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Groups > comp.os.linux.development.apps > #376
| From | Bill M <wpmccormick@just_about_everywhere.com> |
|---|---|
| Newsgroups | comp.os.linux.development.apps |
| Subject | Re: IDE's |
| Date | 2012-01-08 21:53 -0600 |
| Organization | A noiseless patient Spider |
| Message-ID | <jedoc5$fj7$1@dont-email.me> (permalink) |
| References | <jeab96$3ub$1@dont-email.me> <Pine.LNX.4.64.1201072203410.12292@login04.caesar.elte.hu> <jecf9q$6ca$2@dont-email.me> <20120108104237.475@kylheku.com> |
Kaz Kylheku wrote, On 1/8/2012 12:49 PM: > On 2012-01-08, Bill M<wpmccormick@just_about_everywhere.com> wrote: >> Ersek, Laszlo wrote, On 1/7/2012 3:06 PM: >>> On Sat, 7 Jan 2012, Bill M wrote: >>> >>>> Is there such an IDE that can do this without having a lot of overhead >>>> on the target hardware platform? >>> >>> "man gdbserver". Any IDE or standalone debugger frontend that can work >>> with gdb will do (eg. emacs or ddd). >>> >>> Laszlo >> Would you recommend Eclipse for this? > > Eclipse is a front end and has nothing to do with what runs on the > target platform or whether you're reduced to using printf for debugging or have > real breakpoint debugging. > > The right answer was given: the GNU project has a debugger called gdb, which > implements remote debugging via a scaled down version called gdbserver, which > has the process-loading and instrumentation pieces of gdb and can communicate > with another gdb over a serial line or network. This other gdb is where you > load all the executable images and their symbols (so that these things don't > have to be present on the target system, which may be a small embedded device > with no space for those things!) In your words "without having a lot of > overhead on the target hardware platform". > > If your target can support gdbserver, you should be able to remotely debug with > gdb, using local copies of the executable material, with symbols, source code, > etc. > > Given that, you can use whatever front-end for gdb that you like. > If Eclipse provides one, you should be able to use it. Obviously gdb and gdbserver must be part of the solution. But, as the subject of this thread suggests, any and all answers that fit into the IDE catagory are answers.
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IDE's Bill M <wpmccormick@just_about_everywhere.com> - 2012-01-07 14:51 -0600
Re: IDE's "Ersek, Laszlo" <lacos@caesar.elte.hu> - 2012-01-07 22:06 +0100
Re: IDE's Bill M <wpmccormick@just_about_everywhere.com> - 2012-01-08 10:12 -0600
Re: IDE's "Ersek, Laszlo" <lacos@caesar.elte.hu> - 2012-01-08 18:12 +0100
Re: IDE's Bill M <wpmccormick@just_about_everywhere.com> - 2012-01-08 21:19 -0600
Re: IDE's Bill M <wpmccormick@just_about_everywhere.com> - 2012-01-08 21:45 -0600
Re: IDE's "Ersek, Laszlo" <lacos@caesar.elte.hu> - 2012-01-09 11:55 +0100
Re: IDE's Bill M <wpmccormick@just_about_everywhere.com> - 2012-01-09 13:29 -0600
Re: IDE's Kaz Kylheku <kaz@kylheku.com> - 2012-01-09 19:47 +0000
Re: IDE's David Brown <david.brown@removethis.hesbynett.no> - 2012-01-09 20:30 +0100
Re: IDE's Kaz Kylheku <kaz@kylheku.com> - 2012-01-08 18:49 +0000
Re: IDE's Bill M <wpmccormick@just_about_everywhere.com> - 2012-01-08 21:53 -0600
Re: IDE's Grant Edwards <invalid@invalid.invalid> - 2012-01-09 15:15 +0000
Re: IDE's ufo22940268@gmail.com - 2012-02-18 06:22 -0800
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