From 34f1fd3866c8e3f53d9a25bbae30426e8224a7b3 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Thomas Schwinge Date: Mon, 24 Mar 2008 18:29:41 +0100 Subject: hurd/running/debian/faq/debugging_inside_glibc: No esacping needed here for underscores. --- hurd/running/debian/faq/debugging_inside_glibc.mdwn | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) (limited to 'hurd/running/debian') diff --git a/hurd/running/debian/faq/debugging_inside_glibc.mdwn b/hurd/running/debian/faq/debugging_inside_glibc.mdwn index 997bfadb..d28eccd7 100644 --- a/hurd/running/debian/faq/debugging_inside_glibc.mdwn +++ b/hurd/running/debian/faq/debugging_inside_glibc.mdwn @@ -12,8 +12,8 @@ To get [[debugging]] information for glibc, you need to install the `libc0.3-dbg` package. At the place [[debugging/GDB]] looks for debugging symbols by default (`/usr/lib/debug/lib/`), Debian's `libc0.3-dbg` stores only frame unwind information. If you want to step into glibc while debugging, you -need to add `LD\_LIBRARY\_PATH=/usr/lib/debug` to GDB's environment. If that -still does not work, try `LD\_PRELOAD=/usr/lib/debug/libc.so.0.3` instead. You +need to add `LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/lib/debug` to GDB's environment. If that +still does not work, try `LD_PRELOAD=/usr/lib/debug/libc.so.0.3` instead. You can add to GDB's environment via `set env FOO bar` from the GDB command line. It seems that this is no longer needed with the Debian glibc 2.5 packages, but -- cgit v1.2.3