From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: Eli Zaretskii To: Harald Fernengel Cc: gdb@sources.redhat.com Subject: Re: Need help with GDB commands Date: Tue, 03 Jul 2001 23:51:00 -0000 Message-id: References: <20010703185922Z114582-2795+260@trolltech.com> X-SW-Source: 2001-07/msg00017.html On Tue, 3 Jul 2001, Harald Fernengel wrote: > I need to create a user-defined command that reads some memory and then > passes it a formatting program. I am assuming the formatting program would > be run via the 'shell' command'. Is there any way to do this? > > Below is a list of the things that I have thought of. None of them seem to > be possible: > > * Writing the command output to a file (this is my preferred approach) > * Passing output as stdin to a child process > * Setting an environment variable which contains the output > * Passing output as command line parameters to a child process I'd suggest * add a special function to the debuggee which will accept the command line for the formatting program, and then run that program. Then use the GDB `call' command to invoke that function from GDB. > Another possible solution would be to call C runtime I/O functions as part > an expression in a 'set' command. However, these functions would be > running on the target, not the gdb host machine right? Ah, you are debugging a remote target? Than my suggestion won't work for you. Sounds like a good reason for extending `shell', or maybe for a new command.