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RE: Multi thread Debugging
- To: 'Jonathan Larmour' <jlarmour at redhat dot co dot uk>
- Subject: RE: [ECOS] Multi thread Debugging
- From: Fabrice Gautier <Fabrice_Gautier at sdesigns dot com>
- Date: Fri, 25 Aug 2000 12:04:23 -0700
- Cc: "Ecos-List (E-mail)" <ecos-discuss at sourceware dot cygnus dot com>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jonathan Larmour [mailto:jlarmour@redhat.co.uk]
> Subject: Re: [ECOS] Multi thread Debugging
>
>
> Fabrice Gautier wrote:
> > Si now I see that there is a saved context when there is an
> > interrupt but
> > I don't understand how is the context saved when there is a
> > thread switch.
> >
> > The macro HAL_THREAD_SWITCH_CONTEXT let me think that there
> > is something
> > saved in the stack_ptr member of the Threads while in
> > interrupt_end it is
> > saved in the saved_context member.
>
> The stack_ptr member is there for a different purpose than
> saved_context.
> saved_context is for GDB debugging purposes only and provides the full
> context. AFAIK interrupt_end is the only place that stores
> the context in
> saved_context.
>
> This is interesting - it's not clear to me either how
> saved_context is set
> if threads get rescheduled for any reason other than an interrupt.
>
> Is this a bug?
>
> I wouldn't have thought this would have caused a problem on the scale
> Fabrice is seeing at any rate.
>
> > Then, I'v eseen in GDB that in order to get the information
> > for each thread
> > it does a thread switch. How (where?) is a thread switch
> > request from gdb
> > done in the Stub?
>
> There is no thread switch in the stub. Look at
> kernel/VERSION/src/debug/dbg_gdb.cxx and specifically
> dbg_threadlist(). It
> traverses the list of threads by following the thread list pointers.
Yes, okay. This function works well for I can get the name and status of
each thread.
But in GDB, There is a switch_to_thread function called in the
info_threads_command in order to get the PC.
In fact I think GDB only try to do a stack frame switch in this function but
in fact the frame is always the same. It seems that the read_fp function
always return the same frame pointer. (And this is the one of the current
thread)
There is certainly a bug somewhere but I don't know if it is a GDB bug or a
eCos bug.
I've already send a mail to the gdb mailing list but didnt get any answer.
Thanks
--
Fabrice Gautier
fabrice_gautier@sdesigns.com