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Re: How can I get a memory map out of a core file?


On Friday 06 June 2008 11:29:29 pm Eli Zaretskii wrote:
> > On Fri, 2008-06-06 at 13:45 -0700, Bruce Korb wrote:
> > > Hi,
> > > 
> > > "jmap" looked really nice, but that is Solaris only.
> > > "pmap" is almost what I want, but there's no /proc/pid directory
> > > for my core dump any more.
> > > If there is some GDB command I can use, I haven't found it.
> > > I haven't seen any obvious way to emulate it either.
> > > Surely someone, somewhere has solved this problem.
> > > Anyone know where the solution is hiding?  :)
> > > Thank you.  Regards - Bruce
> > 
> > Try "help info proc mappings".  It may be the closest we've got
> > to what you want.
> 
> How can this help in a core file?  The process is already dead, so
> it's not in /proc, right?  Or am I missing something?

Hi Eli,

Nope.  You're right, Eli.  It doesn't help.  I tried it.  I also tried sourcing
a file that had a series of "x/3x 0xNNN00000" commands at 1 Meg steps.
That didn't work either because GDB quit as soon as an invalid address
was attempted.  So, for me, the ideal solution is a command that yields
(figures out) the valid address ranges, and an adequate backup would
be to tell the "source" command to keep going after a failed command.
Perhaps this is a "request for enhancement", though I hoped there might
already be some hackish way of accomplishing what I need.

Thanks!  Cheers - Bruce


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