On Sun, Sep 08, 2002 at 09:54:47PM -0700, Tim Gilman wrote:
>
> Sorry about this, Christian; your patches are buried in my
> bottomless inbox. It appears real-life has swept me off my
> feet. I fully don't expect to come down for a month or so
> (getting married in 2 weeks, honeymoon, etc), so pl
Christian Zander at 9/8/02 (maybe):
>On Sun, Sep 08, 2002 at 05:54:56PM +0930, Greg 'groggy' Lehey wrote:
>> Just by coincidence, I heard of this today from Richard
>> Sharpe of Panasas. It seems that Tim has moved on,
>> which is possibly why you haven't heard back from him.
>I was aware of that
On Sun, Sep 08, 2002 at 05:54:56PM +0930, Greg 'groggy' Lehey wrote:
>
> Just by coincidence, I heard of this today from Richard Sharpe of
> Panasas. It seems that Tim has moved on, which is possibly why you
> haven't heard back from him.
>
I was aware of that, I had been in touch with Tim ove
On Saturday, 7 September 2002 at 10:28:27 +0200, Christian Zander wrote:
> On Sat, Sep 07, 2002 at 12:56:12AM -0700, Julian Elischer wrote:
>>
>>> What I found to work well is remote GDB debugging with the UDP
>>> wrapper (ip-gdb), it responds to CTRL-C as expected.
>>
>> huh? do we have that?
>>
On Sep 06 at 17:17, Nate Lawson spoke:
> You can do this by connecting a second serial cable for a console between
> your host and target or by using the remotechat option and a single cable.
> Once you have the serial console, option ALT_BREAK_TO_DEBUGGER allows you
> to initiate a break usi
On Sep 07 at 09:47, Christian Zander spoke:
> What I found to work well is remote GDB debugging with the UDP
> wrapper (ip-gdb), it responds to CTRL-C as expected.
Is there a description available about how to configure/setup the
target kernel?
Where is ip-gdb available?
-Hanspeter
To Unsubs
On Sat, Sep 07, 2002 at 12:56:12AM -0700, Julian Elischer wrote:
>
> > What I found to work well is remote GDB debugging with the UDP
> > wrapper (ip-gdb), it responds to CTRL-C as expected.
>
> huh? do we have that?
> (rushes of to see it it's in ports)
> comes back sadly..
>
> (where do you g
On Sat, 7 Sep 2002, Christian Zander wrote:
> On Fri, Sep 06, 2002 at 05:17:07PM -0700, Nate Lawson wrote:
> >
> > > But I want to be able to pass control to the debugger when
> > > the target kernel `hangs', that is when no `ctl-alt-f1',
> > > `ctl-alt-del' has any effect.
> >
> > If the han
On Fri, 6 Sep 2002, Hanspeter Roth wrote:
> On Sep 06 at 12:11, Julian Elischer spoke:
>
> > hit CTL_ALT_ESC on it's keyboard...
>
> Doing this on the remote host (running gdb) tells me `No debugger in
> kernel'.
> Doing this on the target host passes control to the remote gdb.
Like it should
On Sep 06 at 12:11, Julian Elischer spoke:
> hit CTL_ALT_ESC on it's keyboard...
Doing this on the remote host (running gdb) tells me `No debugger in
kernel'.
Doing this on the target host passes control to the remote gdb.
But I want to pass control to the remote debugger by issuing
the inter
hit CTL_ALT_ESC on it's keyboard...
or do:
sysctl debug.enter_debugger=gdb
On Fri, 6 Sep 2002, Hanspeter Roth wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I have BREAK_TO_DEBUGGER, DDB and no DDB_UNATTENDED on the target
> kernel and remotebreak = 1 on the remote gdb. So I'm expecting
> pressing ctl-C in the remote g
Hello,
I have BREAK_TO_DEBUGGER, DDB and no DDB_UNATTENDED on the target
kernel and remotebreak = 1 on the remote gdb. So I'm expecting
pressing ctl-C in the remote gdb should interrupt the remote kernel
as if it had encountered a breakpoint. Is my expectation right?
Nothing happens when pressin
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