- Known problems in GDB 5.2
+ Known problems in GDB 6.0
See also: http://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/bugs/
+mips*-*-*
+powerpc*-*-*
+sparc*-*-*
-hppa2.0-hp-hpux10.20
---------------------
+GDB's SPARC, MIPS and PowerPC targets, in 6.0, have not been updated
+to use the new frame mechanism.
-gdb/487: The top level make files used to build GDB are not compatible
-with HP/UX make. As a workaround, use GNU make.
+People encountering problems with these targets should consult GDB's
+web pages and mailing lists (http://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/) to see
+if there is an update.
-gdb/486: The HP/UX C compiler defaults to K&R mode but GDB only builds
-with an ISO C compiler. The top level configuration incorrectly sets
-CC to `cc' instead of `cc -Ae'. As a workaround, the correct compiler
-can be specified as part of the configuration vis:
+arm-*-*
- $ 'CC=cc -Ae' ./configure
+GDB's ARM target, in 6.0, has not been updated to use the new frame
+mechanism.
+Fortunately the ARM target, in the GDB's mainline sources, has been
+updated so people encountering problems should consider downloading a
+more current GDB (http://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/current).
-s390*-*-*
----------
+gdb/1516: [regression] local classes, gcc 2.95.3, dwarf-2
-gdb/513: GDB does not build on s390 GNU/Linux. The problem should be
-fixed in more recent sources.
+With gcc 2.95.3 and the dwarf-2 debugging format, classes which are
+defined locally to a function include the demangled name of the function
+as part of their name. For example, if a function "foobar" contains a
+local class definition "Local", gdb will say that the name of the class
+type is "foobar__Fi.0:Local".
+This applies only to classes where the class type is defined inside a
+function, not to variables defined with types that are defined somewhere
+outside any function (which most types are).
-i386-*-freebsd4.4*
-------------------
+gdb/1091: Constructor breakpoints ignored
+gdb/1193: g++ 3.3 creates multiple constructors: gdb 5.3 can't set breakpoints
-gdb/455: GDB doesn't build on a FreeBSD 4.4-STABLE system. The
-problem is still being investigated.
+When gcc 3.x compiles a C++ constructor or C++ destructor, it generates
+2 or 3 different versions of the object code. These versions have
+unique mangled names (they have to, in order for linking to work), but
+they have identical source code names, which leads to a great deal of
+confusion. Specifically, if you set a breakpoint in a constructor or a
+destructor, gdb will put a breakpoint in one of the versions, but your
+program may execute the other version. This makes it impossible to set
+breakpoints reliably in constructors or destructors.
+
+gcc 3.x generates these multiple object code functions in order to
+implement virtual base classes. gcc 2.x generated just one object code
+function with a hidden parameter, but gcc 3.x conforms to a multi-vendor
+ABI for C++ which requires multiple object code functions.