Take a look at the patch I sent you.  It uses an lldb platform based on ADB to 
set up the port forwarding and possibly copy files then connects to gdbserver.  
The implementation is rough, but the basic idea seemed to work pretty well.  I 
was using it to copy over and launch a new version of gdbserver because the one 
that came with the x86 emulator at the time didn't work.

-Andy

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Todd Fiala
Sent: Wednesday, November 20, 2013 2:19 PM
To: Greg Clayton
Cc: lldb-dev
Subject: Re: [lldb-dev] LLDB for Android initiative

>
> There is probably some amount of overlap in lldb-platform and what we 
> currently do with adb (Android Debug Bridge).  Eventually I'll need to figure 
> out what makes sense to speed up the compile/deploy/debug/fix cycle.
You can make a new platform named "remote-andriod" that can talk to adb, and 
just skip using the "lldb-platform" binary. Anything that is missing in that we 
need in the lldb_private::Platform class could then be added to adb, and if we 
are missing anything in the lldb_private::Platform compared to adb we could add 
to the platform API. How do you communicate with adb? Sockets?

ADB runs on the host/local side, and it knows how to forward ports to devices 
(typically over USB).  So, we talk to the local ADB port that then forwards 
communication to the actual device.  I'll need to have a look at the guts of it 
- it might make sense to only use it as a port forwarder and go with an 
lldb-platform on the device side and just stick with that.  I'll have a deeper 
look at that once I get Android gdbserver (or equivalent) working.



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