4 research outputs found
A Machine-Independent Debugger--Revisited
Most debuggers are notoriously machine-dependent, but some recent research
prototypes achieve varying degrees of machine-independence with novel designs.
Cdb, a simple source-level debugger for C, is completely independent of its
target architecture. This independence is achieved by embedding symbol tables
and debugging code in the target program, which costs both time and space. This
paper describes a revised design and implementation of cdb that reduces the
space cost by nearly one-half and the time cost by 13% by storing symbol tables
in external files. A symbol table is defined by a 31-line grammar in the
Abstract Syntax Description Language (ASDL). ASDL is a domain-specific language
for specifying tree data structures. The ASDL tools accept an ASDL grammar and
generate code to construct, read, and write these data structures. Using ASDL
automates implementing parts of the debugger, and the grammar documents the
symbol table concisely. Using ASDL also suggested simplifications to the
interface between the debugger and the target program. Perhaps most important,
ASDL emphasizes that symbol tables are data structures, not file formats. Many
of the pitfalls of working with low-level file formats can be avoided by
focusing instead on high-level data structures and automating the
implementation details.Comment: 12 pages; 6 figures; 3 table