I am pretty new to Eclipse. Trying to set up to do remote debugging.
Here is situation, I am connecting to remote machine running Linux, I am running Windows.
<gdbserver
needs more arguments. For example, say gdbserver localhost:1337 yourprogram yourprogramarguments
and keep it running.
Then, in Eclipse, create a new debug configuration for a "C/C++ Application". On the main tab, on the bottom, choose GDB (GSF) Remote System Process Launcher
as launcher. On the debugger tab, choose gdbserver Debugger
as the debugger. Under connection, say TCP
as connection type and give localhost:1337
as address. When you launch the configuration, you may control the remote gdb
by entering commands into the console.
CLI sanity check
Before you do anything, make sure you:
This answer supposes that you can do on the development board:
sudo apt-get install gdbserver
gdbserver :1234 path/to/executable
And on host:
aarch64-linux-gnu-gdb \
-ex "target remote board-hostname:1234" \
-ex "file path/to/cross/compiled/executable" \
-ex 'tb main' \
-ex c
and then step debug everything correctly.
Eclipse setup
Tested in Ubuntu 16.04 host, Eclipse Oxygen 4.7.0 (downloaded from website), gdbserver
7.12, aarch64-linux-gnu-gdb
7.6.
I have successfully used all of the following methods:
Manual
With this method, we have to launch gdbserver
on the target before running debug on Eclipse.
Pro: dispenses configuring SSH connections through Eclipse to allow Eclipse to run gdbserver
, which is another possible point of failure.
Con: you have to relaunch gdbserver
every time debugging starts. This could be overcome if Eclipse understood gdbserver --multi
, but I don't think it does?
Due to its simplicity, I recommend that you get this method working first.
Open the debug configurations, then create a new "C / C++ Remote Application".
Under the tab "Main":
select the "Name", "Project" and "C/C++ Application" as usual for a local debug
at the bottom launcher, click "Select other", check "Use configuration specific settings" and pick "GDB (DSF) Manual Remote Debugging Launcher"
Why we do this: the automatic launcher first connects to the board with SSH and launches the gdbserver
for you.
Under the tab "Debugger":
"GDB debugger": same as used from CLI on host, aarch64-linux-gnu-gdb
for this example
Sub-tab "Connection": set hostname and port as passed to the host on CLI (board-hostname
and 1234
)
Finally, manually launch gdbserver
on the target just as we did from the CLI:
gdbserver :1234 path/to/executable
and start the debugger from Eclipse normally.
You have to restart gdbserver
every time you terminate the program.
Automatic with password auth
This is the best method for development boards, which have fixed publicly known passwords.
It connects to the target with SSH and a password, and launches gdbserver
on the target automatically every time, which is super convenient!
Target gdbserver
stdout goes to the Eclipse "Console" window, which further reduces window switching.
In Eclipse set:
/root/path/to/project/path/to/executable
Automatic with public key
Very similar to the password authentication, except that you must go to: "Connection", "New", and choose "Public key based authentication"
Pros:
Cons:
so I would prefer this method for servers.
SSH can connect without a password if you:
~/.ssh/authorized_keys
on the target to contain the ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
from the hostBefore using this method, make sure that your authorized keys work from the command line, i.e. you should now be able to do:
ssh user@host
without typing any password.
Update for Eclipse 2019-03
In eclipse 2019, the above steps didn't work, because Eclipse has changed the layout of the configuration in "C/C++ Remote Application".
Updates of @Ciro post:
The following steps worked with me: Under "Debug Configurations" Under "C / C++ Remote Application" Under the tab "Main":
Under the tab "Debugger":
These are the only changes I made so that the previous answer works with me.