Remedy Debugger

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The Remedy debugger was the first embedded system level debugger in the world. It offered many features that users take for granted today in the days when having a source level debugger was a luxury. Some of these features include:

  • Multiprocessor operation
  • Heterogeneous
  • Distributed
  • Dynamic thread view of the system
  • Synchronized debugging for multiple threads
  • Trace functions
  • Operating system resource displays
  • Source and assembly level debugging

It started as an academic research project (originally called Melody for debugging the Harmony Operating System). The results were published in a seminal paper on debugging multiprocessors systems.[1]

The current version of Unison continues to use both gdb and Remedy Debugger.[2]

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Remedy, A Real-Time Multiprocessor System Level Debugger, IEEE Symposium on Real-Time Systems, December, 1987"
  2. ^ Host Development, Deeply Embedded Development and Multiprocessor Products

[1] [2]