Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
John Baldwin
c632517124 Change GDB_BUFSZ to be large enough to hold a register dump where each
register takes 16 characters (64-bit register in hex).  In practice this
is a slight bit of overkill as 7 of the 56 registers are only 32-bit, but
having the buffer too small results in remote kgdb trashing kernel memory
when it connects.

PR:		amd64/108673
Submitted by:	Ravi Murty, Nikhil Rao @ Intel
MFC after:	3 days
2007-02-05 21:48:32 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
b1fb1bb19a Sync with i386: Map exceptions to signals in gdb_cpu_signal() so
that kgdb(1) gets a SIGTRAP when it needs to.

Pointed out by: grehan@
2006-04-04 03:00:20 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
470d831703 The PC is register 16, not 18.
Pointed out by: grehan@
2006-04-04 02:44:51 +00:00
Warner Losh
46280ae719 Begin all license/copyright comments with /*- 2005-01-05 20:17:21 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
bcc5241c43 Change gdb_cpu_setreg() to not take the value to which to set the
specified register, but a pointer to the in-memory representation of
that value. The reason for this is twofold:
1. Not all registers can be represented by a register_t. In particular
   FP registers fall in that category. Passing the new register value
   by reference instead of by value makes this point moot.
2. When we receive a G or P packet, both are for writing a register,
   the packet will have the register value in target-byte order and
   in the memory representation (modulo the fact that bytes are sent
   as 2 printable hexadecimal numbers of course). We only need to
   decode the packet to have a pointer to the register value.

This change fixes the bug of extracting the register value of the P
packet as a hexadecimal number instead of as a bit array. The quick
(and dirty) fix to bswap the register value in gdb_cpu_setreg() as
it has been added on i386 and amd64 can therefore be removed and has
in fact been that.

Tested on: alpha, amd64, i386, ia64, sparc64
2004-12-01 06:40:35 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
72d44f31a6 Introduce the GDB debugger backend for the new KDB framework. The
backend improves over the old GDB support in the following ways:
o  Unified implementation with minimal MD code.
o  A simple interface for devices to register themselves as debug
   ports, ala consoles.
o  Compression by using run-length encoding.
o  Implements GDB threading support.
2004-07-10 17:47:22 +00:00