minor typo fixes.

This commit is contained in:
Christopher Faylor 2001-09-16 02:56:48 +00:00
parent 615643cb12
commit 1d1c6baa7b

View File

@ -9,13 +9,13 @@ better than that. You can debug the problem yourself, and even if you can't
fix it, your analysis may be very helpful. Here's the (incoplete) howto on
cygwin debugging.
1. The first thing you'll need to do is to build cygwin1.dll and crashed your
1. The first thing you'll need to do is to build cygwin1.dll and your crashed
application from sources. To debug them you'll need debug information, which
is normally stripped from executables.
2. Create known-working cygwin debugging environment.
- create a separate directory, say, c:\cygdeb, and put known-working
cygwin1.dll, gdb.exe in it.
cygwin1.dll and gdb.exe in it.
- create a wrapper c:\cygdeb\debug_wrapper.cmd:
========= debug_wrapper.cmd =========
@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ c:\cygdeb\gdb.exe -nw %1 %2
4. Strace.
You can run your program under 'strace' utility, described if user's manual.
If you know, where the problem approximately is, you can add a bunch of
If you know where the problem approximately is, you can add a bunch of
additional debug_printf()s in the source code and see what they print in
strace log. There's one common problem with this method, that some bugs
may misteriously disappear once the program is run under strace. Then the