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Re: Simultaneous gdb session badness
From: |
Michael Welsh Duggan |
Subject: |
Re: Simultaneous gdb session badness |
Date: |
Thu, 18 Aug 2005 01:36:33 -0400 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.110004 (No Gnus v0.4) Emacs/22.0.50 (gnu/linux) |
Nick Roberts <address@hidden> writes:
> Michael Welsh Duggan writes:
> > I wish I could say just when this problem cropped up, but...
> >
> > In the current CVS, I cannot run gdb though the gud on two seperate
> > programs simultanously. For example, if I start a gud session for
> > program A, then one for program B, if I then type "b main" in program
> > A's gud buffer, the breakpoint gets set in program B.
> >
> > This definitely worked in 21.3, and I can remember doing it in earlier
> > versions of 22.0. It is a frequent occurence for me to want to run
> > seperate gdb session in the same emacs, especially when they are
> > intercommunicating processes.
>
> The default behaviour for gdb in Emacs has changed considerably since 21.3.
> You could read the manual to understand these differences. It says
> (GDB Graphical Interface):
>
> Manual> You can also run GDB in text command mode, which creates a buffer
> Manual> for input and output to GDB. To do this, set `gud-gdb-command-name'
> Manual> to `"gdb --fullname"' or edit the startup command in the minibuffer to
> Manual> say that. You need to do use text command mode to run multiple
> Manual> debugging sessions within one Emacs session.
Yes, I see that now. It was not obvious from NEWS, so I didn't
realize I needed to reread the gdb manual. (I remember reading the
messages covering bits of this on emacs-devel now that you brought
this up, but I obviously didn't read them closely enough.)
More importantly though, if one cannot run multiple sessions without
using --fullname, M-x gdb should not allow you to attempt to so. It
would be much better for it to give an understandable error message
letting the user know what is going on.
> Text command mode refers to the mode used in 21.3. The default mode for
> 22.1 is referred to as graphical mode and uses "gdb --annotate=3".
>
> When your gdb sessions are independent, you can always uses separate Emacs
> sessions, of course.
Of course, but I have this thing about running more than one emacs on
a machine at a time. Call it silly, but I prefer not to do it.
--
Michael Welsh Duggan
(address@hidden)