Previous: Asynchronous and non-stop modes, Up: GDB/MI General Design [Contents][Index]
GDB may be used to debug several processes at the same time. On some platfroms, GDB may support debugging of several hardware systems, each one having several cores with several different processes running on each core. This section describes the MI mechanism to support such debugging scenarios.
The key observation is that regardless of the structure of the target, MI can have a global list of threads, because most commands that accept the ‘--thread’ option do not need to know what process that thread belongs to. Therefore, it is not necessary to introduce neither additional ‘--process’ option, nor an notion of the current process in the MI interface. The only strictly new feature that is required is the ability to find how the threads are grouped into processes.
To allow the user to discover such grouping, and to support arbitrary
hierarchy of machines/cores/processes, MI introduces the concept of a
thread group. Thread group is a collection of threads and other
thread groups. A thread group always has a string identifier, a type,
and may have additional attributes specific to the type. A new
command, -list-thread-groups
, returns the list of top-level
thread groups, which correspond to processes that GDB is
debugging at the moment. By passing an identifier of a thread group
to the -list-thread-groups
command, it is possible to obtain
the members of specific thread group.
To allow the user to easily discover processes, and other objects, he
wishes to debug, a concept of available thread group is
introduced. Available thread group is an thread group that
GDB is not debugging, but that can be attached to, using the
-target-attach
command. The list of available top-level thread
groups can be obtained using ‘-list-thread-groups --available’.
In general, the content of a thread group may be only retrieved only
after attaching to that thread group.
Thread groups are related to inferiors (see Inferiors and Programs). Each inferior corresponds to a thread group of a special type ‘process’, and some additional operations are permitted on such thread groups.
Previous: Asynchronous and non-stop modes, Up: GDB/MI General Design [Contents][Index]