Question

When you're doing a usual gdb session on an executable file on the same computer, you can give the run command and it will start the program over again.

When you're running gdb on an embedded system, as with the command target localhost:3210', how do you start the program over again without quitting and restarting your gdb session?

Was it helpful?

OTHER TIPS

Unfortunately, I don't know of a way to restart the application and still maintain your session. A workaround is to set the PC back to the entry point of your program. You can do this by either calling:

jump function

or

set $pc=address.

If you munged the arguments to main you may need set them up again.

Edit:

There are a couple of caveats with the above method that could cause problems.

  • If you are in a multi-threaded program jumping to main will jump the current thread to main, all other threads remain. If the current thread held a lock...then you have some problems.
  • Memory leaks, if you program flow allocates some stuff during initialization then you just leaked a bunch of memory with the jump.
  • Open files will still remain open. If you mmap some files or an address, the call will most likely fail.

So, using jump isn't the same thing as restarting the program.

Presumably you are running gdbserver on the embedded system.

You can ask it to restart your program instead of exiting with target extended-remote

"jump _start" is the usual way.

For me the method described in 21.2 Sample GDB session startup works great. When I enter monitor reset halt later at the “(gdb)” prompt the target hardware is reset and I can re-start the application with c (= continue).

The load command can be omitted between the runs because there is no need to flash the program again and again.

Step-by-step procedure

Remote:

# pwd contains cross-compiled ./myexec
gdbserver --multi :1234

Local:

# pwd also contains the same cross-compiled ./myexec
gdb -ex 'target extended-remote 192.168.0.1:1234' \
    -ex 'set remote exec-file ./myexec' \
    --args ./myexec arg1 arg2
(gdb) r
[Inferior 1 (process 1234) exited normally]
(gdb) r
[Inferior 1 (process 1235) exited normally]
(gdb) monitor exit

Tested in Ubuntu 14.04.

It is also possible to pass CLI arguments to the program as:

gdbserver --multi :1234 ./myexec arg1 arg2

and the ./myexec part removes the need for set remote exec-file ./myexec, but this has the following annoyances:

Pass environment variables and change working directory without restart: How to modify the environment variables and working directory of gdbserver --multi without restarting it?

If you are running regular gdb you can type 'run' shortcut 'r' and gdb asks you if you wish to restart the program

On EFM32 Happy Gecko none of the suggestions would work for me, so here is what I have learned from the documentation on integrating GDB into the Eclipse environment.

(gdb) mon reset 0
(gdb) continue
(gdb) continue

This puts me in the state that I would have expected when hitting reset from the IDE.

Licensed under: CC-BY-SA with attribution
Not affiliated with StackOverflow
scroll top