The path and filename of the executable to be debugged it then waits passively for the host gdb to communicate with it This additional data is often folded into the pointer, meaning stored inline in the data representing the address, taking advantage of certain properties of memory addressing Gdb is run on the host, with the arguments
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The path and filename of the executable (and any sources) on the host, and a device name (for a serial line) or the ip address and port number needed for connection to the target system.
Hex dumps are commonly organized into rows of 8 or 16 bytes, sometimes separated by whitespaces
Some hex dumps have the hexadecimal memory address at the beginning On systems where the conventional representation of data is octal, the equivalent is an octal dump. Consistent overhead byte stuffing consistent overhead byte stuffing (cobs) is an algorithm for encoding data bytes that results in efficient, reliable, unambiguous packet framing regardless of packet content, thus making it easy for receiving applications to recover from malformed packets. The basic unit of digital storage is a bit, storing a single 0 or 1
Many common instruction set architectures can address more than 8 bits of data at a time However, data in memory may be of various lengths Instruction sets that support byte addressing. In computer science, a tagged pointer is a pointer (concretely a memory address) with additional data associated with it, such as an indirection bit or reference count