From: Michael Snyder <msnyder@specifix.com>
To: Rich Wagner <richwagner@tilera.com>
Cc: gdb@sourceware.org
Subject: Re: "thread", "thread apply" and "step" ?
Date: Wed, 06 Aug 2008 04:41:00 -0000 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <1217997625.3549.662.camel@localhost.localdomain> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <BCB185E6A8E1DF4BAD610F00CD32CE0D023846ED@exchange1.tad.internal.tilera.com>
On Tue, 2008-08-05 at 16:11 -0400, Rich Wagner wrote:
> I haven't been able to find an "official" GDB spec which answers a
> question I have, relating to threads and stepping, so...
>
>
> Say your program has two threads, A and B, and that B most recently hit
> a breakpoint.
>
> It's pretty clear (and my experiments have shown) that if you then
> simply execute "step", then the step occurs in B. That is, both threads
> resume execution, with both threads suspending again when B reaches the
> "end-of-step" boundary. So far, so good...
>
> However, things become less clear, and non-intuitive, if after B hits a
> breakpoint, and I then use:
>
> thread A
> step
The short answer is "don't do that".
What I *wanted* to say is "you can't do that".
The problem is, as you have discovered, you can --
it just doesn't have the effect that you think it should.
GDB's "thread" command will specify a thread to which
subsequent state queries will apply (eg. "info register").
But GDB does not exercise any control over the operating
system's thread scheduling, therefore GDB has no control
over which thread will actually run when you say "step"
or "continue". You might think it should be the thread
that you last selected -- but it won't. It will be the
thread that the operating system chooses (generally the
one that was most recently running).
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2008-08-06 4:41 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 8+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2008-08-05 20:11 Rich Wagner
2008-08-05 20:24 ` Daniel Jacobowitz
2008-08-06 4:42 ` Michael Snyder
2008-08-06 11:20 ` Daniel Jacobowitz
2008-08-06 12:45 ` Pedro Alves
2008-08-06 17:38 ` Rich Wagner
2008-08-06 4:41 ` Michael Snyder [this message]
2008-08-06 5:17 ` Vladimir Prus
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