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An earlier question explained that on x86 the size of objects being watched is limited by debug registers. As expected, I can "watch" a double variable. But I can't watch a double datamember, for example,

watch pObject->dPrice

produces

Hardware watchpoint 1: pObject->dPrice

But when you try to continue execution, it says

Could not insert hardware breakpoints: You may have requested too many hardware breakpoints/watchpoints.

even though this is the only breakpoint/watchpoint.

I'm curious why this is so, but more importantly is there a way around it? According to GDB documentation it may use software watchpoints if it can't use hardware. In this case it makes no attempt to use a software watchpoint -- is there a way to force it to do so?

1
  • Are you able to print address of that member variable? My suspicion would be it's optimized into a register. If not that, is it aligned properly? Aug 12, 2010 at 20:22

3 Answers 3

23

Yes, you can:

set can-use-hw-watchpoints 0

From 5.1.2 Setting Watchpoints:

You can force GDB to use only software watchpoints with the set can-use-hw-watchpoints 0 command. With this variable set to zero, GDB will never try to use hardware watchpoints, even if the underlying system supports them. (Note that hardware-assisted watchpoints that were set before setting can-use-hw-watchpoints to zero will still use the hardware mechanism of watching expression values.)

set can-use-hw-watchpoints

    Set whether or not to use hardware watchpoints.

show can-use-hw-watchpoints

    Show the current mode of using hardware watchpoints.

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  • Thanks! I was just reading that section, but obviously I didn't read very carefully.
    – c-urchin
    Aug 12, 2010 at 18:56
  • 2
    It works, but it is a fair bit slower than hardware. In my case, about 1/5000 of the speed.
    – wallyk
    Jun 23, 2015 at 22:05
  • which results in Can't set read/access watchpoint when hardware watchpoints are disabled..
    – phil294
    Jun 5, 2018 at 6:04
  • @Blauhirn This is an 8 year old answer. The change you mentioned was incorporated 5 years ago. Let us know if you are able to solve it. Jun 5, 2018 at 13:59
  • @wallyk yes, GDB manual says "GDB does software watchpointing by single-stepping your program and testing the variable’s value each time, which is hundreds of times slower than normal execution", so this will not be useful in most debugging scenarios. Jan 3, 2020 at 16:22
10

Short answer: Use watch -location pObject->dPrice, or the short form watch -l.

Long answer: Quoting the GDB manual:

Watching complex expressions that reference many variables can also exhaust the resources available for hardware-assisted watchpoints. That's because GDB needs to watch every variable in the expression with separately allocated resources.

GDB quite literally watches the expression itself, not whatever address it points to. In this case, it means that the breakpoint will hit if pObject itself is changed to point to a new dPrice; there's not just a watchpoint for pObject->dPrice, but also one for pObject itself. This may be more than what's available.

A more comprehensive example:

// Set a watchpoint on '*p' before running
#include <stdio.h>

int a = 0;
int b = 0;
int c = 0;
int* p = &a;

int main()
{
    puts("Hi"); // Dummy lines to make the results clearer, watchpoints stop at the line after the change
    *p = 1; // Breaks: *p was changed from 0 to 1
    puts("Hi");
    a = 2; // Breaks: a is *p, which changed from 1 to 2
    puts("Hi");
    p = &b; // Breaks: p is now b, changing *p from 2 to 0
    puts("Hi");
    p = &c; // Doesn't break: while p changed, *p is still 0
    puts("Hi");
    p = NULL; // Breaks: *p is now unreadable
    puts("Hi");
    return 0;
}

In theory, this is a useful feature; you can watch a complex expression, breaking as soon as it's false, somewhat like a constantly-tested assertion. For example, you can watch a==b in the above program.

In practice, it's unexpected, often triggers this issue, and usually isn't what you want.

To watch only the target address, use watch -location pObject->dPrice. (This is available as of GDB 7.3, released in July 2011; if you're using anything older, use print &pObject->dPrice and watch *(double*)0x12345678, or whichever address it prints.)

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  • Cross-posting this answer to this question, it answers both.
    – Alcaro
    Feb 15, 2017 at 13:49
  • Oh, OK, so watch pObject->dPrice must be attempting to watch both "all fields of pObject" and pObject->dPrice or something like that. Jan 3, 2020 at 18:00
7

I'm not 100% sure, but my understanding is that when you watch pObject->dPrice, GDB tries to watch anything that can change the watched value.

Using software watchpoints, after each step GDB checks if the expression has changed. Using hardware watchpoints, GDB has to set a watchpoint for dprice, as you expect, but also for pObject.

Now, you tagged the question 'x86'. On x86 you can set breakpoints for up to four bytes. A double is eight bytes. If you want to watch a double, I would guess that GDB would need two hardware watchpoints. You need an additional watchpoint for pObject as well. I'm guessing that GDB tries to watch all of pObject, which goes back to the problem in the question you linked in the question.

When I want to do something similar, if I'm certain that the pointer pObject will not change, I usually do:

p &pObject->dprice

Let's say GDB says the address is (double *) 0xabcdef10, now I do:

watch (double *) *0xabcdef10

and watch only what I want to.

Note: I don't have GDB open in front of me, so I may have the exact syntax for the watch command wrong (regarding the placement of the *), so check it out first.

4
  • 2
    It'd be nice if gdb offered a shortcut for "watch just the final target" Nov 18, 2014 at 7:31
  • 3
    @CraigRinger: It does. watch -location pObject->dprice
    – Alcaro
    Feb 12, 2017 at 19:55
  • 1
    @Alcaro: 1. is this supported in any version of gdb? 2. this is a good enough answer that it should be in a standalone answer, and not as the comment to my answer. Feb 14, 2017 at 9:10
  • (1) Tested to work on GDB 7.7.1, Ubuntu 14.04. I'll download some tarballs and check exactly when it appeared. (And I suspect -location was the default prior to it being an explicit flag. Pretty surprising behavior.) (2) Can do.
    – Alcaro
    Feb 15, 2017 at 12:34

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