On Wed, Jan 02, 2002 at 03:25:10PM +0200, Hannu Krosing wrote:
> I am currently working on understanding enough of the parse/plan/execute
> process
I tried the same a few days ago and made very good progress using simply GDB
going through the code step by step as the system executes.
As mentioned in the Developers FAQ using
$ call pprint(nodepointer)
from within GDB and looking at the debug output was very useful.
Only sometimes I called pprint on something which wasn't really a
node-pointer (but a pointer to something else) and in very rare cases
I got nice system crashes because of this;-)
Some hints for the use GDB with PostgreSQL (deviating from what is
recommended in other places):
1) Start postmaster with `LD_DEBUG=files' set in the environment if you need access to dynamically loaded libraries.
(Seemsnot to be necessary in your case.)
2) Start gdb with all PostgreSQL source directories loaded (I start it within Emacs, at the same time using the Tags
tablewhich can be created with tools/make_etags, which allows fast code browsing.)
3) Connect with psql.
4) pstree -p | grep postmaster to get informed about the pid of the backend your psql is connected to.
5) Make the appropriate calls from psql to get all the dynamically loadable libraries loaded. Follow the PostgreSQL
logoutput to get informed about the entry addresses of the dynamically loaded libraries. (Not necessary in your
case.)
6) In gdb: $ file <bindir>/postgres # now use the entry address which appeared in the logs: $ add-symbol-file
<libdir>/plpgsql.so<entryaddress> $ add-symbol-file <libdir>/<otherlib>.so <otherentryaddress> # now use the pid of
thebackend $ attach pid # now work with gdb
This sounds much to do, but works astonishingly well.
--
Holger Krug
hkrug@rationalizer.com