[
Date Prev][
Date Next][
Thread Prev][
Thread Next][
Date Index][
Thread Index]
[
List Home]
Re: [ptp-dev] Project Debug setup
|
One other thing. In Window->Preference->Run/Debug->Parallel
Application make sure 'Open the associated perspective when the
application suspends' is either 'Always' or 'Prompt'.
Greg
On Sep 19, 2006, at 9:57 AM, Greg Watson wrote:
A couple of other things to check. Make sure that 'Stop at main()
on startup' is selected in the parallel application launch
configuration. Also, in Window->Preferences->PTP->Debug, check that
'Register process 0 by default' is selected.
The Eclipse Debug infrastructure will only switch perspective when
a breakpoint is hit and the target process is being displayed in
the standard Debug view. The above settings should ensure this is
the case.
Greg
On Sep 19, 2006, at 9:24 AM, Clement Chu wrote:
Hi Brian,
Can eclipse open hello.c in source editor if running with CDT?
Please check the project properties. Maybe some settings are not
right, so eclipse will look for hello.c in Debug folder.
Regards,
Clement
Henerey, Brian wrote:
Both of these were set correctly.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
----
*From:* ptp-dev-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:ptp-dev-
bounces@xxxxxxxxxxx] *On Behalf Of *Greg Watson
*Sent:* Monday, September 18, 2006 11:26 PM
*To:* Parallel Tools Platform general developers
*Subject:* Re: [ptp-dev] Project Debug setup
Brian,
Open Window->Preferences then select Perspectives from the Run/
Debug item. Select Parallel Application from the Application
Types. Check that the Debug drop down menu is set to PTP Debug
and the Run drop down menu is set to PTP Runtime.
Greg
On Sep 18, 2006, at 2:26 PM, Henerey, Brian wrote:
I am creating a Managed Make C project to run a parallel Hello
World test job and have a problem.
When I am in the C/C++ perspective, I right-click on the project
folder, and select Debug As, Debug. I make a new Parallel
Application, give it a name, and select the application to be
Debug/testPhello. This is the folder where the debug executable
is created. I set the number of processes to 2, and select SDM to
be the debugger. When I click Debug, it saves my settings,
initializes the debugger, and puts me back into the C/C++
perspective.
Here I notice that a new hello.c file is opened in the editor.
When I click on it’s tab, it says: /testPhello/Debug/hello.c does
not exist. I don’t know why it’s looking inside the Debug folder
for the source file. I tried putting a copy of hello.c inside the
Debug folder but this did not change things.
If I ‘Run’ the job, everything works as expected. I can see what
I’ve done differently between Run and Debug. Any suggestions?
I’ve built and rebuild new projects trying to eliminate my
mistake, but I am clearly doing something wrong.
Thanks in advance,
Brian
PS. I can get around this with a non-managed Makefile, but I’m
hoping to understand/use the Eclipse Build features.
_______________________________________________
ptp-dev mailing list
ptp-dev@xxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:ptp-dev@xxxxxxxxxxx>
https://dev.eclipse.org/mailman/listinfo/ptp-dev
--------------------------------------------------------------------
----
_______________________________________________
ptp-dev mailing list
ptp-dev@xxxxxxxxxxx
https://dev.eclipse.org/mailman/listinfo/ptp-dev
_______________________________________________
ptp-dev mailing list
ptp-dev@xxxxxxxxxxx
https://dev.eclipse.org/mailman/listinfo/ptp-dev
_______________________________________________
ptp-dev mailing list
ptp-dev@xxxxxxxxxxx
https://dev.eclipse.org/mailman/listinfo/ptp-dev