Contents
List of requirements for patches
GDB Internals documentation
GDB has an official Internals Manual (see the documentation page). It is a good reference guide for GDB, but some parts are incomplete or outdated.
Jeremy Bennett wrote Howto: Porting the GNU Debugger, which is a good source of information as well. It is primarily aimed at engineers who will port GDB to a new target for the first time, but contains an overview of GDB Internals that is of general interest.
Creating ChangeLog entries
The GCC folks have a tool called mklog to help generate ChangeLogs. This script creates a ChangeLog template for a diff file. Run "mklog diff-file" and the template will be added to the top of the file.
Editing configure.ac
After editing gdb/configure.ac, you need to regenerate gdb/configure, gdb/config.in and gdb/aclocal.m4:
$ pwd /path/to/src/gdb $ aclocal -I gnulib/m4 $ autoconf $ autoheader
Please note:
You need to use the correct versions of aclocal, autoconf and autoheader. The correct version is the one mentioned at the beginning of gdb/aclocal.m4 and gdb/configure.
- Don't include the changes to these generated files in your patch when you post it to the mailing list. These files are big and unnecessary for code review.
Editing gdbarch.h/gdbarch.c
Don't.
These are generated files. Edit gdbarch.sh instead, and then run it.
Updating GDB's import of gnulib
GDB now imports various modules from the gnulib project, located in gdb/gnulib. This import is used when building both GDB and GDBserver.
To facilitate the update of our import, a script called update-gnulib.sh has been created to automate the process. To run this script:
% cd /path/to/gdb-sources/gdb/gnulib
% ./update-gnulib.sh /path/to/gnulib-git-repositoryWhen run without change, the new import should be identical to the previous one. This is actually a good test to perform before making any update to our import, to make sure that everything is correctly setup.
The script maintains the two key pieces of information from which the import is created as constants defined inside the script:
GNULIB_COMMIT_SHA1 - which commit from the gnulib respository is to be used for the import;
IMPORTED_GNULIB_MODULES - which modules to import from gnulib.
When updating the import, please only modify one element at a time. For instance, if you want to import a new module only defined in a later version of gnulib, please first update the import to use the newer commit as a first patch, and then update the import to include the new module as a second patch.
Debugging gdbserver on uClinux / Linux with no MMU
GDB has issues with breakpoints set in gdbserver on !MMU targets. Ulrich Weigand has a tip to make it work:
Gdbserver uses a direct call to the Linux "clone" system call at startup, and for some reason GDB gets really confused by this. When I want to debug gdbserver, I generally simply comment out the call to linux_test_for_tracefork in linux-nat.c:initialize_low to avoid this.
Writing testcases
See GDBTestcaseCookbook.
Finding Gnats bug entries in the Bugzilla database
If you ever had to find an old bug in the Bugzilla database, you probably stumbled upon this situation. There are some old entries from the now-retired Gnats database, which can be found by:
Adding 7105 to the Gnats bug number;
Search for "Converted from Gnats NNN", where NNN is the Gnats bug number.
Use "gdb 123" Location with Mozilla bookmark keyword "gdb", URL "http://localhost/~user/cgi-bin/buggdb.php?id=%s" and install this file as "~/public_html/cgi-bin/buggdb.php".