On Oct 14, 2018, at 6:11 AM, Jd Lyons lyons_dj@yahoo.com wrote:
On Oct 13, 2018, at 9:17 AM, Programmingkid programmingkidx@gmail.com wrote:
On Oct 13, 2018, at 6:45 AM, Jd Lyons lyons_dj@yahoo.com wrote:
On Oct 12, 2018, at 6:43 PM, Programmingkid programmingkidx@gmail.com wrote:
On Oct 12, 2018, at 7:02 AM, Jd Lyons lyons_dj@yahoo.com wrote:
On Oct 11, 2018, at 12:57 PM, Mark Cave-Ayland mark.cave-ayland@ilande.co.uk wrote:
On 11/10/2018 12:12, Jd Lyons via OpenBIOS wrote:
>>>> I installed gdb-multiarch and started qemu with: >>>> >>>> Qemu-system-ppc -s -S >>>> >>>> The launched gdb-multiarch and connected to port 1234. >>>> >>>> Is this the correct toolchain for debugging PPC code on an X86 host, or do I need to do something else?
I actually build gdb from source for the architectures I need (sparc32, sparc64 and ppc), so I can't really comment on how multi-arch works.
Can I build gdb for debugging ppc code on x86?
Any instructions on how to do that?
Or should I be using a PPC host for this?
Mac OS X running in qemu-system-ppc should work just as well as a real PowerPC Mac would. It would probably mean running two instances of qemu-system-ppc on your host.
-- OpenBIOS http://openbios.org/ Mailinglist: http://lists.openbios.org/mailman/listinfo Free your System - May the Forth be with you
I just didn’t know if powerpc-linux-gdb would run to debug a running ppc target in qemu on an x86 host, but I figured it out, seems to run fine.
For reference, he’s how to build gdb on an x86 host for debugging powerpc code:
To build gdb-powerpc-linux on Linux, you'll need normal build tools such as gcc installed, I'll assume people know how to install that stuff with apt or their other package manager. Anything you don't have you need installed to build, it will likely let you know when you try to configure.
Download the GDB source code, I had trouble with the latest release, so likely people will want to use v7.9.
http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/gdb/gdb-7.9.tar.gz
Unpack it and cd into the dir, then just:
./configure -target=powerpc-linux --enable-sim-powerpc make && sudo make install
After that, all you need to do is launch qemu-system-ppc(64) with -s and -S, it will pause and listen on port 1234 for GDB.
Then in another terminal launch gdb:
gdb-powerpc-linux target remote localhost:1234 continue
You'll likely want to set prom-env "auto-boot?=false" --nographic for Qemu.
Set your breakpoint in GDB, I.E.
break *0x20dccc
Then type boot in the Qemu terminal.
What are you trying to debug (Mac OS X, Mac OS 9, Linux)?
Debugging the Mac OS 9 trampoline, to see if I can get it to boot on the G5 cpu.
http://macos9lives.com/smforum/index.php/topic,4600.msg33350/topicseen.html#...
Very interesting work. Maybe we could use the information learned to boot other versions of the Mac OS in QEMU.