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From: Jim Blandy <jimb@codesourcery.com>
To: gdb-patches@sourceware.org
Cc: gdb@sourceware.org
Subject: Re: [rfc / remote protocol] Remote shared library events
Date: Fri, 18 May 2007 16:04:00 -0000	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <m3r6pe9kym.fsf@codesourcery.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20070518002701.GA13859@caradoc.them.org> (Daniel Jacobowitz's message of "Thu, 17 May 2007 20:27:01 -0400")


Daniel Jacobowitz <drow@false.org> writes:
> On Wed, May 16, 2007 at 03:58:52PM -0700, Jim Blandy wrote:
>> It seems odd to me that it's an @var{n} that distinguishes the reason
>> for the stop; the @var{AA}, the @var{r}, and any other @var{r}:@var{n}
>> pairs are essentially meaningless.  I'd rather see an entirely new
>> stop reply packet type --- 'L', say --- with subsequent name/value
>> pairs, like those in a q[fs]DllInfo packet's 'm' response.
>
> I don't know why you say they're meaningless.  @var{AA} is unused, but
> @var{r} describes the exact reason for the stop (which library was
> loaded or unloaded), and other @var{r}:@var{n} pairs are treated
> exactly as they are for T packets - they supply useful registers.
> I'd have to add the expedited register support to any new reply packet
> too, which would make it basically T without the signal number; this
> version seems to complicate the protocol less.

Sorry --- of course the @var{r} associated with the dllstop isn't
meaningless.  Regarding the other pairs, I didn't realize that one
wanted expedited registers for DLL events; would we actually use them?


  reply	other threads:[~2007-05-18 16:04 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 8+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2007-05-09 20:16 Daniel Jacobowitz
2007-05-09 20:40 ` Smith, Stephen (SWCOE)
2007-05-10  3:18 ` Eli Zaretskii
2007-05-16 22:59 ` Jim Blandy
2007-05-18  0:27   ` Daniel Jacobowitz
2007-05-18 16:04     ` Jim Blandy [this message]
2007-05-18 16:10       ` Daniel Jacobowitz
2007-05-18 16:49         ` Jim Blandy

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