JavaScript is required to for searching.
Skip Navigation Links
Exit Print View
Oracle Solaris Modular Debugger Guide     Oracle Solaris 11.1 Information Library
search filter icon
search icon

Document Information

Preface

1.  Modular Debugger Overview

2.  Debugger Concepts

3.  MDB Language Syntax

4.  Using MDB Commands Interactively

Command Reentry

Inline Editing

Keyboard Shortcuts

Output Pager

Signal Handling

5.  Built-In Commands

6.  Execution Control

7.  Kernel Execution Control

8.  Kernel Debugging Modules

9.  Debugging With the Kernel Memory Allocator

10.  Module Programming API

A.  MDB Options

B.  Notes

C.  Transition From adb and kadb

D.  Transition From crash

Index

Inline Editing

If standard input is a terminal device, MDB provides some simple emacs-style facilities for editing the command line. The search, previous, and next commands in edit mode provide access to the history list. Only strings, not patterns, are matched when searching. In the list below, the notation for control characters is the caret character (^) followed by a character shown in uppercase. The notation for escape sequences is M- followed by a character. For example, M-f (pronounced meta- eff) is entered by pressing the ESC keyboard key followed by the f key, or by pressing the Meta key followed by the f key on keyboards that support a Meta key. A command line is committed and executed using RETURN or NEWLINE. The edit commands are:

^F

Move cursor forward (right) one character.

M-f

Move cursor forward one word.

^B

Move cursor backward (left) one character.

M-b

Move cursor backward one word.

^A

Move cursor to start of line.

^E

Move cursor to end of line.

^D

Delete current character, if the current line is not empty. If the current line is empty, ^D denotes EOF and the debugger will exit.

M-^H

(Meta-backspace) Delete previous word.

^K

Delete from the cursor to the end of the line.

^L

Reprint the current line.

^T

Transpose the current character with the next character.

^N

Fetch the next command from the history. Each time ^N is entered, the next command forward in time is retrieved.

^P

Fetch the previous command from the history. Each time ^P is entered, the next command backward in time is retrieved.

^R[string]

Search backward in the history for a previous command line containing string. The string should be terminated by a RETURN or NEWLINE. If string is omitted, the previous history element containing the most recent string is retrieved.

The editing mode also interprets the following user-defined sequences as editing commands. User-defined sequences can be read or modified using the stty(1) command.

erase

User-defined erase character (usually ^H or ^?). Delete previous character.

intr

User-defined interrupt character (usually ^C). Abort the current command and print a new prompt.

kill

User-defined kill character (usually ^U). Kill the entire current command line.

quit

User-defined quit character (usually ^\). Quit the debugger.

suspend

User-defined suspend character (usually ^Z). Suspend the debugger.

werase

User-defined word erase character (usually ^W). Erase the preceding word.

On keyboards that support an extended keypad with arrow keys, mdb interprets these keystrokes as editing commands:

Up arrow

Fetch the previous command from the history (same as ^P).

Down arrow

Fetch the next command from the history (same as ^N).

Left arrow

Move cursor backward one character (same as ^B).

Right arrow

Move cursor forward one character (same as ^F).