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authorRuss Cox <rsc@golang.org>2020-03-15 15:50:36 -0400
committerRuss Cox <rsc@golang.org>2020-03-17 20:58:46 +0000
commit972d42d925e6cae3f8eebd9b21d445e06c2eb386 (patch)
tree737af27f0d49318b612efec874b1d1328c699d1a /content/debugging-go-programs-with-gnu-debugger.article
parentfaf1e2da2d911edc717993e8edb24fe88f99b2b5 (diff)
content: rename articles to reinforce convention of short URLs
The Go blog started out on Blogger (http://web.archive.org/web/20100325005843/http://blog.golang.org/). Later, we moved to the current self-hosted blog server with extra Go-specific functionality like playground snippets. The old Blogger posts have very long URLs that Blogger chose for us, such as "go-programming-language-turns-two" or "two-go-talks-lexical-scanning-in-go-and", predating the convention of giving posts shorter, more share-friendly, typeable names. The conversion of the old Blogger posts also predated the convention of putting supporting files in a subdirectory. The result is that although we've established new conventions, you wouldn't know by listing the directory - the old Blogger content presents a conflicting picture. This commit renames the posts with very long names to have shorter, more share-friendly names, and it moves all supporting files to subdirectories. It also adds a README documenting the conventions. For example, blog.golang.org/go-programming-language-turns-two is now blog.golang.org/2years, matching our more recent birthday post URLs, and its supporting files are moved to the new 2years/ directory. The old URLs redirect to the new ones. Change-Id: I9f46a790c2c8fab8459aeda73d4e3d2efc86d88f Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/blog/+/223599 Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
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-# Debugging Go programs with the GNU Debugger
-30 Oct 2011
-Tags: debug, gdb, technical
-Summary: Announcing a new article about debugging Go programs with GDB.
-
-Andrew Gerrand
-
-##
-
-Last year we [reported](https://blog.golang.org/2010/11/debugging-go-code-status-report.html)
-that Go's [gc](https://golang.org/cmd/gc/)/[ld](https://golang.org/cmd/6l/)
-toolchain produces DWARFv3 debugging information that can be read by the GNU Debugger (GDB).
-Since then, work has continued steadily on improving support for debugging Go code with GDB.
-Among the improvements are the ability to inspect goroutines and to print
-native Go data types,
-including structs, slices, strings, maps,
-interfaces, and channels.
-
-To learn more about Go and GDB, see the [Debugging with GDB](https://golang.org/doc/debugging_with_gdb.html) article.