Re: kgdb cleanups

From: Amit S. Kale
Date: Wed Jan 14 2004 - 08:06:50 EST


On Wednesday 14 Jan 2004 2:23 am, George Anzinger wrote:
> Matt Mackall wrote:
> > On Sun, Jan 11, 2004 at 09:41:57PM -0800, George Anzinger wrote:
> >>For the internal kgdb stuff I have created kdgb_local.h which I intended
> >> to be local to the workings of kgdb and not to contain anything a user
> >> would need.
> >
> > Agreed, I just haven't touched it since you last mentioned it.
> >
> >>>+struct kgdb_hook {
> >>>+ char *sendbuf;
> >>>+ int maxsend;
> >>
> >>I don't see the need of maxsend, or sendbuff, for that matter, as kgdb
> >> uses it now (for the eth code) it is redundant, in that the eth putchar
> >> also does the same thing as is being done in the kgdb_stub.c code. I
> >> think this should be removed from the stub and the limit in the ethcode
> >> relied upon.
> >
> > Fair enough.
> >
> >>>void
> >>>putDebugChar(int c)
> >>>{
> >>>- if (!kgdboe) {
> >>>- tty_putDebugChar(c);
> >>>- } else {
> >>>- eth_putDebugChar(c);
> >>>- }
> >>>+ if (kh)
> >>>+ kh->putchar(c);
> >>>}
> >>
> >>I was thinking that this might read something like:
> >> if (xxx[kh].putchar(c))
> >> xxx[kh].putchar(c);
> >>
> >>One might further want to do something like:
> >> if (!xxx[kh].putchar(c))
> >> kh = 0;
> >>
> >>In otherwords, an array (xxx must, of course, be renamed) of stuct
> >>kgdb_hook (which name should also be changed to relate to I/O,
> >>kgdb_IO_hook, for example). Then reserve entry 0 for the rs232 I/O code.
> >
> > Dunno about that. Probably should work more like the console code,
> > whoever registers first wins. Early boot will probably be the
> > exclusive province of serial for a while yet, but designing it in is
> > probably short-sighted.
> >
> >> An alternate possibility is an array of pointer to struct kgdb_hook
> >> which allows one to define the struct contents as below and to build the
> >> array, all at compile/link time. A legal entry MUST define get and put,
> >> but why not define them all, using dummy functions for the ones that
> >> make no sense in a particular interface.
> >
> > Throwing all the stubs in a special section could work well too. Then
> > we could add an avail() function so that early boot debugging could
> > discover if each one was available. The serial code could use this to
> > kickstart itself while the eth code could test a local initialized
> > flag and say "not a chance". Which gives us all the architecture to
> > throw in other trivial interfaces (parallel, bus-snoopers, etc.).
>
> I am thinking of something more like what was done with the x86 timer code.
> Each timer option sets up a structure with an array of pointers to each
> option. There it is done at compile time, and the runtime code tries each.
> There it is done in order, but here we want to do it a bit differently.
>
> Maybe we could have an "available" flag or just assume that the address
> being !=0 for getdebugchar means it is "available". I think there should
> be a prefered intface set at config time. Possibly over ride this with the
> command line. Then have a back up order in case kgdb wants to communicate
> prior to the prefered one being available.
>
> We would also have a rule that the command line over ride only works if
> communication has not yet been established. Here, we would also like
> control from gdb/kgdb so we could switch to a different interface, but
> under gdb control at this point. Either a maintaince command or setting
> the "channel" with a memory modify command. We would want this to take
> effect only after the current command is acknowledged.

I have something similar in my patches.
Each interface has kgdb_hook function, which returns failure if an interface
isn't ready.
--
Amit Kale
EmSysSoft (http://www.emsyssoft.com)
KGDB: Linux Kernel Source Level Debugger (http://kgdb.sourceforge.net)

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