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.gitignoreH A D23-Dec-201038 54

ChangeLogH A D31-May-2011213.6 KiB5,7774,745

Makefile.inH A D10-Mar-201124.8 KiB586442

READMEH A D29-Dec-20105.9 KiB154117

acinclude.m4H A D09-Oct-2009228 106

aclocal.m4H A D15-Feb-2011632 1511

config.inH A D01-Sep-20107.1 KiB269190

configureH A D09-Mar-2011170.9 KiB6,2295,123

configure.acH A D09-Mar-201111.9 KiB405353

configure.srvH A D29-Dec-201010.5 KiB273264

event-loop.cH A D01-Jan-201117.4 KiB638356

gdb_proc_service.hH A D01-Jan-20112 KiB7538

gdbreplay.cH A D06-Jan-20119.8 KiB487391

gdbserver.1H A D05-Jan-20114.5 KiB11795

hostio-errno.cH A D01-Jan-20112.1 KiB8760

hostio.cH A D14-Mar-20119.3 KiB479360

i386-low.cH A D27-Feb-201118.1 KiB586354

i386-low.hH A D01-Jan-20114.6 KiB11729

i387-fp.cH A D28-Jan-201114.7 KiB566400

i387-fp.hH A D01-Jan-20111.4 KiB3711

inferiors.cH A D01-Jan-201111.4 KiB528362

linux-amd64-ipa.cH A D27-Feb-20114.4 KiB176124

linux-arm-low.cH A D02-Mar-20119.6 KiB393276

linux-bfin-low.cH A D01-Jan-20112.7 KiB10867

linux-cris-low.cH A D01-Jan-20113.1 KiB12983

linux-crisv32-low.cH A D01-Jan-201110.4 KiB391239

linux-i386-ipa.cH A D16-May-20115.1 KiB199139

linux-ia64-low.cH A D01-Jan-20115.7 KiB288250

linux-low.cH A D27-Feb-2011138.2 KiB5,2023,479

linux-low.hH A D01-Jan-20119.2 KiB272120

linux-m32r-low.cH A D01-Jan-20112.7 KiB10569

linux-m68k-low.cH A D01-Jan-20114.7 KiB192135

linux-mips-low.cH A D01-Jan-20119.9 KiB372262

linux-ppc-low.cH A D06-Jan-201118.4 KiB629472

linux-s390-low.cH A D06-Jan-20118.1 KiB328248

linux-sh-low.cH A D01-Jan-20113.1 KiB12578

linux-sparc-low.cH A D06-Jan-20118.2 KiB298199

linux-x86-low.cH A D31-May-201159.5 KiB2,5862,029

linux-xtensa-low.cH A D06-Jan-20115 KiB193135

lynx-i386-low.cH A D01-Jan-201110.5 KiB320230

lynx-low.cH A D01-Jan-201119.8 KiB771573

lynx-low.hH A D01-Jan-20111.7 KiB5315

lynx-ppc-low.cH A D01-Jan-20115.7 KiB187116

mem-break.cH A D06-Jan-201127.9 KiB1,146761

mem-break.hH A D01-Jan-20114.9 KiB15834

nto-low.cH A D06-Jan-201122.7 KiB960705

nto-low.hH A D01-Jan-20111.2 KiB4520

nto-x86-low.cH A D01-Jan-20112.4 KiB10771

proc-service.cH A D01-Jan-20114.1 KiB16188

proc-service.listH A D01-Jan-2011947 3124

regcache.cH A D28-Jan-20119.5 KiB431322

regcache.hH A D28-Jan-20113.8 KiB11843

remote-utils.cH A D07-Mar-201139.7 KiB1,8631,367

server.cH A D10-Mar-201177.2 KiB3,2642,392

server.hH A D18-Mar-201120.6 KiB675405

spu-low.cH A D01-Jan-201117 KiB683474

target.cH A D01-Jan-20115.2 KiB199141

target.hH A D01-Jan-201115.9 KiB513203

terminal.hH A D23-Aug-20071.5 KiB5227

thread-db.cH A D06-Jan-201125.2 KiB941671

tracepoint.cH A D10-Mar-2011191.4 KiB7,4585,066

utils.cH A D28-Feb-20117.8 KiB379260

win32-arm-low.cH A D01-Jan-20113.6 KiB13393

win32-i386-low.cH A D31-May-201111.6 KiB432331

win32-low.cH A D01-Jan-201148.2 KiB1,8291,405

win32-low.hH A D06-Jan-20113.2 KiB10437

wincecompat.cH A D01-Jan-20111.1 KiB4018

wincecompat.hH A D01-Jan-2011996 317

xtensa-xtregs.cH A D01-Jan-20111.2 KiB3815

README

1		   README for GDBserver & GDBreplay
2		    by Stu Grossman and Fred Fish
3
4Introduction:
5
6This is GDBserver, a remote server for Un*x-like systems.  It can be used to
7control the execution of a program on a target system from a GDB on a different
8host.  GDB and GDBserver communicate using the standard remote serial protocol
9implemented in remote.c, and various *-stub.c files.  They communicate via
10either a serial line or a TCP connection.
11
12For more information about GDBserver, see the GDB manual.
13
14Usage (server (target) side):
15
16First, you need to have a copy of the program you want to debug put onto
17the target system.  The program can be stripped to save space if needed, as
18GDBserver doesn't care about symbols.  All symbol handling is taken care of by
19the GDB running on the host system.
20
21To use the server, you log on to the target system, and run the `gdbserver'
22program.  You must tell it (a) how to communicate with GDB, (b) the name of
23your program, and (c) its arguments.  The general syntax is:
24
25	target> gdbserver COMM PROGRAM [ARGS ...]
26
27For example, using a serial port, you might say:
28
29	target> gdbserver /dev/com1 emacs foo.txt
30
31This tells GDBserver to debug emacs with an argument of foo.txt, and to
32communicate with GDB via /dev/com1.  GDBserver now waits patiently for the
33host GDB to communicate with it.
34
35To use a TCP connection, you could say:
36
37	target> gdbserver host:2345 emacs foo.txt
38
39This says pretty much the same thing as the last example, except that we are
40going to communicate with the host GDB via TCP.  The `host:2345' argument means
41that we are expecting to see a TCP connection from `host' to local TCP port
422345.  (Currently, the `host' part is ignored.)  You can choose any number you
43want for the port number as long as it does not conflict with any existing TCP
44ports on the target system.  This same port number must be used in the host
45GDBs `target remote' command, which will be described shortly.  Note that if
46you chose a port number that conflicts with another service, GDBserver will
47print an error message and exit.
48
49On some targets, GDBserver can also attach to running programs.  This is
50accomplished via the --attach argument.  The syntax is:
51
52	target> gdbserver --attach COMM PID
53
54PID is the process ID of a currently running process.  It isn't necessary
55to point GDBserver at a binary for the running process.
56
57Usage (host side):
58
59You need an unstripped copy of the target program on your host system, since
60GDB needs to examine it's symbol tables and such.  Start up GDB as you normally
61would, with the target program as the first argument.  (You may need to use the
62--baud option if the serial line is running at anything except 9600 baud.)
63Ie: `gdb TARGET-PROG', or `gdb --baud BAUD TARGET-PROG'.  After that, the only
64new command you need to know about is `target remote'.  It's argument is either
65a device name (usually a serial device, like `/dev/ttyb'), or a HOST:PORT
66descriptor.  For example:
67
68	(gdb) target remote /dev/ttyb
69
70communicates with the server via serial line /dev/ttyb, and:
71
72	(gdb) target remote the-target:2345
73
74communicates via a TCP connection to port 2345 on host `the-target', where
75you previously started up GDBserver with the same port number.  Note that for
76TCP connections, you must start up GDBserver prior to using the `target remote'
77command, otherwise you may get an error that looks something like
78`Connection refused'.
79
80Building GDBserver:
81
82The supported targets as of November 2006 are:
83	arm-*-linux*
84	bfin-*-uclinux
85	bfin-*-linux-uclibc
86	crisv32-*-linux*
87	cris-*-linux*
88	i[34567]86-*-cygwin*
89	i[34567]86-*-linux*
90	i[34567]86-*-mingw*
91	ia64-*-linux*
92	m32r*-*-linux*
93	m68*-*-linux*
94	m68*-*-uclinux*
95	mips*64*-*-linux*
96	mips*-*-linux*
97	powerpc[64]-*-linux*
98	s390[x]-*-linux*
99	sh-*-linux*
100	spu*-*-*
101	x86_64-*-linux*
102	xscale*-*-linux*
103
104Configuring GDBserver you should specify the same machine for host and
105target (which are the machine that GDBserver is going to run on.  This
106is not the same as the machine that GDB is going to run on; building
107GDBserver automatically as part of building a whole tree of tools does
108not currently work if cross-compilation is involved (we don't get the
109right CC in the Makefile, to start with)).
110
111Building GDBserver for your target is very straightforward.  If you build
112GDB natively on a target which GDBserver supports, it will be built
113automatically when you build GDB.  You can also build just GDBserver:
114
115	% mkdir obj
116	% cd obj
117	% path-to-gdbserver-sources/configure
118	% make
119
120If you prefer to cross-compile to your target, then you can also build
121GDBserver that way.  In a Bourne shell, for example:
122
123	% export CC=your-cross-compiler
124	% path-to-gdbserver-sources/configure your-target-name
125	% make
126
127Using GDBreplay:
128
129A special hacked down version of GDBserver can be used to replay remote
130debug log files created by GDB.  Before using the GDB "target" command to
131initiate a remote debug session, use "set remotelogfile <filename>" to tell
132GDB that you want to make a recording of the serial or tcp session.  Note
133that when replaying the session, GDB communicates with GDBreplay via tcp,
134regardless of whether the original session was via a serial link or tcp.
135
136Once you are done with the remote debug session, start GDBreplay and
137tell it the name of the log file and the host and port number that GDB
138should connect to (typically the same as the host running GDB):
139
140	$ gdbreplay logfile host:port
141
142Then start GDB (preferably in a different screen or window) and use the
143"target" command to connect to GDBreplay:
144
145	(gdb) target remote host:port
146
147Repeat the same sequence of user commands to GDB that you gave in the
148original debug session.  GDB should not be able to tell that it is talking
149to GDBreplay rather than a real target, all other things being equal.  Note
150that GDBreplay echos the command lines to stderr, as well as the contents of
151the packets it sends and receives.  The last command echoed by GDBreplay is
152the next command that needs to be typed to GDB to continue the session in
153sync with the original session.
154