gdb needs full C++ function signature to set a breakpoint
Klaus Zeitler
kzeitler@lucent.com
Thu Jul 7 08:16:00 GMT 2005
Hello,
I'm debugging a program with automatically generated C++ code (hundreds of
classes with lots of ugly looking, but unique, i.e. not overloaded member
functions). When I try to set a breakpoint on such a C++ member function name
gdb always says: "The class ... does not have any method named ...".
For example using the following function:
aMOTxAmp_Actor::choicePoint28_checkAST(SPD<MODCInvokeActionReq, SP<MODCBase> > const*, prMOAccess::Conjugate*)
(that gets mangled to
_ZN14aMOTxAmp_Actor22choicePoint28_checkASTEPK3SPDI19MODCInvokeActionReq2SPI8MODCBaseEEPN10prMOAccess9ConjugateE)
gdb says:
(gdb) b aMOTxAmp_Actor::choicePoint28_checkAST
the class aMOTxAmp_Actor does not have any method named choicePoint28_checkAST
Hint: try 'aMOTxAmp_Actor::choicePoint28_checkAST<TAB> or 'aMOTxAmp_Actor::choicePoint28_checkAST<ESC-?>
Thus I always need to have these function names expanded with '...<tab>'.
That's not very convenient but ok as long as I don't want to set breakpoints
via .gdbinit (in the latter case I use the mangled names).
Now what puzzles me is, that when I reduce my 100MB image to a small example
with only one or two of these weird functions, gdb is able to set the
breakpoint in the example above.
BTW I've checked that in both cases 'nm <image> | grep choicePoint28_checkAST'
returns exactly one (and the same) match.
Thanks
Klaus
--
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| Klaus Zeitler Lucent Technologies |
| Email: kzeitler@lucent.com |
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