What has changed in GDB?
(Organized release by release)
-*** Changes since GDB 7.11
+*** Changes since GDB 7.12
+
+* GDB and GDBserver now require building with a C++ compiler.
+
+ It is no longer possible to build GDB or GDBserver with a C
+ compiler. The --disable-build-with-cxx configure option has been
+ removed.
+
+* Support for thread names on MS-Windows.
+
+ GDB now catches and handles the special exception that programs
+ running on MS-Windows use to assign names to threads in the
+ debugger.
+
+*** Changes in GDB 7.12
+
+* GDB and GDBserver now build with a C++ compiler by default.
+
+ The --enable-build-with-cxx configure option is now enabled by
+ default. One must now explicitly configure with
+ --disable-build-with-cxx in order to build with a C compiler. This
+ option will be removed in a future release.
+
+* GDBserver now supports recording btrace without maintaining an active
+ GDB connection.
* GDB now supports a negative repeat count in the 'x' command to examine
memory backward from the given address. For example:
for its own control and synchronization, invisible to the command
line.
+* The "catch syscall" command catches groups of related syscalls.
+
+ The "catch syscall" command now supports catching a group of related
+ syscalls using the 'group:' or 'g:' prefix.
+
* New commands
skip -file file
** gdb.Breakpoint objects have a new attribute "pending", which
indicates whether the breakpoint is pending.
+ ** Three new breakpoint-related events have been added:
+ gdb.breakpoint_created, gdb.breakpoint_modified, and
+ gdb.breakpoint_deleted.
signal-event EVENTID
Signal ("set") the given MS-Windows event object. This is used in