Ordinarily, when you continue your program, you do so at the place where
it stopped, with the continue
command. You can instead continue at
an address of your own choosing, with the following commands:
jump linespec
jump
command does not change the current stack frame, or
the stack pointer, or the contents of any memory location or any
register other than the program counter. If line linespec is in
a different function from the one currently executing, the results may
be bizarre if the two functions expect different patterns of arguments or
of local variables. For this reason, the jump
command requests
confirmation if the specified line is not in the function currently
executing. However, even bizarre results are predictable if you are
well acquainted with the machine-language code of your program.
jump *address
You can get much the same effect as the jump
command by storing a
new value into the register $pc
. The difference is that this
does not start your program running; it only changes the address of where it
will run when you continue. For example,
set $pc = 0x485
makes the next continue
command or stepping command execute at
address 0x485
, rather than at the address where your program stopped.
See section Continuing and stepping.
The most common occasion to use the jump
command is to back up--
perhaps with more breakpoints set--over a portion of a program that has
already executed, in order to examine its execution in more detail.
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