Sorry. I will talk it clear in the furue. On Sat, Nov 8, 2008 at 02:55, Michael Snyder wrote: > Marc, > > Try running gdbarch.sh, and then renaming the generated files appropriately. > > Looks like an oversight. > > Michael > > > Marc Khouzam wrote: >> >> Hi, >> >> I just couldn't wait and wanted to try this out. >> I applied all 10 patches, but my compilation fails. >> cc1: warnings being treated as errors >> ../../src/gdb/i386-tdep.c: In function 'i386_gdbarch_init': >> ../../src/gdb/i386-tdep.c:5536: warning: implicit declaration of function >> 'set_gdbarch_process_record' >> >> When I grep for gdbarch_process_record in the set of patches, I see some >> new methods >> being used but never declared. Am I missing a patch? Or have I been >> coding with Java too long :-) >> >> Thanks >> >> Marc >> >> >>> -----Original Message----- >>> From: gdb-patches-owner@sourceware.org >>> [mailto:gdb-patches-owner@sourceware.org] On Behalf Of teawater >>> Sent: Thursday, November 06, 2008 2:51 AM >>> To: gdb-patches@sourceware.org >>> Subject: [RFA] Process record and replay, 8/10 >>> >>> This patch add code to make I386 architecture support process record and >>> replay. >>> >>> 2008-11-06 Hui Zhu >>> >>> I386 architecture process record and replay support. >>> >>> * i386-tdep.c (PREFIX_REPZ, PREFIX_REPNZ, PREFIX_LOCK, >>> PREFIX_DATA, PREFIX_ADDR): New macros. Help decode the I386 >>> instruction. >>> (aflag, dflag, override, modrm, mod, reg, rm, ot, >>> i386_record_pc): New variables. Ditto. >>> (i386_record_modrm, i386_record_lea_modrm_addr, >>> i386_record_lea_modrm): New functions. Ditto. >>> (i386_process_record): New function. Parse the instruction in >>> address "addr" and record the values of registers and memory >>> that will be change in this instruction. >>> (i386_gdbarch_init): Set "i386_process_record" to GDBARCH >>> "process_record" interface. >>> * i386-tdep.h (gdbarch_tdep): New function pointers >>> "i386_intx80_record" and "i386_sysenter_record" that point to >>> the function can record "intx80" and "sysenter" execute log. >>> >>> i386-tdep.c | 2706 >>> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ >>> i386-tdep.h | 3 >>> 2 files changed, 2709 insertions(+) >>> > > &j!z޶X܆[\