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2002-02-20 Daniel Jacobowitz <drow@mvista.com>

* mips-linux-nat.c: Call the operating system GNU/Linux.
        * mips-linux-tdep.c: Likewise.
        * mips-tdep.c: Likewise.
readline_4_3-import-branch
Daniel Jacobowitz 24 years ago
parent
commit
75c9abc620
  1. 6
      gdb/ChangeLog
  2. 2
      gdb/mips-linux-nat.c
  3. 8
      gdb/mips-linux-tdep.c
  4. 2
      gdb/mips-tdep.c

6
gdb/ChangeLog

@ -1,3 +1,9 @@
2002-02-20 Daniel Jacobowitz <drow@mvista.com>
* mips-linux-nat.c: Call the operating system GNU/Linux.
* mips-linux-tdep.c: Likewise.
* mips-tdep.c: Likewise.
2002-02-20 Daniel Jacobowitz <drow@mvista.com>
Fix PR gdb/265.

2
gdb/mips-linux-nat.c

@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
/* Native-dependent code for Linux/MIPS.
/* Native-dependent code for GNU/Linux on MIPS processors.
Copyright 2001 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of GDB.

8
gdb/mips-linux-tdep.c

@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
/* Target-dependent code for Linux/MIPS.
/* Target-dependent code for GNU/Linux on MIPS processors.
Copyright 2001 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of GDB.
@ -298,11 +298,11 @@ static struct core_fns regset_core_fns =
};
/* Fetch (and possibly build) an appropriate link_map_offsets
structure for native Linux/MIPS targets using the struct offsets
structure for native GNU/Linux MIPS targets using the struct offsets
defined in link.h (but without actual reference to that file).
This makes it possible to access Linux/MIPS shared libraries from a
GDB that was not built on an Linux/MIPS host (for cross debugging). */
This makes it possible to access GNU/Linux MIPS shared libraries from a
GDB that was built on a different host platform (for cross debugging). */
struct link_map_offsets *
mips_linux_svr4_fetch_link_map_offsets (void)

2
gdb/mips-tdep.c

@ -1403,7 +1403,7 @@ mips_addr_bits_remove (CORE_ADDR addr)
/* mips_software_single_step() is called just before we want to resume
the inferior, if we want to single-step it but there is no hardware
or kernel single-step support (MIPS on Linux for example). We find
or kernel single-step support (MIPS on GNU/Linux for example). We find
the target of the coming instruction and breakpoint it.
single_step is also called just after the inferior stops. If we had

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