Totalview® User Guide : PART II Debugging Tools and Tasks : Chapter 7 Stepping through and Executing your Program : Executing to a Selected Line
Executing to a Selected Line
If you don’t need to stop execution every time execution reaches a specific line, you can tell TotalView to run your program to a selected line or machine instruction. After selecting the line on which you want the program to stop, invoke one of the eight Run To commands defined within the GUI. These commands are on the Group, Process, and Thread menus.
CLI: dfocus ... duntil
Executing to a selected line is discussed in greater depth in Chapter 21, "Group, Process, and Thread Control".
If your program reaches a breakpoint while running to a selected line, TotalView stops at that breakpoint.
If your program calls recursive functions, you can select a nested stack frame in the Stack Trace Pane. When you do this, TotalView determines where to stop execution by looking at the following:
The frame pointer (FP) of the selected stack frame.
The selected source line or instruction.
CLI: dup and ddown
 
RELATED TOPICS 
 
Detailed discussion on stepping and setting breakpoints
The duntil command
duntil in "CLI Commands" in the TotalView Reference Guide
The dup command
dup in "CLI Commands" in the TotalView Reference Guide
The ddowncommand
ddown in "CLI Commands" in the TotalView Reference Guide