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Re: Getting pissed off by gdb. Please help with stepping in.
On Thursday 18 March 2010 14:33:37 Daniel Jacobowitz wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 18, 2010 at 12:22:20AM -0700, Doug Evans wrote:
> > This patch for cvs head gets things working for me. I haven't run it
> > through the testsuite, and it might be nice compare more than just
> > frame ids (and for the gdb crowd, yes, the FIXME needs to go before
> > being checked in ...), but .... this patch seems otherwise reasonable
> > to me. At the point where the patch is applied gdb has already
> > decided to continue - what's a case where it *should* continue at this
> > point *if* the frame has changed? [Note that gdb has already handled
> > various cases like stopping in trampolines and such.]
>
> In addition to what Eli said... here's the previous block:
>
> if ((stop_pc == stop_pc_sal.pc)
> && (ecs->event_thread->current_line != stop_pc_sal.line
> || ecs->event_thread->current_symtab != stop_pc_sal.symtab))
> {
> /* We are at the start of a different line. So stop. Note that
> we don't stop if we step into the middle of a different line.
> That is said to make things like for (;;) statements work
> better. */
>
> IOW, if we are at a line boundary, we stop stepping. If we've ended
> up in the middle of a line, we keep going. This prevents us from
> ending up in a weird state where we show the line containing the
> function call, but the function has already been called. I think it'd
> be even more confusing.
Since this code turns up in discussion: The condition fires back in case
of an ill-behaved remote stub.
I unfortunately have to care for such a beast that sometimes "overshoots"
when stepping over a range by two or three instructions. In this case the
condition is false and gdb will execute the code below the the block
leading to
keep_going (ecs);
This means a 'next' effectively jumps over two lines, which is rather nasty.
So I have been removing this optimization in gdb for a while (as the stub
is not under my control) without experiencing any bad side effects. Most
notably, stepping over for (;;) does not seem to be affected at all.
I understand the (for me unfortunate) gdb behaviour this is entirely the
fault of the stub, but nevertheless I wonder whether this optimization is
really needed.
I dug a bit in gdb's history, and the code is older than anything I could
access, i.e. before 1991 or so. Together with the comment "That is said
to make things like for (;;) statements work better" one might get the
impression that it was a workaround for some particular compiler or such.
Does anybody happen to remember what triggered the inclusion of this
optimization into gdb code?
Andre'