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config.sedH A D12-Oct-20162.3 KiB

djcheck.shH A D22-Mar-20231.4 KiB

djconfig.shH A D22-Mar-20236.8 KiB

fnchange.lstH A D22-Mar-202344.8 KiB

langinfo.hH A D22-Mar-20231 KiB

nl_types.hH A D22-Mar-2023914

READMEH A D12-Oct-20167.1 KiB

README

1
2       How to build and install the DJGPP native version of GDB
3       ********************************************************
4
5General
6=======
7
8GDB built with DJGPP supports native DJGPP debugging, whereby you run
9gdb.exe and the program being debugged on the same machine.  In
10addition, this version supports remote debugging via a serial port,
11provided that the target machine has a GDB-compatible debugging stub
12which can be linked with the target program (see the section "Remote
13Serial" in the GDB manual for more details).
14
15
16Installation of the binary distribution
17=======================================
18
19Simply unzip the gdbNNNb.zip file (where NNN is the version number)
20from the top DJGPP installation directory.  Be sure to preserve the
21directory structure while you unzip (use -d switch if you do this with
22PKUNZIP).  On Windows 9X and Windows 2000, use an unzip program which
23supports long file names; one such program is unzip32.exe, available
24from the DJGPP sites.
25
26If you need the libraries which are built as part of GDB, install the
27companion file gdbNNNa.zip.  This allows to develop applications which
28use the same functions as GDB.  For example, you can build your own
29front end to the debugger.
30
31
32Rebuilding GDB from sources
33===========================
34
351. Prerequisites
36   -------------
37To build the package, you will need the DJGPP development environment
38(GCC, header files, and the libraries), and also DJGPP ports of the
39following tools:
40
41	- GNU Make 3.79.1 or later
42	- Bash 2.03 or later
43	- GNU Sed
44	- GNU Fileutils
45	- GNU Textutils 2.0 or later
46	- GNU Sh-utils
47	- GNU Grep 2.4 or later
48	- GNU Findutils
49	- GNU Awk 3.04 or later
50	- GNU Bison (only if you change one of the gdb/*.y files)
51	- Groff (only if you need to format the man pages)
52	- GNU Diffutils (only if you run the test suite)
53
54These programs should be available from the DJGPP sites, in the v2gnu
55directory.  In addition, the configuration script invokes the `update'
56and `utod' utilities which are part of the basic DJGPP development kit
57(djdevNNN.zip).
58
59
602. Unpacking the sources
61   ---------------------
62If you download the source distribution from one of the DJGPP sites,
63just unzip it while preserving the directory structure (I suggest to
64use unzip32.exe available with the rest of DJGPP), and proceed to the
65section "How to build", below.
66
67Source distributions downloaded from one of the GNU FTP sites need
68some more work to unpack.  First, you MUST use the `djunpack' batch
69file to unzip the package.  That's because some file names in the
70official distributions need to be changed to avoid problems on the
71various platforms supported by DJGPP.  `djunpack' invokes the `djtar'
72program (that is part of the basic DJGPP development kit) to rename
73these files on the fly given a file with name mappings; the
74distribution includes a file `gdb/config/djgpp/fnchange.lst' with the
75necessary mappings.  So you need first to retrieve that batch file,
76and then invoke it to unpack the distribution.  Here's how:
77
78 djtar -x -p -o gdb-5.2/djunpack.bat gdb-5.2.tar.gz > djunpack.bat
79 djunpack gdb-5.2.tar.gz
80
81(The name of the distribution archive and the leading directory of the
82path to `djunpack.bat' in the distribution will be different for
83versions of GDB other than 5.2.)
84
85If the argument to `djunpack.bat' include leading directories, it MUST
86be given with the DOS-style backslashes; Unix-style forward slashes
87will NOT work.
88
89If the distribution comes as a .tar.bz2 archive, and your version of
90`djtar' doesn't support bzip2 decompression, you need to unpack it as
91follows:
92
93 bunzip2 gdb-6.4.tar.bz2
94 djtar -x -p -o gdb-6.4/djunpack.bat gdb-6.4.tar > djunpack.bat
95 djunpack gdb-6.4.tar
96
97
983. How to build
99   ------------
100
101If the source distribution available from DJGPP archives is already
102configured for DJGPP v2.x (if it is, you will find files named
103`Makefile' in each subdirectory), then just invoke Make:
104
105		make
106
107To build a package that is not yet configured, or if you downloaded
108GDB from a GNU FTP site, you will need to configure it first.  You
109will also need to configure it if you want to change the configuration
110options (e.g., compile without support for the GDBMI interface).  To
111configure GDB, type this command:
112
113		sh ./gdb/config/djgpp/djconfig.sh
114
115This script checks the unpacked distribution, then edits the configure
116scripts in the various subdirectories, to make them suitable for
117DJGPP, and finally invokes the top-level configure script, which
118recursively configures all the subdirectories.
119
120You may pass optional switches to djconfig.sh.  It accepts all the
121switches accepted by the original GDB configure script.  These
122switches are described in the file gdb/README, and their full list can
123be displayed by running the following command:
124
125		sh ./gdb/configure --help
126
127NOTE: if you *do* use optional command-line switches, you MUST pass
128to the script the name of the directory where GDB sources are
129unpacked--even if you are building GDB in-place!  For example:
130
131	sh ./gdb/config/djgpp/djconfig.sh . --disable-gdbmi
132
133It is also possible to build GDB in a directory that is different from
134the one where the sources were unpacked.  In that case, you have to
135pass the source directory as the first argument to the script:
136
137	sh ./gdb/config/djgpp/djconfig.sh d:/gnu/gdb-6.4
138
139You MUST use forward slashes in the first argument.
140
141After the configure script finishes, run Make:
142
143	make
144
145If you want to produce the documentation (for example, if you changed
146some of the Texinfo sources), type this:
147
148	make info
149
150When Make finishes, you can install the package:
151
152	make install prefix='${DJDIR}' INSTALL='ginstall -c'
153
154The above doesn't install the docs; for that you will need to say
155this:
156
157	make install-info prefix='${DJDIR}' INSTALL='ginstall -c'
158
159The test suite has been made to work with DJGPP.  If you make a change
160in some of the programs, or want to be sure you have a fully
161functional GDB executable, it is a good idea to run the test suite.
162You cannot use "make check" for that, since it will want to run the
163`dejagnu' utility which DJGPP doesn't support.  Instead, use the special
164script gdb/config/djgpp/djcheck.sh, like this:
165
166		cd gdb/testsuite
167		sh ../config/djgpp/djcheck.sh
168
169This will run for a while and should not print anything, except the
170messages "Running tests in DIR", where DIR is one of the
171subdirectories of the testsuite.  Any test that fails to produce the
172expected output will cause the diffs between the expected and the
173actual output be printed, and in addition will leave behind a file
174SOMETHING.tst (where SOMETHING is the name of the failed test).  You
175should compare each of the *.tst files with the corresponding *.out
176file and convince yourself that the differences do not indicate a real
177problem.  Examples of differences you can disregard are changes in the
178copyright blurb printed by GDB, values of unitialized variables,
179addresses of global variables like argv[] and envp[] (which depend on
180the size of your environment), etc.
181
182Note that djcheck.sh only recurses into those of the subdirectories of
183the test suite which test features supported by the DJGPP port of GDB.
184For example, the tests in the gdb.gdbtk, and gdb.threads directories
185are not run.
186
187
188Enjoy,
189                                    Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>
190