Sun Studio 12 Update 1: Debugging a Program With dbx

Using Fix and Continue

The fix and continue feature lets you modify and recompile a native source file and continue executing without rebuilding the entire program. By updating the .o files and splicing them into your program, you don’t need to relink.

The advantages of using fix and continue are:

How Fix and Continue Operates

Before using the fix command you must edit the source. (See Modifying Source Using Fix and Continue for the ways you can modify your code). After saving changes, type fix. For information on the fix command, see fix Command.

Once you have invoked the fix command, dbx calls the compiler with the appropriate compiler options. The modified files are compiled and shared object (.so) files are created. Semantic tests are done by comparing the old and new files.

The new object file is linked to your running process using the runtime linker. If the function on top of the stack is being fixed, the new stopped in function is the beginning of the same line in the new function. All the breakpoints in the old file are moved to the new file.

You can use fix and continue on files that have been compiled with or without debugging information, but there are some limitations in the functionality of the fix command and the cont command for files originally compiled without debugging information. See the -g option description in fix Command for more information.

You can fix shared objects (.so) files, but they must be opened in a special mode. You can use either RTLD_NOW|RTLD_GLOBAL or RTLD_LAZY|RTLD_GLOBAL in the call to the dlopen function.

The pre-compiled headers feature of the Sun Studio C and C++ compilers requires that the compiler options be the same when recompiling. Because the fix command changes the compiler options slightly, do not use the fix command on object files that were created using precompiled headers.

Modifying Source Using Fix and Continue

You can modify source code in the following ways when using fix and continue:

Problems can occur when functions are mapped from the old file to the new file. To minimize such problems when editing a source file:

If you make any of the above changes, rebuild your entire program rather than using fix and continue.