If you just enter totalview in a shell, the Sessions Manager launches where you can configure your debugging session. But you can also bypass the manager and launch TotalView directly. This chapter details the multiple options you have for starting TotalView.
The TotalView GUI provides an extensive set of tools for viewing, navigating, and customization. This chapter discusses features specific to TotalView’s interface.
Action points control how your programs execute and what happens when your program reaches statements that you define as important. Action points also let you monitor changes to a variable’s value.
Many TotalView operations such as displaying variables are actually operating upon expressions. Here’s where you’ll find details of what TotalView does. This information is not just for advanced users.
This chapter is the first of a three-chapter look at the TotalView process/thread model and how to manipulate threads and processes while debugging your multi-threaded applications. This chapter contains concept information on threads and processes in general. Chapter 14, “Manipulating Processes and Threads” describes TotalView’s hands-on tools for organizing and viewing thread and process activity and data, while Chapter 22, “Group, Process, and Thread Control” includes advanced configuration and customization, useful for finely controlling execution in very complex applications.
The second (of three) chapter focusing on threads and processes, with an emphasis on hands-on tasks and tools to control the view, execution, and focus of a single or group of threads and processes.