This is the mail archive of the gdb-patches@sourceware.org mailing list for the GDB project.


Index Nav: [Date Index] [Subject Index] [Author Index] [Thread Index]
Message Nav: [Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next]
Other format: [Raw text]

Re: [Patch] Win32 gdbserver new interrupt support, and attach to process fix.


Lerele wrote:

It seems after all the solution proposed may be the best resort, instead of the last: more compatible, less interfereable with child, however a bit more difficult to write.
In fact, the first version of interrupt code I wrote several months ago worked like that (I still keep a copy somewhere). It worked, but it was buggy, so I dropped it and wrote that other simpler new version.
This other solution may be the one-for-all solution, because it uses rather more standard Win32 calls.

The more I search for a *clean* way to do it in WinCE, the more I'm inclined to drop the create_a_remote_thread idea. A bit of googling and reading old MSFT docs indicates that older debuggers either suspend all threads with SuspendThread (like you suggest, or get the main thread's PC (EIP) and set a breakpoint there, which should be simpler. (I would still have to do a little more work for WinCE because the address might not be physically writable.) I think I read somewhere that recent MSVC uses DebugBreakProcess, and hides the fact that the break was inside ntdll.dll, or wherever, by switching threads...

What do you think of just suspending of thread, and setting a breakpoint
at the current PC, and resuming?

Another problem besides one commented in my last message, is that signal handlers will not be called in child, but is this really an issue when doing a remote interrupt request?


You mean the ctrl-c event/SIGINT? I don't have much of an opinion here. I never needed it except for stopping the inferior, and WinCE doesn't have signals, 'ctrl-c events', or a proper console, for the matter.




1) May be solved by doing:

1. Create in gdbserver process as much threads as number of cpus -1 the computer has. These threads should consume all scheduled cpu for them.
2. SetPriorityClass on gdbserver process with real-time priority.
3. GetPriorityClass on child and store it to restore later on.
4. SetPriorityClass on child with below normal or idle.
5. Suspend all child threads.
Child should be stopped here.


Only problem I see with this can be if child changes its own priority class between steps 3 and 4 above, however this is a very remote possibility, because if this happens it is because child is already running in real-time priority, and in this case gdbserver possibly may not even work at all (unless you run gdbserver itself with this priority).

What do you think about this?


What about using the version you sent (if approved), and then work on this new version on top? IMHO, it is better to have something working first. (I don't believe the extra thread makes a difference 99.999999999% of the times.)

Cheers,
Pedro Alves




Index Nav: [Date Index] [Subject Index] [Author Index] [Thread Index]
Message Nav: [Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next]