Chapter 2. Summary of gdb
5
Changes much prior to version 2.0 are lost in the mists of time.
Plea:
Additions to this section are particularly welcome. If you or your friends (or enemies, to be even-
handed) have been unfairly omitted from this list, we would like to add your names!
So that they may not regard their many labors as thankless, we particularly thank those who shep-
herded gdb through major releases: Andrew Cagney (releases 6.0, 5.3, 5.2, 5.1 and 5.0); Jim Blandy
(release 4.18); Jason Molenda (release 4.17); Stan Shebs (release 4.14); Fred Fish (releases 4.16, 4.15,
4.13, 4.12, 4.11, 4.10, and 4.9); Stu Grossman and John Gilmore (releases 4.8, 4.7, 4.6, 4.5, and 4.4);
John Gilmore (releases 4.3, 4.2, 4.1, 4.0, and 3.9); Jim Kingdon (releases 3.5, 3.4, and 3.3); and Randy
Smith (releases 3.2, 3.1, and 3.0).
Richard Stallman, assisted at various times by Peter TerMaat, Chris Hanson, and Richard Mlynarik,
handled releases through 2.8.
Michael Tiemann is the author of most of the gnu C
++
support in gdb, with significant additional
contributions from Per Bothner and Daniel Berlin. James Clark wrote the gnu C
++
demangler. Early
work on C
++
was by Peter TerMaat (who also did much general update work leading to release 3.0).
gdb uses the BFD subroutine library to examine multiple object-file formats; BFD was a joint project
of David V. Henkel-Wallace, Rich Pixley, Steve Chamberlain, and John Gilmore.
David Johnson wrote the original COFF support; Pace Willison did the original support for encapsu-
lated COFF.
Brent Benson of Harris Computer Systems contributed DWARF 2 support.
Adam de Boor and Bradley Davis contributed the ISI Optimum V support. Per Bothner, Noboyuki
Hikichi, and Alessandro Forin contributed MIPS support. Jean-Daniel Fekete contributed Sun 386i
support. Chris Hanson improved the HP9000 support. Noboyuki Hikichi and Tomoyuki Hasei con-
tributed Sony/News OS 3 support. David Johnson contributed Encore Umax support. Jyrki Kuop-
pala contributed Altos 3068 support. Jeff Law contributed HP PA and SOM support. Keith Packard
contributed NS32K support. Doug Rabson contributed Acorn Risc Machine support. Bob Rusk con-
tributed Harris Nighthawk CX-UX support. Chris Smith contributed Convex support (and Fortran
debugging). Jonathan Stone contributed Pyramid support. Michael Tiemann contributed SPARC sup-
port. Tim Tucker contributed support for the Gould NP1 and Gould Powernode. Pace Willison con-
tributed Intel 386 support. Jay Vosburgh contributed Symmetry support. Marko Mlinar contributed
OpenRISC 1000 support.
Andreas Schwab contributed M68K gnu/Linux support.
Rich Schaefer and Peter Schauer helped with support of SunOS shared libraries.
Jay Fenlason and Roland McGrath ensured that gdb and GAS agree about several machine instruction
sets.
Patrick Duval, Ted Goldstein, Vikram Koka and Glenn Engel helped develop remote debugging. Intel
Corporation, Wind River Systems, AMD, and ARM contributed remote debugging modules for the
i960, VxWorks, A29K UDI, and RDI targets, respectively.
Brian Fox is the author of the readline libraries providing command-line editing and command history.
Andrew Beers of SUNY Buffalo wrote the language-switching code, the Modula-2 support, and con-
tributed the Languages chapter of this manual.
Fred Fish wrote most of the support for Unix System Vr4. He also enhanced the command-completion
support to cover C
++
overloaded symbols.
Hitachi America, Ltd. sponsored the support for H8/300, H8/500, and Super-H processors.
NEC sponsored the support for the v850, Vr4xxx, and Vr5xxx processors.
Mitsubishi sponsored the support for D10V, D30V, and M32R/D processors.
Toshiba sponsored the support for the TX39 Mips processor.
Summary of Contents for ENTERPRISE LINUX 4 - DEVELOPER TOOLS GUIDE
Page 1: ...Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4 Debugging with gdb ...
Page 12: ...2 Chapter 1 Debugging with gdb ...
Page 28: ...18 Chapter 4 Getting In and Out of gdb ...
Page 34: ...24 Chapter 5 gdb Commands ...
Page 44: ...34 Chapter 6 Running Programs Under gdb ...
Page 68: ...58 Chapter 8 Examining the Stack ...
Page 98: ...88 Chapter 10 Examining Data ...
Page 112: ...102 Chapter 12 Tracepoints ...
Page 118: ...108 Chapter 13 Debugging Programs That Use Overlays ...
Page 138: ...128 Chapter 14 Using gdb with Different Languages ...
Page 144: ...134 Chapter 15 Examining the Symbol Table ...
Page 170: ...160 Chapter 19 Debugging remote programs ...
Page 198: ...188 Chapter 21 Controlling gdb ...
Page 204: ...194 Chapter 22 Canned Sequences of Commands ...
Page 206: ...196 Chapter 23 Command Interpreters ...
Page 216: ...206 Chapter 25 Using gdb under gnu Emacs ...
Page 296: ...286 Chapter 27 gdb Annotations ...
Page 300: ...290 Chapter 28 Reporting Bugs in gdb ...
Page 322: ...312 Chapter 30 Using History Interactively ...
Page 362: ...352 Appendix D gdb Remote Serial Protocol ...
Page 380: ...370 Appendix F GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE ...
Page 386: ...376 Appendix G GNU Free Documentation License ...
Page 410: ......