undefined. @value{GDBN} does not
37847currently define a @code{BREAK} mechanism for any of the network
37848interfaces except for TCP, in which case @value{GDBN} sends the
37849@code{telnet} BREAK sequence.
9a6253be
KB
37850
37851@samp{Ctrl-C}, on the other hand, is defined and implemented for all
37852transport mechanisms. It is represented by sending the single byte
37853@code{0x03} without any of the usual packet overhead described in
37854the Overview section (@pxref{Overview}). When a @code{0x03} byte is
37855transmitted as part of a packet, it is considered to be packet data
37856and does @emph{not} represent an interrupt. E.g., an @samp{X} packet
0876f84a 37857(@pxref{X packet}), used for binary downloads, may include an unescaped
9a6253be
KB
37858@code{0x03} as part of its packet.
37859
9a7071a8
JB
37860@code{BREAK} followed by @code{g} is also known as Magic SysRq g.
37861When Linux kernel receives this sequence from serial port,
37862it stops execution and connects to gdb.
37863
9a6253be
KB
37864Stubs are not required to recognize these interrupt mechanisms and the
37865precise meaning associated with receipt of the interrupt is
8b23ecc4
SL
37866implementation defined. If the target supports debugging of multiple
37867threads and/or processes, it should attempt to interrupt all
37868currently-executing threads and processes.
37869If the stub is successful at interrupting the
37870running program, it should send one of the stop
37871reply packets (@pxref{Stop Reply Packets}) to @value{GDBN} as a result
37872of successfully stopping the program in all-stop mode, and a stop reply
37873for each stopped thread in non-stop mode.
37874Interrupts received while the
37875program is stopped are discarded.
37876
37877@node Notification Packets
37878@section Notification Packets
37879@cindex notification packets
37880@cindex packets, notification
37881
37882The @value{GDBN} remote serial protocol includes @dfn{notifications},
37883packets that require no acknowledgment. Both the GDB and the stub
37884may send notifications (although the only notifications defined at
37885present are sent by the stub). Notifications carry information
37886without incurring the round-trip latency of an acknowledgment, and so
37887are useful for low-impact communications where occasional packet loss
37888is not a problem.
37889
37890A notification packet has the form @samp{% @var{data} #
37891@var{checksum}}, where @var{data} is the content of the notification,
37892and @var{checksum} is a checksum of @var{data}, computed and formatted
37893as for ordinary @value{GDBN} packets. A notification's @var{data}
37894never contains @samp{$}, @samp{%} or @samp{#} characters. Upon
37895receiving a notification, the recipient sends no @samp{+} or @samp{-}
37896to acknowledge the notification's receipt or to report its corruption.
37897
37898Every notification's @var{data} begins with a name, which contains no
37899colon characters, followed by a colon character.
37900
37901Recipients should silently ignore corrupted notifications and
37902notifications they do not understand. Recipients should restart
37903timeout periods on receipt of a well-formed notification, whether or
37904not they understand it.
37905
37906Senders should only send the notifications described here when this
37907protocol description specifies that they are permitted. In the
37908future, we may extend the protocol to permit existing notifications in
37909new contexts; this rule helps older senders avoid confusing newer
37910recipients.
37911
37912(Older versions of @value{GDBN} ignore bytes received until they see
37913the @samp{$} byte that begins an ordinary packet, so new stubs may
37914transmit notifications without fear of confusing older clients. There
37915are no notifications defined for @value{GDBN} to send at the moment, but we
37916assume that most older stubs would ignore them, as well.)
37917
37918The following notification packets from the stub to @value{GDBN} are
37919defined:
37920
37921@table @samp
37922@item Stop: @var{reply}
37923Report an asynchronous stop event in non-stop mode.
37924The @var{reply} has the form of a stop reply, as
37925described in @ref{Stop Reply Packets}. Refer to @ref{Remote Non-Stop},
37926for information on how these notifications are acknowledged by
37927@value{GDBN}.
37928@end table
37929
37930@node Remote Non-Stop
37931@section Remote Protocol Support for Non-Stop Mode
37932
37933@value{GDBN}'s remote protocol supports non-stop debugging of
37934multi-threaded programs, as described in @ref{Non-Stop Mode}. If the stub
37935supports non-stop mode, it should report that to @value{GDBN} by including
37936@samp{QNonStop+} in its @samp{qSupported} response (@pxref{qSupported}).
37937
37938@value{GDBN} typically sends a @samp{QNonStop} packet only when
37939establishing a new connection with the stub. Entering non-stop mode
37940does not alter the state of any currently-running threads, but targets
37941must stop all threads in any already-attached processes when entering
37942all-stop mode. @value{GDBN} uses the @samp{?} packet as necessary to
37943probe the target state after a mode change.
37944
37945In non-stop mode, when an attached process encounters an event that
37946would otherwise be reported with a stop reply, it uses the
37947asynchronous notification mechanism (@pxref{Notification Packets}) to
37948inform @value{GDBN}. In contrast to all-stop mode, where all threads
37949in all processes are stopped when a stop reply is sent, in non-stop
37950mode only the thread reporting the stop event is stopped. That is,
37951when reporting a @samp{S} or @samp{T} response to indicate completion
37952of a step operation, hitting a breakpoint, or a fault, only the
37953affected thread is stopped; any other still-running threads continue
37954to run. When reporting a @samp{W} or @samp{X} response, all running
37955threads belonging to other attached processes continue to run.
37956
37957Only one stop reply notification at a time may be pending; if
37958additional stop events occur before @value{GDBN} has acknowledged the
37959previous notification, they must be queued by the stub for later
37960synchronous transmission in response to @samp{vStopped} packets from
37961@value{GDBN}. Because the notification mechanism is unreliable,
37962the stub is permitted to resend a stop reply notification
37963if it believes @value{GDBN} may not have received it. @value{GDBN}
37964ignores additional stop reply notifications received before it has
37965finished processing a previous notification and the stub has completed
37966sending any queued stop events.
37967
37968Otherwise, @value{GDBN} must be prepared to receive a stop reply
37969notification at any time. Specifically, they may appear when
37970@value{GDBN} is not otherwise reading input from the stub, or when
37971@value{GDBN} is expecting to read a normal synchronous response or a
37972@samp{+}/@samp{-} acknowledgment to a packet it has sent.
37973Notification packets are distinct from any other communication from
37974the stub so there is no ambiguity.
37975
37976After receiving a stop reply notification, @value{GDBN} shall
37977acknowledge it by sending a @samp{vStopped} packet (@pxref{vStopped packet})
37978as a regular, synchronous request to the stub. Such acknowledgment
37979is not required to happen immediately, as @value{GDBN} is permitted to
37980send other, unrelated packets to the stub first, which the stub should
37981process normally.
37982
37983Upon receiving a @samp{vStopped} packet, if the stub has other queued
37984stop events to report to @value{GDBN}, it shall respond by sending a
37985normal stop reply response. @value{GDBN} shall then send another
37986@samp{vStopped} packet to solicit further responses; again, it is
37987permitted to send other, unrelated packets as well which the stub
37988should process normally.
37989
37990If the stub receives a @samp{vStopped} packet and there are no
37991additional stop events to report, the stub shall return an @samp{OK}
37992response. At this point, if further stop events occur, the stub shall
37993send a new stop reply notification, @value{GDBN} shall accept the
37994notification, and the process shall be repeated.
37995
37996In non-stop mode, the target shall respond to the @samp{?} packet as
37997follows. First, any incomplete stop reply notification/@samp{vStopped}
37998sequence in progress is abandoned. The target must begin a new
37999sequence reporting stop events for all stopped threads, whether or not
38000it has previously reported those events to @value{GDBN}. The first
38001stop reply is sent as a synchronous reply to the @samp{?} packet, and
38002subsequent stop replies are sent as responses to @samp{vStopped} packets
38003using the mechanism described above. The target must not send
38004asynchronous stop reply notifications until the sequence is complete.
38005If all threads are running when the target receives the @samp{?} packet,
38006or if the target is not attached to any process, it shall respond
38007@samp{OK}.
9a6253be 38008
a6f3e723
SL
38009@node Packet Acknowledgment
38010@section Packet Acknowledgment
38011
38012@cindex acknowledgment, for @value{GDBN} remote
38013@cindex packet acknowledgment, for @value{GDBN} remote
38014By default, when either the host or the target machine receives a packet,
38015the first response expected is an acknowledgment: either @samp{+} (to indicate
38016the package was received correctly) or @samp{-} (to request retransmission).
38017This mechanism allows the @value{GDBN} remote protocol to operate over
38018unreliable transport mechanisms, such as a serial line.
38019
38020In cases where the transport mechanism is itself reliable (such as a pipe or
38021TCP connection), the @samp{+}/@samp{-} acknowledgments are redundant.
38022It may be desirable to disable them in that case to reduce communication
38023overhead, or for other reasons. This can be accomplished by means of the
38024@samp{QStartNoAckMode} packet; @pxref{QStartNoAckMode}.
38025
38026When in no-acknowledgment mode, neither the stub nor @value{GDBN} shall send or
38027expect @samp{+}/@samp{-} protocol acknowledgments. The packet
38028and response format still includes the normal checksum, as described in
38029@ref{Overview}, but the checksum may be ignored by the receiver.
38030
38031If the stub supports @samp{QStartNoAckMode} and prefers to operate in
38032no-acknowledgment mode, it should report that to @value{GDBN}
38033by including @samp{QStartNoAckMode+} in its response to @samp{qSupported};
38034@pxref{qSupported}.
38035If @value{GDBN} also supports @samp{QStartNoAckMode} and it has not been
38036disabled via the @code{set remote noack-packet off} command
38037(@pxref{Remote Configuration}),
38038@value{GDBN} may then send a @samp{QStartNoAckMode} packet to the stub.
38039Only then may the stub actually turn off packet acknowledgments.
38040@value{GDBN} sends a final @samp{+} acknowledgment of the stub's @samp{OK}
38041response, which can be safely ignored by the stub.
38042
38043Note that @code{set remote noack-packet} command only affects negotiation
38044between @value{GDBN} and the stub when subsequent connections are made;
38045it does not affect the protocol acknowledgment state for any current
38046connection.
38047Since @samp{+}/@samp{-} acknowledgments are enabled by default when a
38048new connection is established,
38049there is also no protocol request to re-enable the acknowledgments
38050for the current connection, once disabled.
38051
ee2d5c50
AC
38052@node Examples
38053@section Examples
eb12ee30 38054
8e04817f
AC
38055Example sequence of a target being re-started. Notice how the restart
38056does not get any direct output:
eb12ee30 38057
474c8240 38058@smallexample
d2c6833e
AC
38059-> @code{R00}
38060<- @code{+}
8e04817f 38061@emph{target restarts}
d2c6833e 38062-> @code{?}
8e04817f 38063<- @code{+}
d2c6833e
AC
38064<- @code{T001:1234123412341234}
38065-> @code{+}
474c8240 38066@end smallexample
eb12ee30 38067
8e04817f 38068Example sequence of a target being stepped by a single instruction:
eb12ee30 38069
474c8240 38070@smallexample
d2c6833e 38071-> @code{G1445@dots{}}
8e04817f 38072<- @code{+}
d2c6833e
AC
38073-> @code{s}
38074<- @code{+}
38075@emph{time passes}
38076<- @code{T001:1234123412341234}
8e04817f 38077-> @code{+}
d2c6833e 38078-> @code{g}
8e04817f 38079<- @code{+}
d2c6833e
AC
38080<- @code{1455@dots{}}
38081-> @code{+}
474c8240 38082@end smallexample
eb12ee30 38083
79a6e687
BW
38084@node File-I/O Remote Protocol Extension
38085@section File-I/O Remote Protocol Extension
0ce1b118
CV
38086@cindex File-I/O remote protocol extension
38087
38088@menu
38089* File-I/O Overview::
79a6e687
BW
38090* Protocol Basics::
38091* The F Request Packet::
38092* The F Reply Packet::
38093* The Ctrl-C Message::
0ce1b118 38094* Console I/O::
79a6e687 38095* List of Supported Calls::
db2e3e2e 38096* Protocol-specific Representation of Datatypes::
0ce1b118
CV
38097* Constants::
38098* File-I/O Examples::
38099@end menu
38100
38101@node File-I/O Overview
38102@subsection File-I/O Overview
38103@cindex file-i/o overview
38104
9c16f35a 38105The @dfn{File I/O remote protocol extension} (short: File-I/O) allows the
fc320d37 38106target to use the host's file system and console I/O to perform various
0ce1b118 38107system calls. System calls on the target system are translated into a
fc320d37
SL
38108remote protocol packet to the host system, which then performs the needed
38109actions and returns a response packet to the target system.
0ce1b118
CV
38110This simulates file system operations even on targets that lack file systems.
38111
fc320d37
SL
38112The protocol is defined to be independent of both the host and target systems.
38113It uses its own internal representation of datatypes and values. Both
0ce1b118 38114@value{GDBN} and the target's @value{GDBN} stub are responsible for
fc320d37
SL
38115translating the system-dependent value representations into the internal
38116protocol representations when data is transmitted.
0ce1b118 38117
fc320d37
SL
38118The communication is synchronous. A system call is possible only when
38119@value{GDBN} is waiting for a response from the @samp{C}, @samp{c}, @samp{S}
38120or @samp{s} packets. While @value{GDBN} handles the request for a system call,
0ce1b118 38121the target is stopped to allow deterministic access to the target's
fc320d37
SL
38122memory. Therefore File-I/O is not interruptible by target signals. On
38123the other hand, it is possible to interrupt File-I/O by a user interrupt
c8aa23ab 38124(@samp{Ctrl-C}) within @value{GDBN}.
0ce1b118
CV
38125
38126The target's request to perform a host system call does not finish
38127the latest @samp{C}, @samp{c}, @samp{S} or @samp{s} action. That means,
38128after finishing the system call, the target returns to continuing the
38129previous activity (continue, step). No additional continue or step
38130request from @value{GDBN} is required.
38131
38132@smallexample
f7dc1244 38133(@value{GDBP}) continue
0ce1b118
CV
38134 <- target requests 'system call X'
38135 target is stopped, @value{GDBN} executes system call
3f94c067
BW
38136 -> @value{GDBN} returns result
38137 ... target continues, @value{GDBN} returns to wait for the target
0ce1b118
CV
38138 <- target hits breakpoint and sends a Txx packet
38139@end smallexample
38140
fc320d37
SL
38141The protocol only supports I/O on the console and to regular files on
38142the host file system. Character or block special devices, pipes,
38143named pipes, sockets or any other communication method on the host
0ce1b118
CV
38144system are not supported by this protocol.
38145
8b23ecc4
SL
38146File I/O is not supported in non-stop mode.
38147
79a6e687
BW
38148@node Protocol Basics
38149@subsection Protocol Basics
0ce1b118
CV
38150@cindex protocol basics, file-i/o
38151
fc320d37
SL
38152The File-I/O protocol uses the @code{F} packet as the request as well
38153as reply packet. Since a File-I/O system call can only occur when
38154@value{GDBN} is waiting for a response from the continuing or stepping target,
38155the File-I/O request is a reply that @value{GDBN} has to expect as a result
38156of a previous @samp{C}, @samp{c}, @samp{S} or @samp{s} packet.
0ce1b118
CV
38157This @code{F} packet contains all information needed to allow @value{GDBN}
38158to call the appropriate host system call:
38159
38160@itemize @bullet
b383017d 38161@item
0ce1b118
CV
38162A unique identifier for the requested system call.
38163
38164@item
38165All parameters to the system call. Pointers are given as addresses
38166in the target memory address space. Pointers to strings are given as
b383017d 38167pointer/length pair. Numerical values are given as they are.
db2e3e2e 38168Numerical control flags are given in a protocol-specific representation.
0ce1b118
CV
38169
38170@end itemize
38171
fc320d37 38172At this point, @value{GDBN} has to perform the following actions.
0ce1b118
CV
38173
38174@itemize @bullet
b383017d 38175@item
fc320d37
SL
38176If the parameters include pointer values to data needed as input to a
38177system call, @value{GDBN} requests this data from the target with a
0ce1b118
CV
38178standard @code{m} packet request. This additional communication has to be
38179expected by the target implementation and is handled as any other @code{m}
38180packet.
38181
38182@item
38183@value{GDBN} translates all value from protocol representation to host
38184representation as needed. Datatypes are coerced into the host types.
38185
38186@item
fc320d37 38187@value{GDBN} calls the system call.
0ce1b118
CV
38188
38189@item
38190It then coerces datatypes back to protocol representation.
38191
38192@item
fc320d37
SL
38193If the system call is expected to return data in buffer space specified
38194by pointer parameters to the call, the data is transmitted to the
0ce1b118
CV
38195target using a @code{M} or @code{X} packet. This packet has to be expected
38196by the target implementation and is handled as any other @code{M} or @code{X}
38197packet.
38198
38199@end itemize
38200
38201Eventually @value{GDBN} replies with another @code{F} packet which contains all
38202necessary information for the target to continue. This at least contains
38203
38204@itemize @bullet
38205@item
38206Return value.
38207
38208@item
38209@code{errno}, if has been changed by the system call.
38210
38211@item
38212``Ctrl-C'' flag.
38213
38214@end itemize
38215
38216After having done the needed type and value coercion, the target continues
38217the latest continue or step action.
38218
79a6e687
BW
38219@node The F Request Packet
38220@subsection The @code{F} Request Packet
0ce1b118
CV
38221@cindex file-i/o request packet
38222@cindex @code{F} request packet
38223
38224The @code{F} request packet has the following format:
38225
38226@table @samp
fc320d37 38227@item F@var{call-id},@var{parameter@dots{}}
0ce1b118
CV
38228
38229@var{call-id} is the identifier to indicate the host system call to be called.
38230This is just the name of the function.
38231
fc320d37
SL
38232@var{parameter@dots{}} are the parameters to the system call.
38233Parameters are hexadecimal integer values, either the actual values in case
38234of scalar datatypes, pointers to target buffer space in case of compound
38235datatypes and unspecified memory areas, or pointer/length pairs in case
38236of string parameters. These are appended to the @var{call-id} as a
38237comma-delimited list. All values are transmitted in ASCII
38238string representation, pointer/length pairs separated by a slash.
0ce1b118 38239
b383017d 38240@end table
0ce1b118 38241
fc320d37 38242
0ce1b118 38243
79a6e687
BW
38244@node The F Reply Packet
38245@subsection The @code{F} Reply Packet
0ce1b118
CV
38246@cindex file-i/o reply packet
38247@cindex @code{F} reply packet
38248
38249The @code{F} reply packet has the following format:
38250
38251@table @samp
38252
d3bdde98 38253@item F@var{retcode},@var{errno},@var{Ctrl-C flag};@var{call-specific attachment}
0ce1b118
CV
38254
38255@var{retcode} is the return code of the system call as hexadecimal value.
38256
db2e3e2e
BW
38257@var{errno} is the @code{errno} set by the call, in protocol-specific
38258representation.
0ce1b118
CV
38259This parameter can be omitted if the call was successful.
38260
fc320d37
SL
38261@var{Ctrl-C flag} is only sent if the user requested a break. In this
38262case, @var{errno} must be sent as well, even if the call was successful.
38263The @var{Ctrl-C flag} itself consists of the character @samp{C}:
0ce1b118
CV
38264
38265@smallexample
38266F0,0,C
38267@end smallexample
38268
38269@noindent
fc320d37 38270or, if the call was interrupted before the host call has been performed:
0ce1b118
CV
38271
38272@smallexample
38273F-1,4,C
38274@end smallexample
38275
38276@noindent
db2e3e2e 38277assuming 4 is the protocol-specific representation of @code{EINTR}.
0ce1b118
CV
38278
38279@end table
38280
0ce1b118 38281
79a6e687
BW
38282@node The Ctrl-C Message
38283@subsection The @samp{Ctrl-C} Message
0ce1b118
CV
38284@cindex ctrl-c message, in file-i/o protocol
38285
c8aa23ab 38286If the @samp{Ctrl-C} flag is set in the @value{GDBN}
79a6e687 38287reply packet (@pxref{The F Reply Packet}),
fc320d37 38288the target should behave as if it had
0ce1b118 38289gotten a break message. The meaning for the target is ``system call
fc320d37 38290interrupted by @code{SIGINT}''. Consequentially, the target should actually stop
0ce1b118 38291(as with a break message) and return to @value{GDBN} with a @code{T02}
c8aa23ab 38292packet.
fc320d37
SL
38293
38294It's important for the target to know in which
38295state the system call was interrupted. There are two possible cases:
0ce1b118
CV
38296
38297@itemize @bullet
38298@item
38299The system call hasn't been performed on the host yet.
38300
38301@item
38302The system call on the host has been finished.
38303
38304@end itemize
38305
38306These two states can be distinguished by the target by the value of the
38307returned @code{errno}. If it's the protocol representation of @code{EINTR}, the system
38308call hasn't been performed. This is equivalent to the @code{EINTR} handling
38309on POSIX systems. In any other case, the target may presume that the
fc320d37 38310system call has been finished --- successfully or not --- and should behave
0ce1b118
CV
38311as if the break message arrived right after the system call.
38312
fc320d37 38313@value{GDBN} must behave reliably. If the system call has not been called
0ce1b118
CV
38314yet, @value{GDBN} may send the @code{F} reply immediately, setting @code{EINTR} as
38315@code{errno} in the packet. If the system call on the host has been finished
fc320d37
SL
38316before the user requests a break, the full action must be finished by
38317@value{GDBN}. This requires sending @code{M} or @code{X} packets as necessary.
38318The @code{F} packet may only be sent when either nothing has happened
0ce1b118
CV
38319or the full action has been completed.
38320
38321@node Console I/O
38322@subsection Console I/O
38323@cindex console i/o as part of file-i/o
38324
d3e8051b 38325By default and if not explicitly closed by the target system, the file
0ce1b118
CV
38326descriptors 0, 1 and 2 are connected to the @value{GDBN} console. Output
38327on the @value{GDBN} console is handled as any other file output operation
38328(@code{write(1, @dots{})} or @code{write(2, @dots{})}). Console input is handled
38329by @value{GDBN} so that after the target read request from file descriptor
383300 all following typing is buffered until either one of the following
38331conditions is met:
38332
38333@itemize @bullet
38334@item
c8aa23ab 38335The user types @kbd{Ctrl-c}. The behaviour is as explained above, and the
0ce1b118
CV
38336@code{read}
38337system call is treated as finished.
38338
38339@item
7f9087cb 38340The user presses @key{RET}. This is treated as end of input with a trailing
fc320d37 38341newline.
0ce1b118
CV
38342
38343@item
c8aa23ab
EZ
38344The user types @kbd{Ctrl-d}. This is treated as end of input. No trailing
38345character (neither newline nor @samp{Ctrl-D}) is appended to the input.
0ce1b118
CV
38346
38347@end itemize
38348
fc320d37
SL
38349If the user has typed more characters than fit in the buffer given to
38350the @code{read} call, the trailing characters are buffered in @value{GDBN} until
38351either another @code{read(0, @dots{})} is requested by the target, or debugging
38352is stopped at the user's request.
0ce1b118 38353
0ce1b118 38354
79a6e687
BW
38355@node List of Supported Calls
38356@subsection List of Supported Calls
0ce1b118
CV
38357@cindex list of supported file-i/o calls
38358
38359@menu
38360* open::
38361* close::
38362* read::
38363* write::
38364* lseek::
38365* rename::
38366* unlink::
38367* stat/fstat::
38368* gettimeofday::
38369* isatty::
38370* system::
38371@end menu
38372
38373@node open
38374@unnumberedsubsubsec open
38375@cindex open, file-i/o system call
38376
fc320d37
SL
38377@table @asis
38378@item Synopsis:
0ce1b118 38379@smallexample
0ce1b118
CV
38380int open(const char *pathname, int flags);
38381int open(const char *pathname, int flags, mode_t mode);
0ce1b118
CV
38382@end smallexample
38383
fc320d37
SL
38384@item Request:
38385@samp{Fopen,@var{pathptr}/@var{len},@var{flags},@var{mode}}
38386
0ce1b118 38387@noindent
fc320d37 38388@var{flags} is the bitwise @code{OR} of the following values:
0ce1b118
CV
38389
38390@table @code
b383017d 38391@item O_CREAT
0ce1b118
CV
38392If the file does not exist it will be created. The host
38393rules apply as far as file ownership and time stamps
38394are concerned.
38395
b383017d 38396@item O_EXCL
fc320d37 38397When used with @code{O_CREAT}, if the file already exists it is
0ce1b118
CV
38398an error and open() fails.
38399
b383017d 38400@item O_TRUNC
0ce1b118 38401If the file already exists and the open mode allows
fc320d37
SL
38402writing (@code{O_RDWR} or @code{O_WRONLY} is given) it will be
38403truncated to zero length.
0ce1b118 38404
b383017d 38405@item O_APPEND
0ce1b118
CV
38406The file is opened in append mode.
38407
b383017d 38408@item O_RDONLY
0ce1b118
CV
38409The file is opened for reading only.
38410
b383017d 38411@item O_WRONLY
0ce1b118
CV
38412The file is opened for writing only.
38413
b383017d 38414@item O_RDWR
0ce1b118 38415The file is opened for reading and writing.
fc320d37 38416@end table
0ce1b118
CV
38417
38418@noindent
fc320d37 38419Other bits are silently ignored.
0ce1b118 38420
0ce1b118
CV
38421
38422@noindent
fc320d37 38423@var{mode} is the bitwise @code{OR} of the following values:
0ce1b118
CV
38424
38425@table @code
b383017d 38426@item S_IRUSR
0ce1b118
CV
38427User has read permission.
38428
b383017d 38429@item S_IWUSR
0ce1b118
CV
38430User has write permission.
38431
b383017d 38432@item S_IRGRP
0ce1b118
CV
38433Group has read permission.
38434
b383017d 38435@item S_IWGRP
0ce1b118
CV
38436Group has write permission.
38437
b383017d 38438@item S_IROTH
0ce1b118
CV
38439Others have read permission.
38440
b383017d 38441@item S_IWOTH
0ce1b118 38442Others have write permission.
fc320d37 38443@end table
0ce1b118
CV
38444
38445@noindent
fc320d37 38446Other bits are silently ignored.
0ce1b118 38447
0ce1b118 38448
fc320d37
SL
38449@item Return value:
38450@code{open} returns the new file descriptor or -1 if an error
38451occurred.
0ce1b118 38452
fc320d37 38453@item Errors:
0ce1b118
CV
38454
38455@table @code
b383017d 38456@item EEXIST
fc320d37 38457@var{pathname} already exists and @code{O_CREAT} and @code{O_EXCL} were used.
0ce1b118 38458
b383017d 38459@item EISDIR
fc320d37 38460@var{pathname} refers to a directory.
0ce1b118 38461
b383017d 38462@item EACCES
0ce1b118
CV
38463The requested access is not allowed.
38464
38465@item ENAMETOOLONG
fc320d37 38466@var{pathname} was too long.
0ce1b118 38467
b383017d 38468@item ENOENT
fc320d37 38469A directory component in @var{pathname} does not exist.
0ce1b118 38470
b383017d 38471@item ENODEV
fc320d37 38472@var{pathname} refers to a device, pipe, named pipe or socket.
0ce1b118 38473
b383017d 38474@item EROFS
fc320d37 38475@var{pathname} refers to a file on a read-only filesystem and
0ce1b118
CV
38476write access was requested.
38477
b383017d 38478@item EFAULT
fc320d37 38479@var{pathname} is an invalid pointer value.
0ce1b118 38480
b383017d 38481@item ENOSPC
0ce1b118
CV
38482No space on device to create the file.
38483
b383017d 38484@item EMFILE
0ce1b118
CV
38485The process already has the maximum number of files open.
38486
b383017d 38487@item ENFILE
0ce1b118
CV
38488The limit on the total number of files open on the system
38489has been reached.
38490
b383017d 38491@item EINTR
0ce1b118
CV
38492The call was interrupted by the user.
38493@end table
38494
fc320d37
SL
38495@end table
38496
0ce1b118
CV
38497@node close
38498@unnumberedsubsubsec close
38499@cindex close, file-i/o system call
38500
fc320d37
SL
38501@table @asis
38502@item Synopsis:
0ce1b118 38503@smallexample
0ce1b118 38504int close(int fd);
fc320d37 38505@end smallexample
0ce1b118 38506
fc320d37
SL
38507@item Request:
38508@samp{Fclose,@var{fd}}
0ce1b118 38509
fc320d37
SL
38510@item Return value:
38511@code{close} returns zero on success, or -1 if an error occurred.
0ce1b118 38512
fc320d37 38513@item Errors:
0ce1b118
CV
38514
38515@table @code
b383017d 38516@item EBADF
fc320d37 38517@var{fd} isn't a valid open file descriptor.
0ce1b118 38518
b383017d 38519@item EINTR
0ce1b118
CV
38520The call was interrupted by the user.
38521@end table
38522
fc320d37
SL
38523@end table
38524
0ce1b118
CV
38525@node read
38526@unnumberedsubsubsec read
38527@cindex read, file-i/o system call
38528
fc320d37
SL
38529@table @asis
38530@item Synopsis:
0ce1b118 38531@smallexample
0ce1b118 38532int read(int fd, void *buf, unsigned int count);
fc320d37 38533@end smallexample
0ce1b118 38534
fc320d37
SL
38535@item Request:
38536@samp{Fread,@var{fd},@var{bufptr},@var{count}}
0ce1b118 38537
fc320d37 38538@item Return value:
0ce1b118
CV
38539On success, the number of bytes read is returned.
38540Zero indicates end of file. If count is zero, read
b383017d 38541returns zero as well. On error, -1 is returned.
0ce1b118 38542
fc320d37 38543@item Errors:
0ce1b118
CV
38544
38545@table @code
b383017d 38546@item EBADF
fc320d37 38547@var{fd} is not a valid file descriptor or is not open for
0ce1b118
CV
38548reading.
38549
b383017d 38550@item EFAULT
fc320d37 38551@var{bufptr} is an invalid pointer value.
0ce1b118 38552
b383017d 38553@item EINTR
0ce1b118
CV
38554The call was interrupted by the user.
38555@end table
38556
fc320d37
SL
38557@end table
38558
0ce1b118
CV
38559@node write
38560@unnumberedsubsubsec write
38561@cindex write, file-i/o system call
38562
fc320d37
SL
38563@table @asis
38564@item Synopsis:
0ce1b118 38565@smallexample
0ce1b118 38566int write(int fd, const void *buf, unsigned int count);
fc320d37 38567@end smallexample
0ce1b118 38568
fc320d37
SL
38569@item Request:
38570@samp{Fwrite,@var{fd},@var{bufptr},@var{count}}
0ce1b118 38571
fc320d37 38572@item Return value:
0ce1b118
CV
38573On success, the number of bytes written are returned.
38574Zero indicates nothing was written. On error, -1
38575is returned.
38576
fc320d37 38577@item Errors:
0ce1b118
CV
38578
38579@table @code
b383017d 38580@item EBADF
fc320d37 38581@var{fd} is not a valid file descriptor or is not open for
0ce1b118
CV
38582writing.
38583
b383017d 38584@item EFAULT
fc320d37 38585@var{bufptr} is an invalid pointer value.
0ce1b118 38586
b383017d 38587@item EFBIG
0ce1b118 38588An attempt was made to write a file that exceeds the
db2e3e2e 38589host-specific maximum file size allowed.
0ce1b118 38590
b383017d 38591@item ENOSPC
0ce1b118
CV
38592No space on device to write the data.
38593
b383017d 38594@item EINTR
0ce1b118
CV
38595The call was interrupted by the user.
38596@end table
38597
fc320d37
SL
38598@end table
38599
0ce1b118
CV
38600@node lseek
38601@unnumberedsubsubsec lseek
38602@cindex lseek, file-i/o system call
38603
fc320d37
SL
38604@table @asis
38605@item Synopsis:
0ce1b118 38606@smallexample
0ce1b118 38607long lseek (int fd, long offset, int flag);
0ce1b118
CV
38608@end smallexample
38609
fc320d37
SL
38610@item Request:
38611@samp{Flseek,@var{fd},@var{offset},@var{flag}}
38612
38613@var{flag} is one of:
0ce1b118
CV
38614
38615@table @code
b383017d 38616@item SEEK_SET
fc320d37 38617The offset is set to @var{offset} bytes.
0ce1b118 38618
b383017d 38619@item SEEK_CUR
fc320d37 38620The offset is set to its current location plus @var{offset}
0ce1b118
CV
38621bytes.
38622
b383017d 38623@item SEEK_END
fc320d37 38624The offset is set to the size of the file plus @var{offset}
0ce1b118
CV
38625bytes.
38626@end table
38627
fc320d37 38628@item Return value:
0ce1b118
CV
38629On success, the resulting unsigned offset in bytes from
38630the beginning of the file is returned. Otherwise, a
38631value of -1 is returned.
38632
fc320d37 38633@item Errors:
0ce1b118
CV
38634
38635@table @code
b383017d 38636@item EBADF
fc320d37 38637@var{fd} is not a valid open file descriptor.
0ce1b118 38638
b383017d 38639@item ESPIPE
fc320d37 38640@var{fd} is associated with the @value{GDBN} console.
0ce1b118 38641
b383017d 38642@item EINVAL
fc320d37 38643@var{flag} is not a proper value.
0ce1b118 38644
b383017d 38645@item EINTR
0ce1b118
CV
38646The call was interrupted by the user.
38647@end table
38648
fc320d37
SL
38649@end table
38650
0ce1b118
CV
38651@node rename
38652@unnumberedsubsubsec rename
38653@cindex rename, file-i/o system call
38654
fc320d37
SL
38655@table @asis
38656@item Synopsis:
0ce1b118 38657@smallexample
0ce1b118 38658int rename(const char *oldpath, const char *newpath);
fc320d37 38659@end smallexample
0ce1b118 38660
fc320d37
SL
38661@item Request:
38662@samp{Frename,@var{oldpathptr}/@var{len},@var{newpathptr}/@var{len}}
0ce1b118 38663
fc320d37 38664@item Return value:
0ce1b118
CV
38665On success, zero is returned. On error, -1 is returned.
38666
fc320d37 38667@item Errors:
0ce1b118
CV
38668
38669@table @code
b383017d 38670@item EISDIR
fc320d37 38671@var{newpath} is an existing directory, but @var{oldpath} is not a
0ce1b118
CV
38672directory.
38673
b383017d 38674@item EEXIST
fc320d37 38675@var{newpath} is a non-empty directory.
0ce1b118 38676
b383017d 38677@item EBUSY
fc320d37 38678@var{oldpath} or @var{newpath} is a directory that is in use by some
0ce1b118
CV
38679process.
38680
b383017d 38681@item EINVAL
0ce1b118
CV
38682An attempt was made to make a directory a subdirectory
38683of itself.
38684
b383017d 38685@item ENOTDIR
fc320d37
SL
38686A component used as a directory in @var{oldpath} or new
38687path is not a directory. Or @var{oldpath} is a directory
38688and @var{newpath} exists but is not a directory.
0ce1b118 38689
b383017d 38690@item EFAULT
fc320d37 38691@var{oldpathptr} or @var{newpathptr} are invalid pointer values.
0ce1b118 38692
b383017d 38693@item EACCES
0ce1b118
CV
38694No access to the file or the path of the file.
38695
38696@item ENAMETOOLONG
b383017d 38697
fc320d37 38698@var{oldpath} or @var{newpath} was too long.
0ce1b118 38699
b383017d 38700@item ENOENT
fc320d37 38701A directory component in @var{oldpath} or @var{newpath} does not exist.
0ce1b118 38702
b383017d 38703@item EROFS
0ce1b118
CV
38704The file is on a read-only filesystem.
38705
b383017d 38706@item ENOSPC
0ce1b118
CV
38707The device containing the file has no room for the new
38708directory entry.
38709
b383017d 38710@item EINTR
0ce1b118
CV
38711The call was interrupted by the user.
38712@end table
38713
fc320d37
SL
38714@end table
38715
0ce1b118
CV
38716@node unlink
38717@unnumberedsubsubsec unlink
38718@cindex unlink, file-i/o system call
38719
fc320d37
SL
38720@table @asis
38721@item Synopsis:
0ce1b118 38722@smallexample
0ce1b118 38723int unlink(const char *pathname);
fc320d37 38724@end smallexample
0ce1b118 38725
fc320d37
SL
38726@item Request:
38727@samp{Funlink,@var{pathnameptr}/@var{len}}
0ce1b118 38728
fc320d37 38729@item Return value:
0ce1b118
CV
38730On success, zero is returned. On error, -1 is returned.
38731
fc320d37 38732@item Errors:
0ce1b118
CV
38733
38734@table @code
b383017d 38735@item EACCES
0ce1b118
CV
38736No access to the file or the path of the file.
38737
b383017d 38738@item EPERM
0ce1b118
CV
38739The system does not allow unlinking of directories.
38740
b383017d 38741@item EBUSY
fc320d37 38742The file @var{pathname} cannot be unlinked because it's
0ce1b118
CV
38743being used by another process.
38744
b383017d 38745@item EFAULT
fc320d37 38746@var{pathnameptr} is an invalid pointer value.
0ce1b118
CV
38747
38748@item ENAMETOOLONG
fc320d37 38749@var{pathname} was too long.
0ce1b118 38750
b383017d 38751@item ENOENT
fc320d37 38752A directory component in @var{pathname} does not exist.
0ce1b118 38753
b383017d 38754@item ENOTDIR
0ce1b118
CV
38755A component of the path is not a directory.
38756
b383017d 38757@item EROFS
0ce1b118
CV
38758The file is on a read-only filesystem.
38759
b383017d 38760@item EINTR
0ce1b118
CV
38761The call was interrupted by the user.
38762@end table
38763
fc320d37
SL
38764@end table
38765
0ce1b118
CV
38766@node stat/fstat
38767@unnumberedsubsubsec stat/fstat
38768@cindex fstat, file-i/o system call
38769@cindex stat, file-i/o system call
38770
fc320d37
SL
38771@table @asis
38772@item Synopsis:
0ce1b118 38773@smallexample
0ce1b118
CV
38774int stat(const char *pathname, struct stat *buf);
38775int fstat(int fd, struct stat *buf);
fc320d37 38776@end smallexample
0ce1b118 38777
fc320d37
SL
38778@item Request:
38779@samp{Fstat,@var{pathnameptr}/@var{len},@var{bufptr}}@*
38780@samp{Ffstat,@var{fd},@var{bufptr}}
0ce1b118 38781
fc320d37 38782@item Return value:
0ce1b118
CV
38783On success, zero is returned. On error, -1 is returned.
38784
fc320d37 38785@item Errors:
0ce1b118
CV
38786
38787@table @code
b383017d 38788@item EBADF
fc320d37 38789@var{fd} is not a valid open file.
0ce1b118 38790
b383017d 38791@item ENOENT
fc320d37 38792A directory component in @var{pathname} does not exist or the
0ce1b118
CV
38793path is an empty string.
38794
b383017d 38795@item ENOTDIR
0ce1b118
CV
38796A component of the path is not a directory.
38797
b383017d 38798@item EFAULT
fc320d37 38799@var{pathnameptr} is an invalid pointer value.
0ce1b118 38800
b383017d 38801@item EACCES
0ce1b118
CV
38802No access to the file or the path of the file.
38803
38804@item ENAMETOOLONG
fc320d37 38805@var{pathname} was too long.
0ce1b118 38806
b383017d 38807@item EINTR
0ce1b118
CV
38808The call was interrupted by the user.
38809@end table
38810
fc320d37
SL
38811@end table
38812
0ce1b118
CV
38813@node gettimeofday
38814@unnumberedsubsubsec gettimeofday
38815@cindex gettimeofday, file-i/o system call
38816
fc320d37
SL
38817@table @asis
38818@item Synopsis:
0ce1b118 38819@smallexample
0ce1b118 38820int gettimeofday(struct timeval *tv, void *tz);
fc320d37 38821@end smallexample
0ce1b118 38822
fc320d37
SL
38823@item Request:
38824@samp{Fgettimeofday,@var{tvptr},@var{tzptr}}
0ce1b118 38825
fc320d37 38826@item Return value:
0ce1b118
CV
38827On success, 0 is returned, -1 otherwise.
38828
fc320d37 38829@item Errors:
0ce1b118
CV
38830
38831@table @code
b383017d 38832@item EINVAL
fc320d37 38833@var{tz} is a non-NULL pointer.
0ce1b118 38834
b383017d 38835@item EFAULT
fc320d37
SL
38836@var{tvptr} and/or @var{tzptr} is an invalid pointer value.
38837@end table
38838
0ce1b118
CV
38839@end table
38840
38841@node isatty
38842@unnumberedsubsubsec isatty
38843@cindex isatty, file-i/o system call
38844
fc320d37
SL
38845@table @asis
38846@item Synopsis:
0ce1b118 38847@smallexample
0ce1b118 38848int isatty(int fd);
fc320d37 38849@end smallexample
0ce1b118 38850
fc320d37
SL
38851@item Request:
38852@samp{Fisatty,@var{fd}}
0ce1b118 38853
fc320d37
SL
38854@item Return value:
38855Returns 1 if @var{fd} refers to the @value{GDBN} console, 0 otherwise.
0ce1b118 38856
fc320d37 38857@item Errors:
0ce1b118
CV
38858
38859@table @code
b383017d 38860@item EINTR
0ce1b118
CV
38861The call was interrupted by the user.
38862@end table
38863
fc320d37
SL
38864@end table
38865
38866Note that the @code{isatty} call is treated as a special case: it returns
388671 to the target if the file descriptor is attached
38868to the @value{GDBN} console, 0 otherwise. Implementing through system calls
38869would require implementing @code{ioctl} and would be more complex than
38870needed.
38871
38872
0ce1b118
CV
38873@node system
38874@unnumberedsubsubsec system
38875@cindex system, file-i/o system call
38876
fc320d37
SL
38877@table @asis
38878@item Synopsis:
0ce1b118 38879@smallexample
0ce1b118 38880int system(const char *command);
fc320d37 38881@end smallexample
0ce1b118 38882
fc320d37
SL
38883@item Request:
38884@samp{Fsystem,@var{commandptr}/@var{len}}
0ce1b118 38885
fc320d37 38886@item Return value:
5600ea19
NS
38887If @var{len} is zero, the return value indicates whether a shell is
38888available. A zero return value indicates a shell is not available.
38889For non-zero @var{len}, the value returned is -1 on error and the
38890return status of the command otherwise. Only the exit status of the
38891command is returned, which is extracted from the host's @code{system}
38892return value by calling @code{WEXITSTATUS(retval)}. In case
38893@file{/bin/sh} could not be executed, 127 is returned.
0ce1b118 38894
fc320d37 38895@item Errors:
0ce1b118
CV
38896
38897@table @code
b383017d 38898@item EINTR
0ce1b118
CV
38899The call was interrupted by the user.
38900@end table
38901
fc320d37
SL
38902@end table
38903
38904@value{GDBN} takes over the full task of calling the necessary host calls
38905to perform the @code{system} call. The return value of @code{system} on
38906the host is simplified before it's returned
38907to the target. Any termination signal information from the child process
38908is discarded, and the return value consists
38909entirely of the exit status of the called command.
38910
38911Due to security concerns, the @code{system} call is by default refused
38912by @value{GDBN}. The user has to allow this call explicitly with the
38913@code{set remote system-call-allowed 1} command.
38914
38915@table @code
38916@item set remote system-call-allowed
38917@kindex set remote system-call-allowed
38918Control whether to allow the @code{system} calls in the File I/O
38919protocol for the remote target. The default is zero (disabled).
38920
38921@item show remote system-call-allowed
38922@kindex show remote system-call-allowed
38923Show whether the @code{system} calls are allowed in the File I/O
38924protocol.
38925@end table
38926
db2e3e2e
BW
38927@node Protocol-specific Representation of Datatypes
38928@subsection Protocol-specific Representation of Datatypes
38929@cindex protocol-specific representation of datatypes, in file-i/o protocol
0ce1b118
CV
38930
38931@menu
79a6e687
BW
38932* Integral Datatypes::
38933* Pointer Values::
38934* Memory Transfer::
0ce1b118
CV
38935* struct stat::
38936* struct timeval::
38937@end menu
38938
79a6e687
BW
38939@node Integral Datatypes
38940@unnumberedsubsubsec Integral Datatypes
0ce1b118
CV
38941@cindex integral datatypes, in file-i/o protocol
38942
fc320d37
SL
38943The integral datatypes used in the system calls are @code{int},
38944@code{unsigned int}, @code{long}, @code{unsigned long},
38945@code{mode_t}, and @code{time_t}.
0ce1b118 38946
fc320d37 38947@code{int}, @code{unsigned int}, @code{mode_t} and @code{time_t} are
0ce1b118
CV
38948implemented as 32 bit values in this protocol.
38949
fc320d37 38950@code{long} and @code{unsigned long} are implemented as 64 bit types.
b383017d 38951
0ce1b118
CV
38952@xref{Limits}, for corresponding MIN and MAX values (similar to those
38953in @file{limits.h}) to allow range checking on host and target.
38954
38955@code{time_t} datatypes are defined as seconds since the Epoch.
38956
38957All integral datatypes transferred as part of a memory read or write of a
38958structured datatype e.g.@: a @code{struct stat} have to be given in big endian
38959byte order.
38960
79a6e687
BW
38961@node Pointer Values
38962@unnumberedsubsubsec Pointer Values
0ce1b118
CV
38963@cindex pointer values, in file-i/o protocol
38964
38965Pointers to target data are transmitted as they are. An exception
38966is made for pointers to buffers for which the length isn't
38967transmitted as part of the function call, namely strings. Strings
38968are transmitted as a pointer/length pair, both as hex values, e.g.@:
38969
38970@smallexample
38971@code{1aaf/12}
38972@end smallexample
38973
38974@noindent
38975which is a pointer to data of length 18 bytes at position 0x1aaf.
38976The length is defined as the full string length in bytes, including
fc320d37
SL
38977the trailing null byte. For example, the string @code{"hello world"}
38978at address 0x123456 is transmitted as
0ce1b118
CV
38979
38980@smallexample
fc320d37 38981@code{123456/d}
0ce1b118
CV
38982@end smallexample
38983
79a6e687
BW
38984@node Memory Transfer
38985@unnumberedsubsubsec Memory Transfer
fc320d37
SL
38986@cindex memory transfer, in file-i/o protocol
38987
38988Structured data which is transferred using a memory read or write (for
db2e3e2e 38989example, a @code{struct stat}) is expected to be in a protocol-specific format
fc320d37
SL
38990with all scalar multibyte datatypes being big endian. Translation to
38991this representation needs to be done both by the target before the @code{F}
38992packet is sent, and by @value{GDBN} before
38993it transfers memory to the target. Transferred pointers to structured
38994data should point to the already-coerced data at any time.
0ce1b118 38995
0ce1b118
CV
38996
38997@node struct stat
38998@unnumberedsubsubsec struct stat
38999@cindex struct stat, in file-i/o protocol
39000
fc320d37
SL
39001The buffer of type @code{struct stat} used by the target and @value{GDBN}
39002is defined as follows:
0ce1b118
CV
39003
39004@smallexample
39005struct stat @{
39006 unsigned int st_dev; /* device */
39007 unsigned int st_ino; /* inode */
39008 mode_t st_mode; /* protection */
39009 unsigned int st_nlink; /* number of hard links */
39010 unsigned int st_uid; /* user ID of owner */
39011 unsigned int st_gid; /* group ID of owner */
39012 unsigned int st_rdev; /* device type (if inode device) */
39013 unsigned long st_size; /* total size, in bytes */
39014 unsigned long st_blksize; /* blocksize for filesystem I/O */
39015 unsigned long st_blocks; /* number of blocks allocated */
39016 time_t st_atime; /* time of last access */
39017 time_t st_mtime; /* time of last modification */
39018 time_t st_ctime; /* time of last change */
39019@};
39020@end smallexample
39021
fc320d37 39022The integral datatypes conform to the definitions given in the
79a6e687 39023appropriate section (see @ref{Integral Datatypes}, for details) so this
0ce1b118
CV
39024structure is of size 64 bytes.
39025
39026The values of several fields have a restricted meaning and/or
39027range of values.
39028
fc320d37 39029@table @code
0ce1b118 39030
fc320d37
SL
39031@item st_dev
39032A value of 0 represents a file, 1 the console.
0ce1b118 39033
fc320d37
SL
39034@item st_ino
39035No valid meaning for the target. Transmitted unchanged.
0ce1b118 39036
fc320d37
SL
39037@item st_mode
39038Valid mode bits are described in @ref{Constants}. Any other
39039bits have currently no meaning for the target.
0ce1b118 39040
fc320d37
SL
39041@item st_uid
39042@itemx st_gid
39043@itemx st_rdev
39044No valid meaning for the target. Transmitted unchanged.
0ce1b118 39045
fc320d37
SL
39046@item st_atime
39047@itemx st_mtime
39048@itemx st_ctime
39049These values have a host and file system dependent
39050accuracy. Especially on Windows hosts, the file system may not
39051support exact timing values.
39052@end table
0ce1b118 39053
fc320d37
SL
39054The target gets a @code{struct stat} of the above representation and is
39055responsible for coercing it to the target representation before
0ce1b118
CV
39056continuing.
39057
fc320d37
SL
39058Note that due to size differences between the host, target, and protocol
39059representations of @code{struct stat} members, these members could eventually
0ce1b118
CV
39060get truncated on the target.
39061
39062@node struct timeval
39063@unnumberedsubsubsec struct timeval
39064@cindex struct timeval, in file-i/o protocol
39065
fc320d37 39066The buffer of type @code{struct timeval} used by the File-I/O protocol
0ce1b118
CV
39067is defined as follows:
39068
39069@smallexample
b383017d 39070struct timeval @{
0ce1b118
CV
39071 time_t tv_sec; /* second */
39072 long tv_usec; /* microsecond */
39073@};
39074@end smallexample
39075
fc320d37 39076The integral datatypes conform to the definitions given in the
79a6e687 39077appropriate section (see @ref{Integral Datatypes}, for details) so this
0ce1b118
CV
39078structure is of size 8 bytes.
39079
39080@node Constants
39081@subsection Constants
39082@cindex constants, in file-i/o protocol
39083
39084The following values are used for the constants inside of the
fc320d37 39085protocol. @value{GDBN} and target are responsible for translating these
0ce1b118
CV
39086values before and after the call as needed.
39087
39088@menu
79a6e687
BW
39089* Open Flags::
39090* mode_t Values::
39091* Errno Values::
39092* Lseek Flags::
0ce1b118
CV
39093* Limits::
39094@end menu
39095
79a6e687
BW
39096@node Open Flags
39097@unnumberedsubsubsec Open Flags
0ce1b118
CV
39098@cindex open flags, in file-i/o protocol
39099
39100All values are given in hexadecimal representation.
39101
39102@smallexample
39103 O_RDONLY 0x0
39104 O_WRONLY 0x1
39105 O_RDWR 0x2
39106 O_APPEND 0x8
39107 O_CREAT 0x200
39108 O_TRUNC 0x400
39109 O_EXCL 0x800
39110@end smallexample
39111
79a6e687
BW
39112@node mode_t Values
39113@unnumberedsubsubsec mode_t Values
0ce1b118
CV
39114@cindex mode_t values, in file-i/o protocol
39115
39116All values are given in octal representation.
39117
39118@smallexample
39119 S_IFREG 0100000
39120 S_IFDIR 040000
39121 S_IRUSR 0400
39122 S_IWUSR 0200
39123 S_IXUSR 0100
39124 S_IRGRP 040
39125 S_IWGRP 020
39126 S_IXGRP 010
39127 S_IROTH 04
39128 S_IWOTH 02
39129 S_IXOTH 01
39130@end smallexample
39131
79a6e687
BW
39132@node Errno Values
39133@unnumberedsubsubsec Errno Values
0ce1b118
CV
39134@cindex errno values, in file-i/o protocol
39135
39136All values are given in decimal representation.
39137
39138@smallexample
39139 EPERM 1
39140 ENOENT 2
39141 EINTR 4
39142 EBADF 9
39143 EACCES 13
39144 EFAULT 14
39145 EBUSY 16
39146 EEXIST 17
39147 ENODEV 19
39148 ENOTDIR 20
39149 EISDIR 21
39150 EINVAL 22
39151 ENFILE 23
39152 EMFILE 24
39153 EFBIG 27
39154 ENOSPC 28
39155 ESPIPE 29
39156 EROFS 30
39157 ENAMETOOLONG 91
39158 EUNKNOWN 9999
39159@end smallexample
39160
fc320d37 39161 @code{EUNKNOWN} is used as a fallback error value if a host system returns
0ce1b118
CV
39162 any error value not in the list of supported error numbers.
39163
79a6e687
BW
39164@node Lseek Flags
39165@unnumberedsubsubsec Lseek Flags
0ce1b118
CV
39166@cindex lseek flags, in file-i/o protocol
39167
39168@smallexample
39169 SEEK_SET 0
39170 SEEK_CUR 1
39171 SEEK_END 2
39172@end smallexample
39173
39174@node Limits
39175@unnumberedsubsubsec Limits
39176@cindex limits, in file-i/o protocol
39177
39178All values are given in decimal representation.
39179
39180@smallexample
39181 INT_MIN -2147483648
39182 INT_MAX 2147483647
39183 UINT_MAX 4294967295
39184 LONG_MIN -9223372036854775808
39185 LONG_MAX 9223372036854775807
39186 ULONG_MAX 18446744073709551615
39187@end smallexample
39188
39189@node File-I/O Examples
39190@subsection File-I/O Examples
39191@cindex file-i/o examples
39192
39193Example sequence of a write call, file descriptor 3, buffer is at target
39194address 0x1234, 6 bytes should be written:
39195
39196@smallexample
39197<- @code{Fwrite,3,1234,6}
39198@emph{request memory read from target}
39199-> @code{m1234,6}
39200<- XXXXXX
39201@emph{return "6 bytes written"}
39202-> @code{F6}
39203@end smallexample
39204
39205Example sequence of a read call, file descriptor 3, buffer is at target
39206address 0x1234, 6 bytes should be read:
39207
39208@smallexample
39209<- @code{Fread,3,1234,6}
39210@emph{request memory write to target}
39211-> @code{X1234,6:XXXXXX}
39212@emph{return "6 bytes read"}
39213-> @code{F6}
39214@end smallexample
39215
39216Example sequence of a read call, call fails on the host due to invalid
fc320d37 39217file descriptor (@code{EBADF}):
0ce1b118
CV
39218
39219@smallexample
39220<- @code{Fread,3,1234,6}
39221-> @code{F-1,9}
39222@end smallexample
39223
c8aa23ab 39224Example sequence of a read call, user presses @kbd{Ctrl-c} before syscall on
0ce1b118
CV
39225host is called:
39226
39227@smallexample
39228<- @code{Fread,3,1234,6}
39229-> @code{F-1,4,C}
39230<- @code{T02}
39231@end smallexample
39232
c8aa23ab 39233Example sequence of a read call, user presses @kbd{Ctrl-c} after syscall on
0ce1b118
CV
39234host is called:
39235
39236@smallexample
39237<- @code{Fread,3,1234,6}
39238-> @code{X1234,6:XXXXXX}
39239<- @code{T02}
39240@end smallexample
39241
cfa9d6d9
DJ
39242@node Library List Format
39243@section Library List Format
39244@cindex library list format, remote protocol
39245
39246On some platforms, a dynamic loader (e.g.@: @file{ld.so}) runs in the
39247same process as your application to manage libraries. In this case,
39248@value{GDBN} can use the loader's symbol table and normal memory
39249operations to maintain a list of shared libraries. On other
39250platforms, the operating system manages loaded libraries.
39251@value{GDBN} can not retrieve the list of currently loaded libraries
39252through memory operations, so it uses the @samp{qXfer:libraries:read}
39253packet (@pxref{qXfer library list read}) instead. The remote stub
39254queries the target's operating system and reports which libraries
39255are loaded.
39256
39257The @samp{qXfer:libraries:read} packet returns an XML document which
39258lists loaded libraries and their offsets. Each library has an
1fddbabb
PA
39259associated name and one or more segment or section base addresses,
39260which report where the library was loaded in memory.
39261
39262For the common case of libraries that are fully linked binaries, the
39263library should have a list of segments. If the target supports
39264dynamic linking of a relocatable object file, its library XML element
39265should instead include a list of allocated sections. The segment or
39266section bases are start addresses, not relocation offsets; they do not
39267depend on the library's link-time base addresses.
cfa9d6d9 39268
9cceb671
DJ
39269@value{GDBN} must be linked with the Expat library to support XML
39270library lists. @xref{Expat}.
39271
cfa9d6d9
DJ
39272A simple memory map, with one loaded library relocated by a single
39273offset, looks like this:
39274
39275@smallexample
39276<library-list>
39277 <library name="/lib/libc.so.6">
39278 <segment address="0x10000000"/>
39279 </library>
39280</library-list>
39281@end smallexample
39282
1fddbabb
PA
39283Another simple memory map, with one loaded library with three
39284allocated sections (.text, .data, .bss), looks like this:
39285
39286@smallexample
39287<library-list>
39288 <library name="sharedlib.o">
39289 <section address="0x10000000"/>
39290 <section address="0x20000000"/>
39291 <section address="0x30000000"/>
39292 </library>
39293</library-list>
39294@end smallexample
39295
cfa9d6d9
DJ
39296The format of a library list is described by this DTD:
39297
39298@smallexample
39299<!-- library-list: Root element with versioning -->
39300<!ELEMENT library-list (library)*>
39301<!ATTLIST library-list version CDATA #FIXED "1.0">
1fddbabb 39302<!ELEMENT library (segment*, section*)>
cfa9d6d9
DJ
39303<!ATTLIST library name CDATA #REQUIRED>
39304<!ELEMENT segment EMPTY>
39305<!ATTLIST segment address CDATA #REQUIRED>
1fddbabb
PA
39306<!ELEMENT section EMPTY>
39307<!ATTLIST section address CDATA #REQUIRED>
cfa9d6d9
DJ
39308@end smallexample
39309
1fddbabb
PA
39310In addition, segments and section descriptors cannot be mixed within a
39311single library element, and you must supply at least one segment or
39312section for each library.
39313
2268b414
JK
39314@node Library List Format for SVR4 Targets
39315@section Library List Format for SVR4 Targets
39316@cindex library list format, remote protocol
39317
39318On SVR4 platforms @value{GDBN} can use the symbol table of a dynamic loader
39319(e.g.@: @file{ld.so}) and normal memory operations to maintain a list of
39320shared libraries. Still a special library list provided by this packet is
39321more efficient for the @value{GDBN} remote protocol.
39322
39323The @samp{qXfer:libraries-svr4:read} packet returns an XML document which lists
39324loaded libraries and their SVR4 linker parameters. For each library on SVR4
39325target, the following parameters are reported:
39326
39327@itemize @minus
39328@item
39329@code{name}, the absolute file name from the @code{l_name} field of
39330@code{struct link_map}.
39331@item
39332@code{lm} with address of @code{struct link_map} used for TLS
39333(Thread Local Storage) access.
39334@item
39335@code{l_addr}, the displacement as read from the field @code{l_addr} of
39336@code{struct link_map}. For prelinked libraries this is not an absolute
39337memory address. It is a displacement of absolute memory address against
39338address the file was prelinked to during the library load.
39339@item
39340@code{l_ld}, which is memory address of the @code{PT_DYNAMIC} segment
39341@end itemize
39342
39343Additionally the single @code{main-lm} attribute specifies address of
39344@code{struct link_map} used for the main executable. This parameter is used
39345for TLS access and its presence is optional.
39346
39347@value{GDBN} must be linked with the Expat library to support XML
39348SVR4 library lists. @xref{Expat}.
39349
39350A simple memory map, with two loaded libraries (which do not use prelink),
39351looks like this:
39352
39353@smallexample
39354<library-list-svr4 version="1.0" main-lm="0xe4f8f8">
39355 <library name="/lib/ld-linux.so.2" lm="0xe4f51c" l_addr="0xe2d000"
39356 l_ld="0xe4eefc"/>
39357 <library name="/lib/libc.so.6" lm="0xe4fbe8" l_addr="0x154000"
39358 l_ld="0x152350"/>
39359</library-list-svr>
39360@end smallexample
39361
39362The format of an SVR4 library list is described by this DTD:
39363
39364@smallexample
39365<!-- library-list-svr4: Root element with versioning -->
39366<!ELEMENT library-list-svr4 (library)*>
39367<!ATTLIST library-list-svr4 version CDATA #FIXED "1.0">
39368<!ATTLIST library-list-svr4 main-lm CDATA #IMPLIED>
39369<!ELEMENT library EMPTY>
39370<!ATTLIST library name CDATA #REQUIRED>
39371<!ATTLIST library lm CDATA #REQUIRED>
39372<!ATTLIST library l_addr CDATA #REQUIRED>
39373<!ATTLIST library l_ld CDATA #REQUIRED>
39374@end smallexample
39375
79a6e687
BW
39376@node Memory Map Format
39377@section Memory Map Format
68437a39
DJ
39378@cindex memory map format
39379
39380To be able to write into flash memory, @value{GDBN} needs to obtain a
39381memory map from the target. This section describes the format of the
39382memory map.
39383
39384The memory map is obtained using the @samp{qXfer:memory-map:read}
39385(@pxref{qXfer memory map read}) packet and is an XML document that
9cceb671
DJ
39386lists memory regions.
39387
39388@value{GDBN} must be linked with the Expat library to support XML
39389memory maps. @xref{Expat}.
39390
39391The top-level structure of the document is shown below:
68437a39
DJ
39392
39393@smallexample
39394<?xml version="1.0"?>
39395<!DOCTYPE memory-map
39396 PUBLIC "+//IDN gnu.org//DTD GDB Memory Map V1.0//EN"
39397 "http://sourceware.org/gdb/gdb-memory-map.dtd">
39398<memory-map>
39399 region...
39400</memory-map>
39401@end smallexample
39402
39403Each region can be either:
39404
39405@itemize
39406
39407@item
39408A region of RAM starting at @var{addr} and extending for @var{length}
39409bytes from there:
39410
39411@smallexample
39412<memory type="ram" start="@var{addr}" length="@var{length}"/>
39413@end smallexample
39414
39415
39416@item
39417A region of read-only memory:
39418
39419@smallexample
39420<memory type="rom" start="@var{addr}" length="@var{length}"/>
39421@end smallexample
39422
39423
39424@item
39425A region of flash memory, with erasure blocks @var{blocksize}
39426bytes in length:
39427
39428@smallexample
39429<memory type="flash" start="@var{addr}" length="@var{length}">
39430 <property name="blocksize">@var{blocksize}</property>
39431</memory>
39432@end smallexample
39433
39434@end itemize
39435
39436Regions must not overlap. @value{GDBN} assumes that areas of memory not covered
39437by the memory map are RAM, and uses the ordinary @samp{M} and @samp{X}
39438packets to write to addresses in such ranges.
39439
39440The formal DTD for memory map format is given below:
39441
39442@smallexample
39443<!-- ................................................... -->
39444<!-- Memory Map XML DTD ................................ -->
39445<!-- File: memory-map.dtd .............................. -->
39446<!-- .................................... .............. -->
39447<!-- memory-map.dtd -->
39448<!-- memory-map: Root element with versioning -->
39449<!ELEMENT memory-map (memory | property)>
39450<!ATTLIST memory-map version CDATA #FIXED "1.0.0">
39451<!ELEMENT memory (property)>
39452<!-- memory: Specifies a memory region,
39453 and its type, or device. -->
39454<!ATTLIST memory type CDATA #REQUIRED
39455 start CDATA #REQUIRED
39456 length CDATA #REQUIRED
39457 device CDATA #IMPLIED>
39458<!-- property: Generic attribute tag -->
39459<!ELEMENT property (#PCDATA | property)*>
39460<!ATTLIST property name CDATA #REQUIRED>
39461@end smallexample
39462
dc146f7c
VP
39463@node Thread List Format
39464@section Thread List Format
39465@cindex thread list format
39466
39467To efficiently update the list of threads and their attributes,
39468@value{GDBN} issues the @samp{qXfer:threads:read} packet
39469(@pxref{qXfer threads read}) and obtains the XML document with
39470the following structure:
39471
39472@smallexample
39473<?xml version="1.0"?>
39474<threads>
39475 <thread id="id" core="0">
39476 ... description ...
39477 </thread>
39478</threads>
39479@end smallexample
39480
39481Each @samp{thread} element must have the @samp{id} attribute that
39482identifies the thread (@pxref{thread-id syntax}). The
39483@samp{core} attribute, if present, specifies which processor core
39484the thread was last executing on. The content of the of @samp{thread}
39485element is interpreted as human-readable auxilliary information.
39486
b3b9301e
PA
39487@node Traceframe Info Format
39488@section Traceframe Info Format
39489@cindex traceframe info format
39490
39491To be able to know which objects in the inferior can be examined when
39492inspecting a tracepoint hit, @value{GDBN} needs to obtain the list of
39493memory ranges, registers and trace state variables that have been
39494collected in a traceframe.
39495
39496This list is obtained using the @samp{qXfer:traceframe-info:read}
39497(@pxref{qXfer traceframe info read}) packet and is an XML document.
39498
39499@value{GDBN} must be linked with the Expat library to support XML
39500traceframe info discovery. @xref{Expat}.
39501
39502The top-level structure of the document is shown below:
39503
39504@smallexample
39505<?xml version="1.0"?>
39506<!DOCTYPE traceframe-info
39507 PUBLIC "+//IDN gnu.org//DTD GDB Memory Map V1.0//EN"
39508 "http://sourceware.org/gdb/gdb-traceframe-info.dtd">
39509<traceframe-info>
39510 block...
39511</traceframe-info>
39512@end smallexample
39513
39514Each traceframe block can be either:
39515
39516@itemize
39517
39518@item
39519A region of collected memory starting at @var{addr} and extending for
39520@var{length} bytes from there:
39521
39522@smallexample
39523<memory start="@var{addr}" length="@var{length}"/>
39524@end smallexample
39525
39526@end itemize
39527
39528The formal DTD for the traceframe info format is given below:
39529
39530@smallexample
39531<!ELEMENT traceframe-info (memory)* >
39532<!ATTLIST traceframe-info version CDATA #FIXED "1.0">
39533
39534<!ELEMENT memory EMPTY>
39535<!ATTLIST memory start CDATA #REQUIRED
39536 length CDATA #REQUIRED>
39537@end smallexample
39538
f418dd93
DJ
39539@include agentexpr.texi
39540
23181151
DJ
39541@node Target Descriptions
39542@appendix Target Descriptions
39543@cindex target descriptions
39544
23181151
DJ
39545One of the challenges of using @value{GDBN} to debug embedded systems
39546is that there are so many minor variants of each processor
39547architecture in use. It is common practice for vendors to start with
eb17f351 39548a standard processor core --- ARM, PowerPC, or @acronym{MIPS}, for example ---
23181151
DJ
39549and then make changes to adapt it to a particular market niche. Some
39550architectures have hundreds of variants, available from dozens of
39551vendors. This leads to a number of problems:
39552
39553@itemize @bullet
39554@item
39555With so many different customized processors, it is difficult for
39556the @value{GDBN} maintainers to keep up with the changes.
39557@item
39558Since individual variants may have short lifetimes or limited
39559audiences, it may not be worthwhile to carry information about every
39560variant in the @value{GDBN} source tree.
39561@item
39562When @value{GDBN} does support the architecture of the embedded system
39563at hand, the task of finding the correct architecture name to give the
39564@command{set architecture} command can be error-prone.
39565@end itemize
39566
39567To address these problems, the @value{GDBN} remote protocol allows a
39568target system to not only identify itself to @value{GDBN}, but to
39569actually describe its own features. This lets @value{GDBN} support
39570processor variants it has never seen before --- to the extent that the
39571descriptions are accurate, and that @value{GDBN} understands them.
39572
9cceb671
DJ
39573@value{GDBN} must be linked with the Expat library to support XML
39574target descriptions. @xref{Expat}.
123dc839 39575
23181151
DJ
39576@menu
39577* Retrieving Descriptions:: How descriptions are fetched from a target.
39578* Target Description Format:: The contents of a target description.
123dc839
DJ
39579* Predefined Target Types:: Standard types available for target
39580 descriptions.
39581* Standard Target Features:: Features @value{GDBN} knows about.
23181151
DJ
39582@end menu
39583
39584@node Retrieving Descriptions
39585@section Retrieving Descriptions
39586
39587Target descriptions can be read from the target automatically, or
39588specified by the user manually. The default behavior is to read the
39589description from the target. @value{GDBN} retrieves it via the remote
39590protocol using @samp{qXfer} requests (@pxref{General Query Packets,
39591qXfer}). The @var{annex} in the @samp{qXfer} packet will be
39592@samp{target.xml}. The contents of the @samp{target.xml} annex are an
39593XML document, of the form described in @ref{Target Description
39594Format}.
39595
39596Alternatively, you can specify a file to read for the target description.
39597If a file is set, the target will not be queried. The commands to
39598specify a file are:
39599
39600@table @code
39601@cindex set tdesc filename
39602@item set tdesc filename @var{path}
39603Read the target description from @var{path}.
39604
39605@cindex unset tdesc filename
39606@item unset tdesc filename
39607Do not read the XML target description from a file. @value{GDBN}
39608will use the description supplied by the current target.
39609
39610@cindex show tdesc filename
39611@item show tdesc filename
39612Show the filename to read for a target description, if any.
39613@end table
39614
39615
39616@node Target Description Format
39617@section Target Description Format
39618@cindex target descriptions, XML format
39619
39620A target description annex is an @uref{http://www.w3.org/XML/, XML}
39621document which complies with the Document Type Definition provided in
39622the @value{GDBN} sources in @file{gdb/features/gdb-target.dtd}. This
39623means you can use generally available tools like @command{xmllint} to
39624check that your feature descriptions are well-formed and valid.
39625However, to help people unfamiliar with XML write descriptions for
39626their targets, we also describe the grammar here.
39627
123dc839
DJ
39628Target descriptions can identify the architecture of the remote target
39629and (for some architectures) provide information about custom register
08d16641
PA
39630sets. They can also identify the OS ABI of the remote target.
39631@value{GDBN} can use this information to autoconfigure for your
123dc839 39632target, or to warn you if you connect to an unsupported target.
23181151
DJ
39633
39634Here is a simple target description:
39635
123dc839 39636@smallexample
1780a0ed 39637<target version="1.0">
23181151
DJ
39638 <architecture>i386:x86-64</architecture>
39639</target>
123dc839 39640@end smallexample
23181151
DJ
39641
39642@noindent
39643This minimal description only says that the target uses
39644the x86-64 architecture.
39645
123dc839
DJ
39646A target description has the following overall form, with [ ] marking
39647optional elements and @dots{} marking repeatable elements. The elements
39648are explained further below.
23181151 39649
123dc839 39650@smallexample
23181151
DJ
39651<?xml version="1.0"?>
39652<!DOCTYPE target SYSTEM "gdb-target.dtd">
1780a0ed 39653<target version="1.0">
123dc839 39654 @r{[}@var{architecture}@r{]}
08d16641 39655 @r{[}@var{osabi}@r{]}
e35359c5 39656 @r{[}@var{compatible}@r{]}
123dc839 39657 @r{[}@var{feature}@dots{}@r{]}
23181151 39658</target>
123dc839 39659@end smallexample
23181151
DJ
39660
39661@noindent
39662The description is generally insensitive to whitespace and line
39663breaks, under the usual common-sense rules. The XML version
39664declaration and document type declaration can generally be omitted
39665(@value{GDBN} does not require them), but specifying them may be
1780a0ed
DJ
39666useful for XML validation tools. The @samp{version} attribute for
39667@samp{<target>} may also be omitted, but we recommend
39668including it; if future versions of @value{GDBN} use an incompatible
39669revision of @file{gdb-target.dtd}, they will detect and report
39670the version mismatch.
23181151 39671
108546a0
DJ
39672@subsection Inclusion
39673@cindex target descriptions, inclusion
39674@cindex XInclude
39675@ifnotinfo
39676@cindex <xi:include>
39677@end ifnotinfo
39678
39679It can sometimes be valuable to split a target description up into
39680several different annexes, either for organizational purposes, or to
39681share files between different possible target descriptions. You can
39682divide a description into multiple files by replacing any element of
39683the target description with an inclusion directive of the form:
39684
123dc839 39685@smallexample
108546a0 39686<xi:include href="@var{document}"/>
123dc839 39687@end smallexample
108546a0
DJ
39688
39689@noindent
39690When @value{GDBN} encounters an element of this form, it will retrieve
39691the named XML @var{document}, and replace the inclusion directive with
39692the contents of that document. If the current description was read
39693using @samp{qXfer}, then so will be the included document;
39694@var{document} will be interpreted as the name of an annex. If the
39695current description was read from a file, @value{GDBN} will look for
39696@var{document} as a file in the same directory where it found the
39697original description.
39698
123dc839
DJ
39699@subsection Architecture
39700@cindex <architecture>
39701
39702An @samp{<architecture>} element has this form:
39703
39704@smallexample
39705 <architecture>@var{arch}</architecture>
39706@end smallexample
39707
e35359c5
UW
39708@var{arch} is one of the architectures from the set accepted by
39709@code{set architecture} (@pxref{Targets, ,Specifying a Debugging Target}).
123dc839 39710
08d16641
PA
39711@subsection OS ABI
39712@cindex @code{<osabi>}
39713
39714This optional field was introduced in @value{GDBN} version 7.0.
39715Previous versions of @value{GDBN} ignore it.
39716
39717An @samp{<osabi>} element has this form:
39718
39719@smallexample
39720 <osabi>@var{abi-name}</osabi>
39721@end smallexample
39722
39723@var{abi-name} is an OS ABI name from the same selection accepted by
39724@w{@code{set osabi}} (@pxref{ABI, ,Configuring the Current ABI}).
39725
e35359c5
UW
39726@subsection Compatible Architecture
39727@cindex @code{<compatible>}
39728
39729This optional field was introduced in @value{GDBN} version 7.0.
39730Previous versions of @value{GDBN} ignore it.
39731
39732A @samp{<compatible>} element has this form:
39733
39734@smallexample
39735 <compatible>@var{arch}</compatible>
39736@end smallexample
39737
39738@var{arch} is one of the architectures from the set accepted by
39739@code{set architecture} (@pxref{Targets, ,Specifying a Debugging Target}).
39740
39741A @samp{<compatible>} element is used to specify that the target
39742is able to run binaries in some other than the main target architecture
39743given by the @samp{<architecture>} element. For example, on the
39744Cell Broadband Engine, the main architecture is @code{powerpc:common}
39745or @code{powerpc:common64}, but the system is able to run binaries
39746in the @code{spu} architecture as well. The way to describe this
39747capability with @samp{<compatible>} is as follows:
39748
39749@smallexample
39750 <architecture>powerpc:common</architecture>
39751 <compatible>spu</compatible>
39752@end smallexample
39753
123dc839
DJ
39754@subsection Features
39755@cindex <feature>
39756
39757Each @samp{<feature>} describes some logical portion of the target
39758system. Features are currently used to describe available CPU
39759registers and the types of their contents. A @samp{<feature>} element
39760has this form:
39761
39762@smallexample
39763<feature name="@var{name}">
39764 @r{[}@var{type}@dots{}@r{]}
39765 @var{reg}@dots{}
39766</feature>
39767@end smallexample
39768
39769@noindent
39770Each feature's name should be unique within the description. The name
39771of a feature does not matter unless @value{GDBN} has some special
39772knowledge of the contents of that feature; if it does, the feature
39773should have its standard name. @xref{Standard Target Features}.
39774
39775@subsection Types
39776
39777Any register's value is a collection of bits which @value{GDBN} must
39778interpret. The default interpretation is a two's complement integer,
39779but other types can be requested by name in the register description.
39780Some predefined types are provided by @value{GDBN} (@pxref{Predefined
39781Target Types}), and the description can define additional composite types.
39782
39783Each type element must have an @samp{id} attribute, which gives
39784a unique (within the containing @samp{<feature>}) name to the type.
39785Types must be defined before they are used.
39786
39787@cindex <vector>
39788Some targets offer vector registers, which can be treated as arrays
39789of scalar elements. These types are written as @samp{<vector>} elements,
39790specifying the array element type, @var{type}, and the number of elements,
39791@var{count}:
39792
39793@smallexample
39794<vector id="@var{id}" type="@var{type}" count="@var{count}"/>
39795@end smallexample
39796
39797@cindex <union>
39798If a register's value is usefully viewed in multiple ways, define it
39799with a union type containing the useful representations. The
39800@samp{<union>} element contains one or more @samp{<field>} elements,
39801each of which has a @var{name} and a @var{type}:
39802
39803@smallexample
39804<union id="@var{id}">
39805 <field name="@var{name}" type="@var{type}"/>
39806 @dots{}
39807</union>
39808@end smallexample
39809
f5dff777
DJ
39810@cindex <struct>
39811If a register's value is composed from several separate values, define
39812it with a structure type. There are two forms of the @samp{<struct>}
39813element; a @samp{<struct>} element must either contain only bitfields
39814or contain no bitfields. If the structure contains only bitfields,
39815its total size in bytes must be specified, each bitfield must have an
39816explicit start and end, and bitfields are automatically assigned an
39817integer type. The field's @var{start} should be less than or
39818equal to its @var{end}, and zero represents the least significant bit.
39819
39820@smallexample
39821<struct id="@var{id}" size="@var{size}">
39822 <field name="@var{name}" start="@var{start}" end="@var{end}"/>
39823 @dots{}
39824</struct>
39825@end smallexample
39826
39827If the structure contains no bitfields, then each field has an
39828explicit type, and no implicit padding is added.
39829
39830@smallexample
39831<struct id="@var{id}">
39832 <field name="@var{name}" type="@var{type}"/>
39833 @dots{}
39834</struct>
39835@end smallexample
39836
39837@cindex <flags>
39838If a register's value is a series of single-bit flags, define it with
39839a flags type. The @samp{<flags>} element has an explicit @var{size}
39840and contains one or more @samp{<field>} elements. Each field has a
39841@var{name}, a @var{start}, and an @var{end}. Only single-bit flags
39842are supported.
39843
39844@smallexample
39845<flags id="@var{id}" size="@var{size}">
39846 <field name="@var{name}" start="@var{start}" end="@var{end}"/>
39847 @dots{}
39848</flags>
39849@end smallexample
39850
123dc839
DJ
39851@subsection Registers
39852@cindex <reg>
39853
39854Each register is represented as an element with this form:
39855
39856@smallexample
39857<reg name="@var{name}"
39858 bitsize="@var{size}"
39859 @r{[}regnum="@var{num}"@r{]}
39860 @r{[}save-restore="@var{save-restore}"@r{]}
39861 @r{[}type="@var{type}"@r{]}
39862 @r{[}group="@var{group}"@r{]}/>
39863@end smallexample
39864
39865@noindent
39866The components are as follows:
39867
39868@table @var
39869
39870@item name
39871The register's name; it must be unique within the target description.
39872
39873@item bitsize
39874The register's size, in bits.
39875
39876@item regnum
39877The register's number. If omitted, a register's number is one greater
39878than that of the previous register (either in the current feature or in
177b42fe 39879a preceding feature); the first register in the target description
123dc839
DJ
39880defaults to zero. This register number is used to read or write
39881the register; e.g.@: it is used in the remote @code{p} and @code{P}
39882packets, and registers appear in the @code{g} and @code{G} packets
39883in order of increasing register number.
39884
39885@item save-restore
39886Whether the register should be preserved across inferior function
39887calls; this must be either @code{yes} or @code{no}. The default is
39888@code{yes}, which is appropriate for most registers except for
39889some system control registers; this is not related to the target's
39890ABI.
39891
39892@item type
39893The type of the register. @var{type} may be a predefined type, a type
39894defined in the current feature, or one of the special types @code{int}
39895and @code{float}. @code{int} is an integer type of the correct size
39896for @var{bitsize}, and @code{float} is a floating point type (in the
39897architecture's normal floating point format) of the correct size for
39898@var{bitsize}. The default is @code{int}.
39899
39900@item group
39901The register group to which this register belongs. @var{group} must
39902be either @code{general}, @code{float}, or @code{vector}. If no
39903@var{group} is specified, @value{GDBN} will not display the register
39904in @code{info registers}.
39905
39906@end table
39907
39908@node Predefined Target Types
39909@section Predefined Target Types
39910@cindex target descriptions, predefined types
39911
39912Type definitions in the self-description can build up composite types
39913from basic building blocks, but can not define fundamental types. Instead,
39914standard identifiers are provided by @value{GDBN} for the fundamental
39915types. The currently supported types are:
39916
39917@table @code
39918
39919@item int8
39920@itemx int16
39921@itemx int32
39922@itemx int64
7cc46491 39923@itemx int128
123dc839
DJ
39924Signed integer types holding the specified number of bits.
39925
39926@item uint8
39927@itemx uint16
39928@itemx uint32
39929@itemx uint64
7cc46491 39930@itemx uint128
123dc839
DJ
39931Unsigned integer types holding the specified number of bits.
39932
39933@item code_ptr
39934@itemx data_ptr
39935Pointers to unspecified code and data. The program counter and
39936any dedicated return address register may be marked as code
39937pointers; printing a code pointer converts it into a symbolic
39938address. The stack pointer and any dedicated address registers
39939may be marked as data pointers.
39940
6e3bbd1a
PB
39941@item ieee_single
39942Single precision IEEE floating point.
39943
39944@item ieee_double
39945Double precision IEEE floating point.
39946
123dc839
DJ
39947@item arm_fpa_ext
39948The 12-byte extended precision format used by ARM FPA registers.
39949
075b51b7
L
39950@item i387_ext
39951The 10-byte extended precision format used by x87 registers.
39952
39953@item i386_eflags
3995432bit @sc{eflags} register used by x86.
39955
39956@item i386_mxcsr
3995732bit @sc{mxcsr} register used by x86.
39958
123dc839
DJ
39959@end table
39960
39961@node Standard Target Features
39962@section Standard Target Features
39963@cindex target descriptions, standard features
39964
39965A target description must contain either no registers or all the
39966target's registers. If the description contains no registers, then
39967@value{GDBN} will assume a default register layout, selected based on
39968the architecture. If the description contains any registers, the
39969default layout will not be used; the standard registers must be
39970described in the target description, in such a way that @value{GDBN}
39971can recognize them.
39972
39973This is accomplished by giving specific names to feature elements
39974which contain standard registers. @value{GDBN} will look for features
39975with those names and verify that they contain the expected registers;
39976if any known feature is missing required registers, or if any required
39977feature is missing, @value{GDBN} will reject the target
39978description. You can add additional registers to any of the
39979standard features --- @value{GDBN} will display them just as if
39980they were added to an unrecognized feature.
39981
39982This section lists the known features and their expected contents.
39983Sample XML documents for these features are included in the
39984@value{GDBN} source tree, in the directory @file{gdb/features}.
39985
39986Names recognized by @value{GDBN} should include the name of the
39987company or organization which selected the name, and the overall
39988architecture to which the feature applies; so e.g.@: the feature
39989containing ARM core registers is named @samp{org.gnu.gdb.arm.core}.
39990
ff6f572f
DJ
39991The names of registers are not case sensitive for the purpose
39992of recognizing standard features, but @value{GDBN} will only display
39993registers using the capitalization used in the description.
39994
e9c17194
VP
39995@menu
39996* ARM Features::
3bb8d5c3 39997* i386 Features::
1e26b4f8 39998* MIPS Features::
e9c17194 39999* M68K Features::
1e26b4f8 40000* PowerPC Features::
224bbe49 40001* TIC6x Features::
e9c17194
VP
40002@end menu
40003
40004
40005@node ARM Features
123dc839
DJ
40006@subsection ARM Features
40007@cindex target descriptions, ARM features
40008
9779414d
DJ
40009The @samp{org.gnu.gdb.arm.core} feature is required for non-M-profile
40010ARM targets.
123dc839
DJ
40011It should contain registers @samp{r0} through @samp{r13}, @samp{sp},
40012@samp{lr}, @samp{pc}, and @samp{cpsr}.
40013
9779414d
DJ
40014For M-profile targets (e.g. Cortex-M3), the @samp{org.gnu.gdb.arm.core}
40015feature is replaced by @samp{org.gnu.gdb.arm.m-profile}. It should contain
40016registers @samp{r0} through @samp{r13}, @samp{sp}, @samp{lr}, @samp{pc},
40017and @samp{xpsr}.
40018
123dc839
DJ
40019The @samp{org.gnu.gdb.arm.fpa} feature is optional. If present, it
40020should contain registers @samp{f0} through @samp{f7} and @samp{fps}.
40021
ff6f572f
DJ
40022The @samp{org.gnu.gdb.xscale.iwmmxt} feature is optional. If present,
40023it should contain at least registers @samp{wR0} through @samp{wR15} and
40024@samp{wCGR0} through @samp{wCGR3}. The @samp{wCID}, @samp{wCon},
40025@samp{wCSSF}, and @samp{wCASF} registers are optional.
23181151 40026
58d6951d
DJ
40027The @samp{org.gnu.gdb.arm.vfp} feature is optional. If present, it
40028should contain at least registers @samp{d0} through @samp{d15}. If
40029they are present, @samp{d16} through @samp{d31} should also be included.
40030@value{GDBN} will synthesize the single-precision registers from
40031halves of the double-precision registers.
40032
40033The @samp{org.gnu.gdb.arm.neon} feature is optional. It does not
40034need to contain registers; it instructs @value{GDBN} to display the
40035VFP double-precision registers as vectors and to synthesize the
40036quad-precision registers from pairs of double-precision registers.
40037If this feature is present, @samp{org.gnu.gdb.arm.vfp} must also
40038be present and include 32 double-precision registers.
40039
3bb8d5c3
L
40040@node i386 Features
40041@subsection i386 Features
40042@cindex target descriptions, i386 features
40043
40044The @samp{org.gnu.gdb.i386.core} feature is required for i386/amd64
40045targets. It should describe the following registers:
40046
40047@itemize @minus
40048@item
40049@samp{eax} through @samp{edi} plus @samp{eip} for i386
40050@item
40051@samp{rax} through @samp{r15} plus @samp{rip} for amd64
40052@item
40053@samp{eflags}, @samp{cs}, @samp{ss}, @samp{ds}, @samp{es},
40054@samp{fs}, @samp{gs}
40055@item
40056@samp{st0} through @samp{st7}
40057@item
40058@samp{fctrl}, @samp{fstat}, @samp{ftag}, @samp{fiseg}, @samp{fioff},
40059@samp{foseg}, @samp{fooff} and @samp{fop}
40060@end itemize
40061
40062The register sets may be different, depending on the target.
40063
3a13a53b 40064The @samp{org.gnu.gdb.i386.sse} feature is optional. It should
3bb8d5c3
L
40065describe registers:
40066
40067@itemize @minus
40068@item
40069@samp{xmm0} through @samp{xmm7} for i386
40070@item
40071@samp{xmm0} through @samp{xmm15} for amd64
40072@item
40073@samp{mxcsr}
40074@end itemize
40075
3a13a53b
L
40076The @samp{org.gnu.gdb.i386.avx} feature is optional and requires the
40077@samp{org.gnu.gdb.i386.sse} feature. It should
f68eb612
L
40078describe the upper 128 bits of @sc{ymm} registers:
40079
40080@itemize @minus
40081@item
40082@samp{ymm0h} through @samp{ymm7h} for i386
40083@item
40084@samp{ymm0h} through @samp{ymm15h} for amd64
f68eb612
L
40085@end itemize
40086
3bb8d5c3
L
40087The @samp{org.gnu.gdb.i386.linux} feature is optional. It should
40088describe a single register, @samp{orig_eax}.
40089
1e26b4f8 40090@node MIPS Features
eb17f351
EZ
40091@subsection @acronym{MIPS} Features
40092@cindex target descriptions, @acronym{MIPS} features
f8b73d13 40093
eb17f351 40094The @samp{org.gnu.gdb.mips.cpu} feature is required for @acronym{MIPS} targets.
f8b73d13
DJ
40095It should contain registers @samp{r0} through @samp{r31}, @samp{lo},
40096@samp{hi}, and @samp{pc}. They may be 32-bit or 64-bit depending
40097on the target.
40098
40099The @samp{org.gnu.gdb.mips.cp0} feature is also required. It should
40100contain at least the @samp{status}, @samp{badvaddr}, and @samp{cause}
40101registers. They may be 32-bit or 64-bit depending on the target.
40102
40103The @samp{org.gnu.gdb.mips.fpu} feature is currently required, though
40104it may be optional in a future version of @value{GDBN}. It should
40105contain registers @samp{f0} through @samp{f31}, @samp{fcsr}, and
40106@samp{fir}. They may be 32-bit or 64-bit depending on the target.
40107
1faeff08
MR
40108The @samp{org.gnu.gdb.mips.dsp} feature is optional. It should
40109contain registers @samp{hi1} through @samp{hi3}, @samp{lo1} through
40110@samp{lo3}, and @samp{dspctl}. The @samp{dspctl} register should
40111be 32-bit and the rest may be 32-bit or 64-bit depending on the target.
40112
822b6570
DJ
40113The @samp{org.gnu.gdb.mips.linux} feature is optional. It should
40114contain a single register, @samp{restart}, which is used by the
40115Linux kernel to control restartable syscalls.
40116
e9c17194
VP
40117@node M68K Features
40118@subsection M68K Features
40119@cindex target descriptions, M68K features
40120
40121@table @code
40122@item @samp{org.gnu.gdb.m68k.core}
40123@itemx @samp{org.gnu.gdb.coldfire.core}
40124@itemx @samp{org.gnu.gdb.fido.core}
40125One of those features must be always present.
249e1128 40126The feature that is present determines which flavor of m68k is
e9c17194
VP
40127used. The feature that is present should contain registers
40128@samp{d0} through @samp{d7}, @samp{a0} through @samp{a5}, @samp{fp},
40129@samp{sp}, @samp{ps} and @samp{pc}.
40130
40131@item @samp{org.gnu.gdb.coldfire.fp}
40132This feature is optional. If present, it should contain registers
40133@samp{fp0} through @samp{fp7}, @samp{fpcontrol}, @samp{fpstatus} and
40134@samp{fpiaddr}.
40135@end table
40136
1e26b4f8 40137@node PowerPC Features
7cc46491
DJ
40138@subsection PowerPC Features
40139@cindex target descriptions, PowerPC features
40140
40141The @samp{org.gnu.gdb.power.core} feature is required for PowerPC
40142targets. It should contain registers @samp{r0} through @samp{r31},
40143@samp{pc}, @samp{msr}, @samp{cr}, @samp{lr}, @samp{ctr}, and
40144@samp{xer}. They may be 32-bit or 64-bit depending on the target.
40145
40146The @samp{org.gnu.gdb.power.fpu} feature is optional. It should
40147contain registers @samp{f0} through @samp{f31} and @samp{fpscr}.
40148
40149The @samp{org.gnu.gdb.power.altivec} feature is optional. It should
40150contain registers @samp{vr0} through @samp{vr31}, @samp{vscr},
40151and @samp{vrsave}.
40152
677c5bb1
LM
40153The @samp{org.gnu.gdb.power.vsx} feature is optional. It should
40154contain registers @samp{vs0h} through @samp{vs31h}. @value{GDBN}
40155will combine these registers with the floating point registers
40156(@samp{f0} through @samp{f31}) and the altivec registers (@samp{vr0}
aeac0ff9 40157through @samp{vr31}) to present the 128-bit wide registers @samp{vs0}
677c5bb1
LM
40158through @samp{vs63}, the set of vector registers for POWER7.
40159
7cc46491
DJ
40160The @samp{org.gnu.gdb.power.spe} feature is optional. It should
40161contain registers @samp{ev0h} through @samp{ev31h}, @samp{acc}, and
40162@samp{spefscr}. SPE targets should provide 32-bit registers in
40163@samp{org.gnu.gdb.power.core} and provide the upper halves in
40164@samp{ev0h} through @samp{ev31h}. @value{GDBN} will combine
40165these to present registers @samp{ev0} through @samp{ev31} to the
40166user.
40167
224bbe49
YQ
40168@node TIC6x Features
40169@subsection TMS320C6x Features
40170@cindex target descriptions, TIC6x features
40171@cindex target descriptions, TMS320C6x features
40172The @samp{org.gnu.gdb.tic6x.core} feature is required for TMS320C6x
40173targets. It should contain registers @samp{A0} through @samp{A15},
40174registers @samp{B0} through @samp{B15}, @samp{CSR} and @samp{PC}.
40175
40176The @samp{org.gnu.gdb.tic6x.gp} feature is optional. It should
40177contain registers @samp{A16} through @samp{A31} and @samp{B16}
40178through @samp{B31}.
40179
40180The @samp{org.gnu.gdb.tic6x.c6xp} feature is optional. It should
40181contain registers @samp{TSR}, @samp{ILC} and @samp{RILC}.
40182
07e059b5
VP
40183@node Operating System Information
40184@appendix Operating System Information
40185@cindex operating system information
40186
40187@menu
40188* Process list::
40189@end menu
40190
40191Users of @value{GDBN} often wish to obtain information about the state of
40192the operating system running on the target---for example the list of
40193processes, or the list of open files. This section describes the
40194mechanism that makes it possible. This mechanism is similar to the
40195target features mechanism (@pxref{Target Descriptions}), but focuses
40196on a different aspect of target.
40197
40198Operating system information is retrived from the target via the
40199remote protocol, using @samp{qXfer} requests (@pxref{qXfer osdata
40200read}). The object name in the request should be @samp{osdata}, and
40201the @var{annex} identifies the data to be fetched.
40202
40203@node Process list
40204@appendixsection Process list
40205@cindex operating system information, process list
40206
40207When requesting the process list, the @var{annex} field in the
40208@samp{qXfer} request should be @samp{processes}. The returned data is
40209an XML document. The formal syntax of this document is defined in
40210@file{gdb/features/osdata.dtd}.
40211
40212An example document is:
40213
40214@smallexample
40215<?xml version="1.0"?>
40216<!DOCTYPE target SYSTEM "osdata.dtd">
40217<osdata type="processes">
40218 <item>
40219 <column name="pid">1</column>
40220 <column name="user">root</column>
40221 <column name="command">/sbin/init</column>
dc146f7c 40222 <column name="cores">1,2,3</column>
07e059b5
VP
40223 </item>
40224</osdata>
40225@end smallexample
40226
40227Each item should include a column whose name is @samp{pid}. The value
40228of that column should identify the process on the target. The
40229@samp{user} and @samp{command} columns are optional, and will be
dc146f7c
VP
40230displayed by @value{GDBN}. The @samp{cores} column, if present,
40231should contain a comma-separated list of cores that this process
40232is running on. Target may provide additional columns,
07e059b5
VP
40233which @value{GDBN} currently ignores.
40234
05c8c3f5
TT
40235@node Trace File Format
40236@appendix Trace File Format
40237@cindex trace file format
40238
40239The trace file comes in three parts: a header, a textual description
40240section, and a trace frame section with binary data.
40241
40242The header has the form @code{\x7fTRACE0\n}. The first byte is
40243@code{0x7f} so as to indicate that the file contains binary data,
40244while the @code{0} is a version number that may have different values
40245in the future.
40246
40247The description section consists of multiple lines of @sc{ascii} text
40248separated by newline characters (@code{0xa}). The lines may include a
40249variety of optional descriptive or context-setting information, such
40250as tracepoint definitions or register set size. @value{GDBN} will
40251ignore any line that it does not recognize. An empty line marks the end
40252of this section.
40253
40254@c FIXME add some specific types of data
40255
40256The trace frame section consists of a number of consecutive frames.
40257Each frame begins with a two-byte tracepoint number, followed by a
40258four-byte size giving the amount of data in the frame. The data in
40259the frame consists of a number of blocks, each introduced by a
40260character indicating its type (at least register, memory, and trace
40261state variable). The data in this section is raw binary, not a
40262hexadecimal or other encoding; its endianness matches the target's
40263endianness.
40264
40265@c FIXME bi-arch may require endianness/arch info in description section
40266
40267@table @code
40268@item R @var{bytes}
40269Register block. The number and ordering of bytes matches that of a
40270@code{g} packet in the remote protocol. Note that these are the
40271actual bytes, in target order and @value{GDBN} register order, not a
40272hexadecimal encoding.
40273
40274@item M @var{address} @var{length} @var{bytes}...
40275Memory block. This is a contiguous block of memory, at the 8-byte
40276address @var{address}, with a 2-byte length @var{length}, followed by
40277@var{length} bytes.
40278
40279@item V @var{number} @var{value}
40280Trace state variable block. This records the 8-byte signed value
40281@var{value} of trace state variable numbered @var{number}.
40282
40283@end table
40284
40285Future enhancements of the trace file format may include additional types
40286of blocks.
40287
90476074
TT
40288@node Index Section Format
40289@appendix @code{.gdb_index} section format
40290@cindex .gdb_index section format
40291@cindex index section format
40292
40293This section documents the index section that is created by @code{save
40294gdb-index} (@pxref{Index Files}). The index section is
40295DWARF-specific; some knowledge of DWARF is assumed in this
40296description.
40297
40298The mapped index file format is designed to be directly
40299@code{mmap}able on any architecture. In most cases, a datum is
40300represented using a little-endian 32-bit integer value, called an
40301@code{offset_type}. Big endian machines must byte-swap the values
40302before using them. Exceptions to this rule are noted. The data is
40303laid out such that alignment is always respected.
40304
40305A mapped index consists of several areas, laid out in order.
40306
40307@enumerate
40308@item
40309The file header. This is a sequence of values, of @code{offset_type}
40310unless otherwise noted:
40311
40312@enumerate
40313@item
481860b3
GB
40314The version number, currently 6. Versions 1, 2 and 3 are obsolete.
40315Version 4 uses a different hashing function from versions 5 and 6.
40316Version 6 includes symbols for inlined functions, whereas versions
403174 and 5 do not. @value{GDBN} will only read version 4 and 5 indices
40318if the @code{--use-deprecated-index-sections} option is used.
90476074
TT
40319
40320@item
40321The offset, from the start of the file, of the CU list.
40322
40323@item
40324The offset, from the start of the file, of the types CU list. Note
40325that this area can be empty, in which case this offset will be equal
40326to the next offset.
40327
40328@item
40329The offset, from the start of the file, of the address area.
40330
40331@item
40332The offset, from the start of the file, of the symbol table.
40333
40334@item
40335The offset, from the start of the file, of the constant pool.
40336@end enumerate
40337
40338@item
40339The CU list. This is a sequence of pairs of 64-bit little-endian
40340values, sorted by the CU offset. The first element in each pair is
40341the offset of a CU in the @code{.debug_info} section. The second
40342element in each pair is the length of that CU. References to a CU
40343elsewhere in the map are done using a CU index, which is just the
403440-based index into this table. Note that if there are type CUs, then
40345conceptually CUs and type CUs form a single list for the purposes of
40346CU indices.
40347
40348@item
40349The types CU list. This is a sequence of triplets of 64-bit
40350little-endian values. In a triplet, the first value is the CU offset,
40351the second value is the type offset in the CU, and the third value is
40352the type signature. The types CU list is not sorted.
40353
40354@item
40355The address area. The address area consists of a sequence of address
40356entries. Each address entry has three elements:
40357
40358@enumerate
40359@item
40360The low address. This is a 64-bit little-endian value.
40361
40362@item
40363The high address. This is a 64-bit little-endian value. Like
40364@code{DW_AT_high_pc}, the value is one byte beyond the end.
40365
40366@item
40367The CU index. This is an @code{offset_type} value.
40368@end enumerate
40369
40370@item
40371The symbol table. This is an open-addressed hash table. The size of
40372the hash table is always a power of 2.
40373
40374Each slot in the hash table consists of a pair of @code{offset_type}
40375values. The first value is the offset of the symbol's name in the
40376constant pool. The second value is the offset of the CU vector in the
40377constant pool.
40378
40379If both values are 0, then this slot in the hash table is empty. This
40380is ok because while 0 is a valid constant pool index, it cannot be a
40381valid index for both a string and a CU vector.
40382
40383The hash value for a table entry is computed by applying an
40384iterative hash function to the symbol's name. Starting with an
40385initial value of @code{r = 0}, each (unsigned) character @samp{c} in
559a7a62
JK
40386the string is incorporated into the hash using the formula depending on the
40387index version:
40388
40389@table @asis
40390@item Version 4
40391The formula is @code{r = r * 67 + c - 113}.
40392
156942c7 40393@item Versions 5 to 7
559a7a62
JK
40394The formula is @code{r = r * 67 + tolower (c) - 113}.
40395@end table
40396
40397The terminating @samp{\0} is not incorporated into the hash.
90476074
TT
40398
40399The step size used in the hash table is computed via
40400@code{((hash * 17) & (size - 1)) | 1}, where @samp{hash} is the hash
40401value, and @samp{size} is the size of the hash table. The step size
40402is used to find the next candidate slot when handling a hash
40403collision.
40404
40405The names of C@t{++} symbols in the hash table are canonicalized. We
40406don't currently have a simple description of the canonicalization
40407algorithm; if you intend to create new index sections, you must read
40408the code.
40409
40410@item
40411The constant pool. This is simply a bunch of bytes. It is organized
40412so that alignment is correct: CU vectors are stored first, followed by
40413strings.
40414
40415A CU vector in the constant pool is a sequence of @code{offset_type}
40416values. The first value is the number of CU indices in the vector.
156942c7
DE
40417Each subsequent value is the index and symbol attributes of a CU in
40418the CU list. This element in the hash table is used to indicate which
40419CUs define the symbol and how the symbol is used.
40420See below for the format of each CU index+attributes entry.
90476074
TT
40421
40422A string in the constant pool is zero-terminated.
40423@end enumerate
40424
156942c7
DE
40425Attributes were added to CU index values in @code{.gdb_index} version 7.
40426If a symbol has multiple uses within a CU then there is one
40427CU index+attributes value for each use.
40428
40429The format of each CU index+attributes entry is as follows
40430(bit 0 = LSB):
40431
40432@table @asis
40433
40434@item Bits 0-23
40435This is the index of the CU in the CU list.
40436@item Bits 24-27
40437These bits are reserved for future purposes and must be zero.
40438@item Bits 28-30
40439The kind of the symbol in the CU.
40440
40441@table @asis
40442@item 0
40443This value is reserved and should not be used.
40444By reserving zero the full @code{offset_type} value is backwards compatible
40445with previous versions of the index.
40446@item 1
40447The symbol is a type.
40448@item 2
40449The symbol is a variable or an enum value.
40450@item 3
40451The symbol is a function.
40452@item 4
40453Any other kind of symbol.
40454@item 5,6,7
40455These values are reserved.
40456@end table
40457
40458@item Bit 31
40459This bit is zero if the value is global and one if it is static.
40460
40461The determination of whether a symbol is global or static is complicated.
40462The authorative reference is the file @file{dwarf2read.c} in
40463@value{GDBN} sources.
40464
40465@end table
40466
40467This pseudo-code describes the computation of a symbol's kind and
40468global/static attributes in the index.
40469
40470@smallexample
40471is_external = get_attribute (die, DW_AT_external);
40472language = get_attribute (cu_die, DW_AT_language);
40473switch (die->tag)
40474 @{
40475 case DW_TAG_typedef:
40476 case DW_TAG_base_type:
40477 case DW_TAG_subrange_type:
40478 kind = TYPE;
40479 is_static = 1;
40480 break;
40481 case DW_TAG_enumerator:
40482 kind = VARIABLE;
40483 is_static = (language != CPLUS && language != JAVA);
40484 break;
40485 case DW_TAG_subprogram:
40486 kind = FUNCTION;
40487 is_static = ! (is_external || language == ADA);
40488 break;
40489 case DW_TAG_constant:
40490 kind = VARIABLE;
40491 is_static = ! is_external;
40492 break;
40493 case DW_TAG_variable:
40494 kind = VARIABLE;
40495 is_static = ! is_external;
40496 break;
40497 case DW_TAG_namespace:
40498 kind = TYPE;
40499 is_static = 0;
40500 break;
40501 case DW_TAG_class_type:
40502 case DW_TAG_interface_type:
40503 case DW_TAG_structure_type:
40504 case DW_TAG_union_type:
40505 case DW_TAG_enumeration_type:
40506 kind = TYPE;
40507 is_static = (language != CPLUS && language != JAVA);
40508 break;
40509 default:
40510 assert (0);
40511 @}
40512@end smallexample
40513
aab4e0ec 40514@include gpl.texi
eb12ee30 40515
e4c0cfae
SS
40516@node GNU Free Documentation License
40517@appendix GNU Free Documentation License
6826cf00
EZ
40518@include fdl.texi
40519
6d2ebf8b 40520@node Index
c906108c
SS
40521@unnumbered Index
40522
40523@printindex cp
40524
40525@tex
984359d2 40526% I think something like @@colophon should be in texinfo. In the
c906108c
SS
40527% meantime:
40528\long\def\colophon{\hbox to0pt{}\vfill
40529\centerline{The body of this manual is set in}
40530\centerline{\fontname\tenrm,}
40531\centerline{with headings in {\bf\fontname\tenbf}}
40532\centerline{and examples in {\tt\fontname\tentt}.}
40533\centerline{{\it\fontname\tenit\/},}
40534\centerline{{\bf\fontname\tenbf}, and}
40535\centerline{{\sl\fontname\tensl\/}}
40536\centerline{are used for emphasis.}\vfill}
40537\page\colophon
984359d2 40538% Blame: doc@@cygnus.com, 1991.
c906108c
SS
40539@end tex
40540
c906108c 40541@bye
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