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Oracle Solaris Studio 12.2: Debugging a Program With dbx
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Document Information

Preface

1.  Getting Started With dbx

2.  Starting dbx

3.  Customizing dbx

4.  Viewing and Navigating To Code

5.  Controlling Program Execution

6.  Setting Breakpoints and Traces

7.  Using the Call Stack

8.  Evaluating and Displaying Data

9.  Using Runtime Checking

10.  Fixing and Continuing

Using Fix and Continue

How Fix and Continue Operates

Modifying Source Using Fix and Continue

Fixing Your Program

To Fix Your File

Continuing After Fixing

Changing an Executed Function

Changing a Function Not Yet Called

Changing a Function Currently Being Executed

Changing a Function Presently on the Stack

Changing Variables After Fixing

Modifying a Header File

Fixing C++ Template Definitions

11.  Debugging Multithreaded Applications

12.  Debugging Child Processes

13.  Debugging OpenMP Programs

14.  Working With Signals

15.  Debugging C++ With dbx

16.  Debugging Fortran Using dbx

17.  Debugging a Java Application With dbx

18.  Debugging at the Machine-Instruction Level

19.  Using dbx With the Korn Shell

20.  Debugging Shared Libraries

A.  Modifying a Program State

B.  Event Management

C.  Command Reference

Index

Chapter 10

Fixing and Continuing

Using the fix command lets you recompile edited native source code quickly without stopping the debugging process. You cannot use the fix command to recompile Java code.


Note - The fix command is not available on Linux platforms.


This chapter is organized into the following sections: