I'm debugging a tree of processes using gdb
's very handy multiple-inferior support:
(gdb) set detach-on-fork off
(gdb) set schedule-multiple on
(gdb) set follow-fork-mode parent
(gdb) break PostgresMain
(gdb) break PostmasterMain
and now need to let things run until I hit one of the future breakpoints in some yet to be spawned inferior.
However, gdb
seems to be "helpfully" pausing whenever an inferior exits normally, or at least blocking cleanup of the inferior so that its parent's wait()
can return:
(gdb) c
[New process 16505]
process 16505 is executing new program: /home/craig/pg/bdr/bin/pg_config
Reading symbols from /home/craig/pg/bdr/bin/pg_config...done.
[Inferior 2 (process 16505) exited normally]
(gdb) info inferior
Num Description Executable
* 2 <null> /home/craig/pg/bdr/bin/pg_config
1 process 16501 /usr/bin/make
(gdb) inferior 1
[Switching to inferior 1 [process 16501] (/usr/bin/make)]
[Switching to thread 1 (process 16501)]
#0 0x0000003bc68bc502 in __libc_wait (stat_loc=0x7fffffffbc78) at ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/wait.c:30
30 return INLINE_SYSCALL (wait4, 4, WAIT_ANY, stat_loc, 0,
(gdb)
so I have to endlessly:
(gdb) inferior 1
(gdb) c
to carry on. About 70 times, before I hit the desired breakpoint in a child of a child of a child.
I think what's happening is that gdb
treats process exit as a stop event, and since non-stop
is set to off
(the default) it stops all threads in all inferiors when one thread stops. However, this inferior has terminated, it isn't a normal stop event, so you can't just cont
it, you have to switch to another process first.
Is there some way to stop gdb pausing at each inferior exit? I would've expected follow-fork-mode parent
with schedule-multiple on
to do the trick, but gdb
seems to still want to stop when an inferior exits.
I guess I'm looking for something like a "skip proc-exit", or a virtual signal I can change the handler policy on so it doesn't stop.
set non-stop on
seems like it should be the right answer, but I suspect it's broken for multiple inferiors.
If I use non-stop on
, then after the first exit trap, gdb
's internal state indicates that inferior 1 is running:
(gdb) info inferior
Num Description Executable
* 1 process 20540 /usr/bin/make
(gdb) info thread
Id Target Id Frame
* 1 process 20540 "make" (running)
(gdb) cont
Continuing.
Cannot execute this command while the selected thread is running.
but the kernel sees it as blocked on ptrace_stop
:
$ ps -o "cmd,wchan" -p 20540
CMD WCHAN
/usr/bin/make check ptrace_stop
... and it makes no progress until gdb
is detached, or it's killed. Signals to the process are ignored, and interrupt
in gdb
has no effect.
I'm using GNU gdb (GDB) Fedora 7.7.1-18.fc20
on x86_64.
After stumbling on a post that references it in passing I found that the missing magic is set target-async on
alongside set non-stop on
.
non-stop mode, as expected, means gdb won't stop everything whenever an inferior exits. target-async
is required to make it actually work correctly on gdb 7.7; it's the default on 7.8.
So the full incantation is:
set detach-on-fork off
set schedule-multiple on
set follow-fork-mode parent
set non-stop on
set target-async on
For 7.8, remove target-async on
and, to reduce noise, add set print symbol-loading off
.
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