ACID(10.1) ACID(10.1) NAME acid - debugger SYNOPSIS acid [ -l libfile ] [ -wq ] [ -m machine ] [ pid ] [ textfile ] DESCRIPTION Acid is a programmable symbolic debugger. It can inspect one or more processes that share an address space. A pro- gram to be debugged may be specified by the process id of a running or defunct process, or by the name of the program's text file (v.out by default). At the prompt, acid will store function definitions or print the value of expres- sions. Options are -w Allow the textfile to be modified. -q Don't print variable renamings at startup. -l library Load from library at startup; see below. -m machine Assume instructions are for the given CPU type (one of 386, 86, 68020, 960, power, arm, mips, mipsco, sparc, or sunsparc) instead of using the magic num- ber to select the CPU type. At startup, acid obtains standard function definitions from the library file /lib/acid/port, architecture-dependent functions from /lib/acid/$objtype, user-specified functions from $home/lib/acid, and further functions from -l files. Definitions in any file may override previously defined functions. If the function acidinit() is defined, it will be invoked after all modules have been loaded. See 2c(10.1) for information about creating acid functions for examining data structures. Language Symbols of the program being debugged become integer vari- ables whose values are addresses. Contents of addresses are obtained by indirection. Local variables are qualified by function name, for example main:argv. When program symbols conflict with acid words, distinguishing $ signs are pre- fixed. Such renamings are reported at startup; option -q suppresses them. Variable types (integer, float, list, string) and formats are inferred from assignments. Truth values false/true are Page 1 Plan 9 (printed 12/21/24) ACID(10.1) ACID(10.1) attributed to zero/nonzero integers or floats and to empty/nonempty lists or strings. Lists are sequences of expressions surrounded by {} and separated by commas. Expressions are much as in C, but yield both a value and a format. Casts to complex types are allowed. Lists admit the following operators, with subscripts counted from 0. head list tail list append list, element delete list, subscript Format codes are the same as in db(10.1). Formats may be attached to (unary) expressions with \, e.g. (32*7)\D. There are two indirection operators, * to address a core image, @ to address a text file. The type and format of the result are determined by the format of the operand, whose type must be integer. Statements are if expr then statement [ else statement ] while expr do statement loop expr, expr do statement defn name(args) { statement } local name return expr whatis [ name ] Here is a partial list of functions; see the manual for a complete list. stk() Print a stack trace for current process. lstk() Print a stack trace with values of local vari- ables. gpr() Print general registers. Registers can also be accessed by name, for example *R0. spr() Print special registers such as program counter and stack pointer. fpr() Print floating-point registers. regs() Same as spr();gpr(). fmt(expr,format) Expression expr with format given by the char- acter value of expression format. src(address) Print 10 lines of source around the program address. Bsrc(address) Get the source line for the program address into a window of a running editor and select it. (This works only on Plan 9, or a Unix- like system running `Plan 9 Ports'.) line(address) Print source line nearest to the program Page 2 Plan 9 (printed 12/21/24) ACID(10.1) ACID(10.1) address. source() List current source directories. addsrcdir(string) Add a source directory to the list. filepc(where) Convert a string of the form sourcefile:linenumber to a machine address. pcfile(address) Convert a machine address to a source file name. pcline(address) Convert a machine address to a source line number. bptab() List breakpoints set in the current process. bpset(address) Set a breakpoint in the current process at the given address. bpdel(address) Delete a breakpoint from the current process. cont() Continue execution of current process and wait for it to stop. step() Execute a single machine instruction in the current process. func() Step repeatedly until after a function return. stopped(pid) This replaceable function is called automati- cally when the given process stops. It nor- mally prints the program counter and returns to the prompt. asm(address) Disassemble 30 machine instructions beginning at the given address. mem(address,string) Print a block of memory interpreted according to a string of format codes. dump(address,n,string) Like mem(), repeated for n consecutive blocks. print(expr,...) Print the values of the expressions. newproc(arguments) Start a new process with arguments given as a string and halt at the first instruction. new() Like newproc(), but take arguments (except argv[0]) from string variable progargs. win() Like new(), but run the process in a separate window. start(pid) Start a stopped process. kill(pid) Kill the given process. setproc(pid) Make the given process current. rc(string) Escape to the shell, to execute the command string. EXAMPLES Start to debug /bin/ls; set some breakpoints; run up to the first one: Page 3 Plan 9 (printed 12/21/24) ACID(10.1) ACID(10.1) % acid /bin/ls /bin/ls: mips plan 9 executable /lib/acid/port /lib/acid/mips acid: new() 70094: system call _main ADD $-0x14,R29 70094: breakpoint main+0x4 MOVW R31,0x0(R29) acid: pid 70094 acid: argv0 = **main:argv\s acid: whatis argv0 integer variable format s acid: *argv0 /bin/ls acid: bpset(ls) acid: cont() 70094: breakpoint ls ADD $-0x16c8,R29 acid: Display elements of a linked list of structures: complex Str { 'D' 0 val; 'X' 4 next; }; complex Str s; s = *headstr; while s != 0 do{ print(s.val, "\n"); s = s.next; } Note the use of the . operator instead of ->. Display an array of bytes declared in C as char array[]. *(array\s) This example gives array string format, then prints the string beginning at the address (in acid notation) *array. FILES /proc/*/text /proc/*/mem /proc/*/ctl /proc/*/note /lib/acid/$objtype /lib/acid/port $home/lib/acid SOURCE /utils/acid SEE ALSO 2a(10.1), 2c(10.1), 2l(10.1), mk(10.1), db(10.1) Page 4 Plan 9 (printed 12/21/24) ACID(10.1) ACID(10.1) Phil Winterbottom, ``Acid Manual''. DIAGNOSTICS At termination, kill commands are proposed for processes that are still active. BUGS There is no way to redirect the standard input and standard output of a new process. Source line selection near the beginning of a file may pick an adjacent file. With the extant stepping commands, one cannot step through instructions outside the text segment and it is hard to debug across process forks. Page 5 Plan 9 (printed 12/21/24)