> I think you misunderstood my question. I'm sure you know that
> gdb will display the source code of your program while you
> step through it. I am debugging the oskit-mach kernel, and
> I can follow the kernel source except when it calls an oskit
> function, I just wondered where the oskit source
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I think you misunderstood my question. I'm sure you know that
gdb will display the source code of your program while you
step through it. I am debugging the oskit-mach kernel, and
I can follow the kernel source except when it calls an oskit
function, I just wondered where the oskit source should be
"B. Douglas Hilton" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I noticed my gdb isn't properly finding the oskit sources when I am
> stepping through the kernel. How should the source tree be arranged
> so that it works as expected?
Uhm, I don't know what's the cause of your problem, but did you have a
look a
I just did a "cp -a" of my /gnu partition onto oskit-mach's
new home on the IDE drive. I was able to boot my
"kernel-ide" with no problems. It happily fired up
and gave me a Bourne shell with TERM=dumb and
some error about "/dev/console is not a console".
I assume this is normal for oskit-mach. For
I noticed my gdb isn't properly finding the oskit sources
when I am stepping through the kernel. How should the
source tree be arranged so that it works as expected?
BTW: I allocated my 640MB IDE drive to oskit-mach
since the problem with aic78xx seems formidable right
now. That should enable me to
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