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Re: [RFA]: Modified Watchthreads Patch


Daniel Jacobowitz wrote:
On Fri, Dec 10, 2004 at 03:02:41PM -0500, Jeff Johnston wrote:

On the technical side, two questions:

1) I can see that it will be a bit of work to rearrange i386-linux to
use this, but it should be doable.  Do you know offhand of any
i386-specific problems other than inserting watchpoints for all
threads?


Actually, with i386/x86-64 I discovered that the debug registers are global in scope for the setting of watchpoints (i.e. I didn't have to use the observer). The status register, however, is thread-specific for reporting them. I have gotten the watchthreads.exp testcase working for both platforms. Your lwp fix helps a lot with this. We call TIDGET()/PIDGET() in the low-level code which used to get called in the wrong ptid mode so we kept checking the main-thread for the watchpoint.


Er... do you know why the debug registers are global, and what kernel
is this with? They look thread-specific to me (kernel 2.6.10-rc1). They are accessible using PEEKUSR/POKEUSR for each thread, and
__switch_to updates them at context switches.



I am simply speaking from experience with the RHEL3 kernel. I got it working without touching the insert/remove logic. I am currently retrofitting new changes into the mainline gdb that are much "cleaner" than my previous fixes. I haven't tried x86 on the latest kernel, but I am in the midst of putting together an uber-patch with the stuff here plus some other things needed for each platform. IA64 is already finished and running watchthreads.exp on a next-release kernel. I am about to start x86 so I will keep in mind your comment. I'll let you know either way what I had to do to get it working.



2) What should to_stopped_by_watchpoint do in the presence of multiple
threads?  It looks like it relies on inferior_ptid being the thread
which stopped at a watchpoint; I'm worried that that may not be
consistently true in a heavily threaded application.  Maybe it should
iterate over all threads.


It works fine for the watchthreads.exp test once all the mechanisms are in place (I have a few more patches to go). We don't want to iterate over all threads unless we know the platform has a problem. Otherwise, we won't be able to pin down a specific watchpoint triggered with the thread/source line that triggered it. Is there a valid scenario where inferior_ptid should not be the thread for the signal chosen by the low-level linux-nat code? If not, I would prefer to treat that as a bug that requires pinning down.


We can delay this issue, then.  I am concerned about losing watchpoints
when other events are active, e.g. a thread event breakpoint or dlopen
breakpoint and a read watchpoint.  I'm sure GDB gets this wrong
already.

Please fix the whitespace at the end of s390-nat.c.  Otherwise, this is
approved if Ulrich is OK with the S390 bits; let's give him a chance to
comment.


Great. Will make the white-space change and wait for Ulrich.


-- Jeff J.


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