Date: Fri, 1 Sep 2000 10:02:41 -0700 From: Marco Molteni <molter@sofia.csl.sri.com> To: hackers@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: gdb remote debugging on slow computers Message-ID: <20000901100241.B66078@sofia.csl.sri.com> In-Reply-To: <200008312352.TAA03733@hda.hda.com>; from dufault@hda.com on Thu, Aug 31, 2000 at 07:52:43PM -0400 References: <200008312352.TAA03733@hda.hda.com>
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On Thu, 31 Aug 2000, Peter Dufault wrote:
[..]
> I want to attach a gdb running on my FreeBSD system to something
> running on that wicked slow Sun. I've built a gdb with a target
> machine of "sparc-sun-solaris2.7", I've got an executable, but I
> haven't found a way to run something on the Sun that I can attach
> to in order to debug remote processes. All I've found are ways to
> connect to remote serial ports. Does anyone know if I can easily
> do this?
I am not sure I understood your question. If you mean: How can I use
gdb + gdbserver via a TCP connection, you do the following:
hostA (gdbserver)
$ gdbserver hostB:5555 prog-to-be-debugged
hostB (gdb)
$ gdb
(gdb) target remote hostA:5555
Notes:
1. the gdb documentation, although not clearly, explains this in
section 13.4.1.5
2. the gdbserver I am using DOESN'T enforce the connection to come from
hostB; this means that there is a race condition that allows the first
connection to hostA, port 5555 to grab the debugging section!
If you are interested I have a small shared library wrapper around
accept() to fix this.
Marco
--
Marco Molteni "rough consensus and running code"
SRI International, System Design Laboratory
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