If I set a watchpoint for a variable local to the current scope, it will be auto deleted when going out of the scope. Is there any way to set it once and keep it auto alive whenever entering the same scope?
Is there anyway to set conditional watchpoint, like watch var1 if var1==0
? In my case, the condition does't work. gdb stops whenever var1
's value is changed, instead of untill var1 == 0
is true. My gdb is GNU gdb 6.8-debian.
I agree with Dave that a conditional breakpoint is the way to go.
However, to do what you asked, you can use GDB's commands
command to set a list of GDB commands to execute whenever a breakpoint is hit. I find this incredibly useful.
I suggest writing your GDB commands into a file so that they are easy to edit and easy to reload with the source
command. Or you can specify command files to load on the GDB command line or use .gdbinit to make them load automatically.
An example of a good use of commands
:
Suppose that I have a function format
that is called by a lot of other functions. I want to break on it, but only after function do_step_3
has been called.
break do_step_3
commands
break format
continue
end
You could use this for your problem with something like:
break func
commands
watch var
continue
end