On Wed, Jan 21, 2004 at 03:12:25PM -0800, George Anzinger wrote: > Tom Rini wrote: > >On Wed, Jan 21, 2004 at 11:42:17AM -0700, Tom Rini wrote: > > > >>On Wed, Jan 21, 2004 at 10:23:12PM +0530, Amit S. Kale wrote: > >> > >> > >>>Hi, > >>> > >>>Here it is: ppc kgdb from timesys kernel is available at > >>>http://kgdb.sourceforge.net/kgdb-2/linux-2.6.1-kgdb-2.1.0.tar.bz2 > >>> > >>>This is my attempt at extracting kgdb from TimeSys kernel. It works well > >>>in TimeSys kernel, so blame me if above patch doesn't work. > >> > >>Okay, here's my first patch against this. > > > > > >And dependant upon this is a patch to fixup the rest of the common PPC > >code, as follows: > >- Add FRAME_POINTER > >- Put the bits of kgdbppc_init into ppc_kgdb_init. > >- None of the gen550 stuffs depend on CONFIG_8250_SERIAL directly, > > remove that constraint. > >- Add missing bits like debuggerinfo, BREAKPOINT, etc. > >- Add a kgdb_map_scc machdep pointer. > > > >--- 1.48/arch/ppc/Kconfig Wed Jan 21 10:13:13 2004 > >+++ edited/arch/ppc/Kconfig Wed Jan 21 12:18:32 2004 > >@@ -1405,6 +1405,14 @@ > > Say Y here only if you plan to use some sort of debugger to > > debug the kernel. > > If you don't debug the kernel, you can say N. > >+ > >+config FRAME_POINTER > >+ bool "Compile the kernel with frame pointers" > >+ help > >+ If you say Y here the resulting kernel image will be slightly > >larger > >+ and slower, but it will give very useful debugging information. > >+ If you don't debug the kernel, you can say N, but we may not be > >able > >+ to solve problems without frame pointers. > > This is fast becoming old hat. If you compile with dwarf debug info, you > not only get more reliable frame info, but you do not need frame pointers. > Gdb is almost there. The languages have already arrived. My guess would be the miniumum toolchain requirements for i386/ppc (I don't know x86_64) aren't all that new, so while gcc-3.3 probably gives everything you describe, gcc-3.0 (which is valid for PPC, iirc) probably doesn't. > A question I have been meaning to ask: Why is the arch/common connection > via a structure of addresses instead of just calls? I seems to me that > just calling is a far cleaner way to do things here. All the struct seems > to offer is a way to change the backend on the fly. I don't thing we ever > want to do that. Am I missing something? I imagine it's a style thing. I don't have a preference either way. -- Tom Rini http://gate.crashing.org/~trini/ - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majordomo _at_ vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
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