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* command Ctrll-C
@ 2008-11-05  4:40 raja.saleru
  2008-11-05  5:19 ` Michael Snyder
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread
From: raja.saleru @ 2008-11-05  4:40 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: gdb

Hi,

During program execution thought GDB, the execution can be stopped by
command Ctrll-C

How it works internally in GDB source? Which function will be called after
user enters the command Ctrl-C ?

Thanks in Advance
Raja Saleru




^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread

* Re: command Ctrll-C
  2008-11-05  4:40 command Ctrll-C raja.saleru
@ 2008-11-05  5:19 ` Michael Snyder
  2008-11-05 12:03   ` Pedro Alves
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread
From: Michael Snyder @ 2008-11-05  5:19 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: raja.saleru; +Cc: gdb

raja.saleru@iap-online.com wrote:
> Hi,
> 
> During program execution thought GDB, the execution can be stopped by
> command Ctrll-C
> 
> How it works internally in GDB source? Which function will be called after
> user enters the command Ctrl-C ?
> 
> Thanks in Advance
> Raja Saleru

Have a look at "handle_sigint" and "async_request_quit"
in gdb/event-top.c.




^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread

* Re: command Ctrll-C
  2008-11-05  5:19 ` Michael Snyder
@ 2008-11-05 12:03   ` Pedro Alves
  2008-11-05 16:59     ` Roland Puntaier
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread
From: Pedro Alves @ 2008-11-05 12:03 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: gdb; +Cc: Michael Snyder, raja.saleru

On Wednesday 05 November 2008 05:12:06, Michael Snyder wrote:
> raja.saleru@iap-online.com wrote:
> > Hi,
> > 
> > During program execution thought GDB, the execution can be stopped by
> > command Ctrll-C
> > 
> > How it works internally in GDB source? Which function will be called after
> > user enters the command Ctrl-C ?
> > 
> > Thanks in Advance
> > Raja Saleru
> 

> Have a look at "handle_sigint" and "async_request_quit"
> in gdb/event-top.c.

Nope, sorry, that's used when there's no execution.  It calls
quit(), doesn't interrupt the target at all.

If you're talking about native debugging, running a program
under GDB, not attached, then GDB "gives the terminal"
to the inferior (debuggee) (see target_terminal_inferior and friends)
whenever it is going to run it, so the ctrl-c hit while the inferior
is running is sent directly to the debuggee --- GDB is then informed
by ptrace that the inferior got a SIGINT (waitpid returns) (that is
the inferior sees the ctrl-c before gdb does in this case).

If talking about native debugging, attached to a program,
GDB installs a SIGINT handler that forwards the SIGINT to the inferior.
See set_sigint_trap/pass_signal in inflow.c/linux-nat.c for example.
If you go the to attachee's terminal and do a ctrl-c there, GDB will
be reported about a SIGINT just like the in native,non-attached case.

If talking about remote debugging, there are more steps involved depending
on the mode you're talking about, but, in the simplest and standard
mode (all-stop, sync), the idea is that GDB installs a SIGINT signal
handler that ends up passing an "out-of-band" interrupt "packet" to the
remote side (\\03).  Then, when seeing this packet, the remote stub interrupts
its inferior (e.g., sends it a SIGINT) and then informs GDB that the remote
was interrupted with a regular stop reply.  See remote_wait_as installing
remote_interrupt as SIGINT handler.  When ctrl-c is done on GDB, this
handler then calls through async_remote_interrupt -> remote_stop_as -> serial_write (\\03).

-- 
Pedro Alves


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread

* Re: command Ctrll-C
  2008-11-05 12:03   ` Pedro Alves
@ 2008-11-05 16:59     ` Roland Puntaier
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread
From: Roland Puntaier @ 2008-11-05 16:59 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: gdb

gdb-owner@sourceware.org schrieb am 05.11.2008 13:03:23:

> On Wednesday 05 November 2008 05:12:06, Michael Snyder wrote:
> > raja.saleru@iap-online.com wrote:
> > > Hi,
> > > 
> > > During program execution thought GDB, the execution can be stopped 
by
> > > command Ctrll-C
> > > 
> > > How it works internally in GDB source? Which function will be called 
after
> > > user enters the command Ctrl-C ?
> > > 
> > > Thanks in Advance
> > > Raja Saleru
> > 
> 
> > Have a look at "handle_sigint" and "async_request_quit"
> > in gdb/event-top.c.
> 
> Nope, sorry, that's used when there's no execution.  It calls
> quit(), doesn't interrupt the target at all.
> 
> If you're talking about native debugging, running a program
> under GDB, not attached, then GDB "gives the terminal"
> to the inferior (debuggee) (see target_terminal_inferior and friends)
> whenever it is going to run it, so the ctrl-c hit while the inferior
> is running is sent directly to the debuggee --- GDB is then informed
> by ptrace that the inferior got a SIGINT (waitpid returns) (that is
> the inferior sees the ctrl-c before gdb does in this case).
> 
> If talking about native debugging, attached to a program,
> GDB installs a SIGINT handler that forwards the SIGINT to the inferior.
> See set_sigint_trap/pass_signal in inflow.c/linux-nat.c for example.
> If you go the to attachee's terminal and do a ctrl-c there, GDB will
> be reported about a SIGINT just like the in native,non-attached case.
> 
> If talking about remote debugging, there are more steps involved 
depending
> on the mode you're talking about, but, in the simplest and standard
> mode (all-stop, sync), the idea is that GDB installs a SIGINT signal
> handler that ends up passing an "out-of-band" interrupt "packet" to the
> remote side (\\03).  Then, when seeing this packet, the remote stub 
interrupts
> its inferior (e.g., sends it a SIGINT) and then informs GDB that the 
remote
> was interrupted with a regular stop reply.  See remote_wait_as 
installing
> remote_interrupt as SIGINT handler.  When ctrl-c is done on GDB, this
> handler then calls through async_remote_interrupt -> remote_stop_as 
> -> serial_write (\\03).

I use Ctrl-C to leave the remote gdbserver without terminating it.
Then I can set new breakpoints in gdb and re-attach to the remote server 
and continue.

Question: Is there another way to make the gdb responsive,
while the remote inferior continues running, maybe via MI?


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2008-11-05 16:59 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 4+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed)
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2008-11-05  4:40 command Ctrll-C raja.saleru
2008-11-05  5:19 ` Michael Snyder
2008-11-05 12:03   ` Pedro Alves
2008-11-05 16:59     ` Roland Puntaier

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