// Copyright 2010 the V8 project authors. All rights reserved. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be // found in the LICENSE file. #ifndef V8_DIAGNOSTICS_GDB_JIT_H_ #define V8_DIAGNOSTICS_GDB_JIT_H_ #include "include/v8.h" // // GDB has two ways of interacting with JIT code. With the "JIT compilation // interface", V8 can tell GDB when it emits JIT code. Unfortunately to do so, // it has to create platform-native object files, possibly with platform-native // debugging information. Currently only ELF and Mach-O are supported, which // limits this interface to Linux and Mac OS. This JIT compilation interface // was introduced in GDB 7.0. V8 support can be enabled with the --gdbjit flag. // // The other way that GDB can know about V8 code is via the "custom JIT reader" // interface, in which a GDB extension parses V8's private data to determine the // function, file, and line of a JIT frame, and how to unwind those frames. // This interface was introduced in GDB 7.6. This interface still relies on V8 // to register its code via the JIT compilation interface, but doesn't require // that V8 create ELF images. Support will be added for this interface in the // future. // namespace v8 { namespace internal { namespace GDBJITInterface { #ifdef ENABLE_GDB_JIT_INTERFACE // JitCodeEventHandler that creates ELF/Mach-O objects and registers them with // GDB. void EventHandler(const v8::JitCodeEvent* event); #endif } // namespace GDBJITInterface } // namespace internal } // namespace v8 #endif // V8_DIAGNOSTICS_GDB_JIT_H_