Samuel Thibault, le Mon 11 Feb 2013 03:01:09 +0100, a écrit : > The i386 GNU/Hurd ELF core format actually follows the uaccess gregset_t > array format, not the Mach thread state format. This fixes gdb reading > it.
I have uploaded a fixed package on debian-ports. > * gdb/i386gnu-nat.c (CREG_OFFSET): New macro. > (creg_offset): New array. > (CREG_ADDR): Use creg_offset instead of reg_offset. > > --- a/gdb/i386gnu-nat.c.original 2013-02-11 00:46:02.000000000 +0000 > +++ b/gdb/i386gnu-nat.c 2013-02-11 00:48:09.000000000 +0000 > @@ -56,8 +56,21 @@ > REG_OFFSET (ds), REG_OFFSET (es), REG_OFFSET (fs), REG_OFFSET (gs) > }; > > +/* Offset to the greg_t location where REG is stored. */ > +#define CREG_OFFSET(reg) (REG_##reg * 4) > + > +/* At CREG_OFFSET[N] is the offset to the greg_t location where > + the GDB register N is stored. */ > +static int creg_offset[] = > +{ > + CREG_OFFSET (EAX), CREG_OFFSET (ECX), CREG_OFFSET (EDX), CREG_OFFSET (EBX), > + CREG_OFFSET (UESP), CREG_OFFSET (EBP), CREG_OFFSET (ESI), CREG_OFFSET > (EDI), > + CREG_OFFSET (EIP), CREG_OFFSET (EFL), CREG_OFFSET (CS), CREG_OFFSET (SS), > + CREG_OFFSET (DS), CREG_OFFSET (ES), CREG_OFFSET (FS), CREG_OFFSET (GS) > +}; > + > #define REG_ADDR(state, regnum) ((char *)(state) + reg_offset[regnum]) > -#define CREG_ADDR(state, regnum) ((const char *)(state) + reg_offset[regnum]) > +#define CREG_ADDR(state, regnum) ((const char *)(state) + > creg_offset[regnum]) > > > /* Get the whole floating-point state of THREAD and record the values