gdb break when entering child process - c++

I'm having a tough time figuring this one out; I have a program, iverilog that executes a system() call to invoke another program, ivl. I want to debug the second program, ivl in gdb, but I can't get gdb to set any breakpoints in the child process when I invoke gdb with the parent process. Here's what the programs look like:
//iverilog-main.cpp (Parent process)
int main(){
//...
system("ivl arg1 arg2");
//...
return 0;
}
.
//ivl-main.cpp (child process)
int main(){
//...
//stuff I want to debug
//...
return 0;
}
.
The gdb commands I'm running are: gdb iverilog -x cmds.gdb
# cmds.gdb
set args hello.v
set follow-fork-mode child
set breakpoint pending on
break ivl-main.cpp:main
run
Unfortunately, gdb doesn't break at ivl-main.cpp:main,it just completes without ever breaking; the output I get is:
Starting program: /usr/local/bin/iverilog hello.v
[New process 18117]
process 18117 is executing new program: /bin/dash
[Inferior 2 (process 18117) exited normally]
I'm certain ivl-main.cpp:main is being called because when I run the ivl program in gdb it successfully breaks there.
My thinking is that gdb doesn't recognize ivl-main.cpp as a source file when its running gdb iverilog, and it's not setting that breakpoint when it enters the child process which does contain ivl-main.cpp as a source file. So I think if I set the breakpoint for ivl-main.cpp when gdb enters the child process, it should work. The only way I can think of doing this is to manually break at the system() call and step into the child process, then set the breakpoint. Is there a more elegant approach that would force gdb to break whenever entering a child process?

Normally GDB only debugs one process at a time- if your program forks then you will debug the parent or the child, but not both simultaneously. By default, GDB continues debugging the parent after a fork, but you can change this behavior if you so desire with the following command:
set follow-fork-mode child
Alternately, you can tell GDB to keep both the parent and the child under its control. By default GDB only follows one process, but you can tell it to follow all child processes with this command:
set detach-on-fork off
GDB refers to each debugged process as an "inferior". When debugging multiple processes you can examine and interact each process with the "inferiors" command similar to how you would use "threads" to examine or interact with multiple threads.
See more documentation here:
https://sourceware.org/gdb/onlinedocs/gdb/Forks.html

This answer provides one way to achieve what you want.
In theory, set follow-fork-mode child should work.
In practice, the iverilog is likely itself a shell script that runs (forks) multiple commands, so at every fork you will need to decide whether you want to continue debugging the parent or the child. One wrong decision and you've lost control of the process that will eventually execute your program. This very likely explains why it didn't work for you.

Related

How does gdb start another program passed to it as input

I have read how gdb attaches to another running process from this link:
How does a debugger peek into another process' memory?
But what about starting a program directly with it as such:
gdb ./my_program
Does gdb fork and run my_program using it and attach to it like it's explained int he above link (i.e with ptrace on linux), or the process is entirely different?
or the process is entirely different?
No: the process is the same -- fork, parent calls PTRACE_ATTACH, child calls PTRACE_TRACEME. That last point guarantees that GDB can debug the child process from its first instruction.
There is one additional complication: GDB uses $SHELL in order to handle input / output redirection, so there is fork -> exec shell (in the child) -> exec program.

CLion how to set a breakpoint in exec'd process

I need to debug a complex program (SWUpdate) which spawns (actually fork()s) several sub-processes.
I can "follow" execution on child process using GDB commands:
(gdb) set detach-on-fork off
(gdb) set follow-fork-mode child
but I didn't find a way to set a breakpoint directly on a line which will be executed only in a child process.
Is there some way to set a breakpoint at a certain location regardless of executing thread/process?

Attaching to gdb interupts and won't continue the process

got some big real time project to deal with (multiple processes (IPCs), multi Everything in short).
My working on process is started as service on Linux. I have the root access.
Here is the problem:
I'm trying to attach to a running proc, tried starting it through/with gdb but the result is the same: it stops the executable once I "touched" it with gdb or sometimes it throws:
Program received signal SIGUSR1, User defined signal 1. [Switching to Thread 0x7f9fe869f700 (LWP 2638)]
of course from there nothing can be done.
Tried:
handle all nostop
attach to launched as service (daemon) or launched as regular proc
started from gdb
thought maybe forking/multi-threaded problem - implemented in the very beginning sleep for 10 seconds - attached to it with "continue"
Guys, all I want it is to debug, hit the breakpoints, etc.
Please help! Share ideas.
Editing actual commands:
1) gdb attach myProcId. Then after reading symbols, I hit "c" which results:
Program received signal SIGUSR1, User defined signal 1.
[Switching to Thread 0x7f9fe869f700 (LWP 2638)]
0x00007f9fec09bf73 in select () from /lib64/libc.so.6
2) If I make the first line 10 seconds sleep in the code, attaching to the process, hit "c", result: it runs, shows info threads, backtrace of main, but never hits the breakpoint (for sure the code runs there - I get logs and different behaviour if I change code there), meaning the process is stuck.
3) All other combinations like gdb path/to/my/proc args list, then start. Where arg list played with different related options gdb gives us.
Maybe worth to mention: process network packets related, timers driven also.
But for me the important thing is a current snapshot on break, i don't care what will happen to the system after timers expired.
Since you mentioned that you are debugging a multiprocessing program, I think the underlying program you have is to set the breakpoint in the correct subprocess.
Try break fork and set follow-fork-mode child/parent. What you want to achieve is have gdb attached to the process that is running the code you want to debug.
Refer to this link.
Another thought is to generate a crash, since you can compile the programe. For example add a int i = *(int*)NULL and that will generate a core dump. You can then debug the core dump with gdb <program> <core dump>. You can refer to this page for how to configure core dump.

How can I get GDB to stop tracing a detached process?

I'm debugging a C++ application which creates trees of forks. Using GDB defaults, the child processes will be detached on the fork and as a result I see only one inferior shown afterwards.
I tried to attach to one of the child processes and despite it not being listed as an inferior for the other GDB process, in the new GDB session I get an error that the process is already being traced (by the first GDB session).
Is this expected behavior? What steps can I take to debug the forked process in a separate GDB session? What steps can I take to debug the problem further?

Debugging with GDB over several processes

Without getting into to to much detail, I'm working on a program that consists of several separate processes all running on embedded QNX RTOS. They don't have a parent-child relationship, they are all spawned using spawnlp(P_NOWAIT, ...) and they all communicate with each other using the IPC mechanism provided by the OS.
When I'm debugging with GDB and I hit a breakpoint in the process I'm working in, all of my threads are paused, which is great. But is there a way to also have it pause execution of my other processes? Right now what's happening is all the other processes keep on truckin' while my process is paused and so all the IPC queues get full etc. etc.
Thanks in advance,
HF
You can associate a list of GDB commands with each breakpoint. So when you hit a breakpoint in process A, you can for example send a SIGTRAP to process B, which should drop it into the debugger:
(gdb) b main
Breakpoint 1 at 0x804834a: file testA.c, line 40.
(gdb) command
Type commands for when breakpoint 1 is hit, one per line.
End with a line saying just "end".
>shell kill -s TRAP `pidof testB`
>end
(gdb)
More info at Breakpoint Command Lists