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author | Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> | 2013-06-27 19:17:27 +0000 |
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committer | Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> | 2013-06-27 19:17:27 +0000 |
commit | e5823f1cb51a024d11a2953dc3a07af99439b261 (patch) | |
tree | 0e1d4135acf5818db14f523b323aea2f4815dd38 /gdb/infrun.c | |
parent | a8c97a8765cba36112e27b21e62672471d277876 (diff) | |
download | gdb-e5823f1cb51a024d11a2953dc3a07af99439b261.zip gdb-e5823f1cb51a024d11a2953dc3a07af99439b261.tar.gz gdb-e5823f1cb51a024d11a2953dc3a07af99439b261.tar.bz2 |
Move comment on the 'stepping over resolver' mechanism to the internals manual.
This whole comment is now a bit out of place. I looked into moving it
to handle_inferior_event, close to where in_solib_dynsym_resolve_code
is used, but then there are 3 such places. I then looked at
fragmenting it, pushing bits closer to the definitions of
in_solib_dynsym_resolve_code and gdbarch_skip_solib_resolver, but then
we'd lose the main advantage which is the overview. In the end, I
realized this can fit nicely as internals manual material.
This could possibly be a subsection of a new "run control", or "source
stepping" or "stepping" or some such a bit more general section, but
we can do that when we have more related content... Even the "single
stepping" section is presently empty...
gdb/doc/
2013-06-27 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdbint.texinfo (Algorithms) <Stepping over runtime loader
dynamic symbol resolution code>: New section, based on infrun.c
comment.
gdb/
2013-06-27 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* infrun.c: Remove comment describing the 'stepping over runtime
loader dynamic symbol resolution code' mechanism; moved to
gdbint.texinfo.
Diffstat (limited to 'gdb/infrun.c')
-rw-r--r-- | gdb/infrun.c | 40 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 40 deletions
diff --git a/gdb/infrun.c b/gdb/infrun.c index 84e4053..8fb219a 100644 --- a/gdb/infrun.c +++ b/gdb/infrun.c @@ -181,46 +181,6 @@ set_disable_randomization (char *args, int from_tty, "this platform.")); } - -/* If the program uses ELF-style shared libraries, then calls to - functions in shared libraries go through stubs, which live in a - table called the PLT (Procedure Linkage Table). The first time the - function is called, the stub sends control to the dynamic linker, - which looks up the function's real address, patches the stub so - that future calls will go directly to the function, and then passes - control to the function. - - If we are stepping at the source level, we don't want to see any of - this --- we just want to skip over the stub and the dynamic linker. - The simple approach is to single-step until control leaves the - dynamic linker. - - However, on some systems (e.g., Red Hat's 5.2 distribution) the - dynamic linker calls functions in the shared C library, so you - can't tell from the PC alone whether the dynamic linker is still - running. In this case, we use a step-resume breakpoint to get us - past the dynamic linker, as if we were using "next" to step over a - function call. - - in_solib_dynsym_resolve_code() says whether we're in the dynamic - linker code or not. Normally, this means we single-step. However, - if gdbarch_skip_solib_resolver then returns non-zero, then its - value is an address where we can place a step-resume breakpoint to - get past the linker's symbol resolution function. - - The in_dynsym_resolve_code hook of the target_so_ops vector can - generally be implemented in a pretty portable way, by comparing the - PC against the address ranges of the dynamic linker's sections. - - The gdbarch_skip_solib_resolver implementation is generally going - to be system-specific, since it depends on internal details of the - dynamic linker. It's usually not too hard to figure out where to - put a breakpoint, but it certainly isn't portable. - gdbarch_skip_solib_resolver should do plenty of sanity checking. - If it can't figure things out, returning zero and getting the - (possibly confusing) stepping behavior is better than signaling an - error, which will obscure the change in the inferior's state. */ - /* "Observer mode" is somewhat like a more extreme version of non-stop, in which all GDB operations that might affect the target's execution have been disabled. */ |