RFC909

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                     Loader Debugger Protocol


                              RFC-909






                        Christopher Welles
                  BBN Communications Corporation


                          Walter Milliken
                         BBN Laboratories



                             July 1984

Status of This Memo

This RFC specifies a proposed protocol for the ARPA Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for improvements. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.




                         Table of Contents



 1   Introduction.......................................... 1
 1.1   Purpose of This Document............................ 1
 1.2   Summary of Features................................. 2
 2   General Description................................... 3
 2.1   Motivation.......................................... 3
 2.2   Relation to Other Protocols......................... 4
 2.2.1   Transport Service Requirements.................... 5
 3   Protocol Operation.................................... 9
 3.1   Overview............................................ 9
 3.2   Session Management.................................. 9
 3.3   Command Sequencing................................. 10
 3.4   Data Packing and Transmission...................... 10
 3.5   Implementations.................................... 12
 4   Commands and Formats................................. 15
 4.1   Packet Format...................................... 15
 4.2   Command Format..................................... 16
 4.2.1   Command Header................................... 16
 4.3   Addressing......................................... 19
 4.3.1   Long Address Format.............................. 20
 4.3.2   Short Address Format............................. 25
 5   Protocol Commands.................................... 29
 5.1   HELLO Command...................................... 29
 5.2   HELLO_REPLY........................................ 29
 5.3   SYNCH Command...................................... 33
 5.4   SYNCH_REPLY........................................ 34
 5.5   ABORT Command...................................... 35
 5.6   ABORT_DONE Reply................................... 35
 5.7   ERROR Reply........................................ 36
 5.8   ERRACK Acknowledgement............................. 39
 6   Data Transfer Commands............................... 41
 6.1   WRITE Command...................................... 42
 6.2   READ Command....................................... 43
 6.3   READ_DATA Response................................. 45
 6.4   READ_DONE Reply.................................... 47
 6.5   MOVE Command....................................... 48
 6.6   MOVE_DATA Response................................. 50


                                                            Page i




 6.7   MOVE_DONE Reply.................................... 52
 6.8   REPEAT_DATA........................................ 53
 6.9   WRITE_MASK Command (Optional)...................... 54
 7   Control Commands..................................... 59
 7.1   START Command...................................... 59
 7.2   STOP Command....................................... 61
 7.3   CONTINUE Command................................... 62
 7.4   STEP Command....................................... 62
 7.5   REPORT Command..................................... 63
 7.6   STATUS Reply....................................... 64
 7.7   EXCEPTION Trap..................................... 66
 8   Management Commands.................................. 69
 8.1   CREATE Command..................................... 69
 8.2   CREATE_DONE Reply.................................. 74
 8.3   DELETE Command..................................... 75
 8.4   DELETE_DONE Reply.................................. 76
 8.5   LIST_ADDRESSES Command............................. 76
 8.6   ADDRESS_LIST Reply................................. 77
 8.7   LIST_BREAKPOINTS Command........................... 79
 8.8   BREAKPOINT_LIST Reply.............................. 80
 8.9   LIST_PROCESSES Command............................. 82
 8.10   PROCESS_LIST Reply................................ 83
 8.11   LIST_NAMES Command................................ 84
 8.12   NAME_LIST Reply................................... 85
 8.13   GET_PHYS_ADDR Command............................. 87
 8.14   GOT_PHYS_ADDR Reply............................... 88
 8.15   GET_OBJECT Command................................ 90
 8.16   GOT_OBJECT Reply.................................. 91
 9   Breakpoints and Watchpoints.......................... 93
 9.1   BREAKPOINT_DATA Command............................ 95
 10   Conditional Commands................................ 99
 10.1   Condition Command Format......................... 100
 10.2   COUNT Conditions................................. 101
 10.3   CHANGED Condition................................ 102
 10.4   COMPARE Condition................................ 103
 10.5   TEST Condition................................... 105
 11   Breakpoint Commands................................ 109
 11.1   INCREMENT Command................................ 109
 11.2   INC_COUNT Command................................ 110
 11.3   OR Command....................................... 111
 11.4   SET_PTR Command.................................. 112
 11.5   SET_STATE Command................................ 113


 Page ii




 A   Diagram Conventions................................. 115
 B   Command Summary..................................... 117
 C   Commands, Responses and Replies..................... 121
 D   Glossary............................................ 123






















                                                          Page iii




                              FIGURES



 1  Relation to Other Protocols............................ 4
 2  Form of Data Exchange Between Layers................... 6
 3  Packing of 16-bit Words............................... 11
 4  Packing of 20-bit Words............................... 12
 5  Network Packet Format................................. 15
 6  LDP Command Header Format............................. 16
 7  Command Classes....................................... 17
 8  Command Types......................................... 18
 9  Long Address Format................................... 20
 10  Long Address Modes................................... 21
 11  Short Address Format................................. 26
 12  Short Address Modes.................................. 27
 13  HELLO Command Format................................. 29
 14  HELLO_REPLY Format................................... 30
 15  System Types......................................... 31
 16  Target Address Codes................................. 31
 17  Feature Levels....................................... 32
 18  Options.............................................. 33
 19  SYNCH Command Format................................. 33
 20  SYNCH_REPLY Format................................... 34
 21  ABORT Command Format................................. 35
 22  ABORT_DONE Reply Format.............................. 36
 23  ERROR Reply Format................................... 37
 24  ERROR Codes.......................................... 38
 25  ERRACK Command Format................................ 40
 26  WRITE Command Format................................. 42
 27  READ Command Format.................................. 44
 28  DATA Response Format................................. 46
 29  READ_DONE Reply Format............................... 47
 30  MOVE Command Format.................................. 49
 31  MOVE_DATA Response Format............................ 51
 32  MOVE_DONE Reply Format............................... 52
 33  REPEAT_DATA Command Format........................... 54
 34  WRITE_MASK Format.................................... 56
 35  START Command Format................................. 60
 36  STOP Command Format.................................. 61
 37  CONTINUE Command Format.............................. 62
 38  STEP Command Format.................................. 63
 39  REPORT Command Format................................ 64
 40  STATUS Reply Format.................................. 65
 41  EXCEPTION Format..................................... 66
 42  CREATE Command Format................................ 70


 Page iv




 43  Create Types......................................... 71
 44  CREATE BREAKPOINT Format............................. 71
 45  CREATE MEMORY_OBJECT Format.......................... 73
 46  CREATE_DONE Reply Format............................. 74
 47  DELETE Command Format................................ 75
 48  DELETE_DONE Reply Format............................. 76
 49  LIST_ADDRESSES Command Format........................ 77
 50  ADDRESS_LIST Reply Format............................ 78
 51  LIST_BREAKPOINTS Command Format...................... 80
 52  BREAKPOINT_LIST Reply Format......................... 81
 53  LIST_PROCESSES Command Format........................ 82
 54  PROCESS_LIST Reply Format............................ 84
 55  LIST_NAMES Command Format............................ 85
 56  NAME_LIST Reply Format............................... 86
 57  GET_PHYS_ADDR Command Format......................... 88
 58  GOT_PHYS_ADDR Reply Format........................... 89
 59  GET_OBJECT Command Format............................ 90
 60  GOT_OBJECT Reply Format.............................. 91
 61  Commands to Manipulate Breakpoints................... 93
 62  Breakpoint Conditional Command Lists................. 95
 63  BREAKPOINT_DATA Command Format....................... 96
 64  Breakpoint Data Stream Format........................ 97
 65  Conditional Command Summary.......................... 99
 66  Condition Command Header............................ 101
 67  COUNT Condition Format.............................. 101
 68  CHANGED Condition................................... 102
 69  COMPARE Condition................................... 104
 70  TEST Condition...................................... 106
 71  Breakpoint Command Summary.......................... 109
 72  INCREMENT Command Format............................ 110
 73  INC_COUNT Command Format............................ 111
 74  OR Command Format................................... 111
 75  SET_PTR Command Format.............................. 112
 76  SET_STATE Command Format............................ 113
 77  Sample Diagram...................................... 115
 78  Command Summary..................................... 118
 79  Commands, Responses and Replies..................... 122







                                                            Page v



                             CHAPTER 1


                           Introduction


      The Loader-Debugger Protocol (LDP) is an  application  layer
 protocol   for  loading, dumping  and  debugging  target machines
 from hosts in a network environment.  This protocol  is  designed
 to  accommodate a variety  of  target  cpu  types.  It provides a
 powerful set of debugging services.  At  the  same  time,  it  is
 structured  so  that  a  simple  subset  may  be  implemented  in
 applications like boot  loading   where efficiency and space  are
 at a premium.


      The authors would like  to  thank  Dan  Franklin  and  Peter
 Cudhea  for providing many of the ideas on which this protocol is
 based.



 1.1  Purpose of This Document
      This is a technical specification for the LDP protocol.   It
 is intended to be comprehensive enough to be used by implementors
 of the  protocol.   It  contains  detailed  descriptions  of  the
 formats  and usage of over forty commands.  Readers interested in
 an overview of LDP should read the Summary  of  Features,  below,
 and  skim  Sections  2  through  3.1.   Also  see Appendix B, the
 Command Summary.  The remainder of the document reads  best  when
 accompanied by strong coffee or tea.









                                                            Page 1


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


 1.2  Summary of Features
      LDP has the following features:
      o   commands to perform loading, dumping and debugging
      o   support for multiple connections to a single target
      o   reliable performance in an internet environment
      o   a small protocol subset for target loaders
      o   addressing  modes  and  commands  to  support   multiple
          machine types
      o   breakpoints and watchpoints  which  run  in  the  target
          machine.

















 Page 2


 LDP Specification                             General Description


                             CHAPTER 2


                        General Description


 2.1  Motivation
      LDP is an  application  protocol  that  provides  a  set  of
 commands  used  by  application programs for loading, dumping and
 debugging target machines across a network.
      The goals of this protocol are shown in the following list:


      o   The protocol should support various processor types  and
          operating  systems.   Overhead  and complexity should be
          minimized for simpler cases.


      o   The protocol should provide support for applications  in
          which  more  than  one  user  can  debug the same target
          machine.  This implies an underlying transport mechanism
          that supports multiple connections between a host-target
          pair.


      o   LDP should have a minimal subset of  commands  for  boot
          loading  and dumping.  Target machine implementations of
          these applications are often restricted in the amount of
          code-space  they  may  take.   The  services  needed for
          loading and dumping  should  be  provided  in  a  small,
          easily implemented set of commands.


      o   There should be a means for communicating exceptions and
          errors from the target LDP process to the host process.


      o   LDP should allow the application to implement a full set
          of debugging functions without crippling the performance
          of the target's application (i.e., PSN,  PAD,  gateway).
          For  example,  a  breakpoint  mechanism  that  halts the
          target machine while breakpoint commands are  sent  from
          the  host  to the target is of limited usefulness, since
          the target will  be  unable  to  service  the  real-time


                                                            Page 3


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


          demands of its application.


 2.2  Relation to Other Protocols
      LDP is an application protocol that fits  into  the  layered
 internet  protocol environment. Figure 1 illustrates the place of
 LDP in the protocol hierarchy.



              +------------------------------+
              |              LDP             |        Application
              +------------------------------+        Layer
                    |                  |
                    |                  |
                    |                  |
              +---------+          +---------+
              |   RDP   |    or    |  TCP    |        Transport Layer
              +---------+          +---------+
                | or |                |
                |    |                |
                |  +--------------------+
                |  |  Internet Protocol |             Internetwork
                |  +--------------------+             Layer
                |              |
              +------------------------------+
              |    Network Access Protocol   |        Network Layer
              +------------------------------+


                    Relation to Other Protocols
                             Figure 1








 Page 4


 LDP Specification                             General Description


 2.2.1  Transport Service Requirements
      LDP requires that the underlying transport layer:


      o   allow connections to be opened by specifying  a  network
          (or  internet)  address.   Support  passive  and  active
          opens.
      o   for each connection, specify the maximum message size.
      o   provide a mechanism for sending and  receiving  messages
          over an open connection.
      o   deliver messages reliably and in sequence
      o   support multiple connections, and  distinguish  messages
          associated  with  different connections.  This is only a
          requirement where LDP is  expected  to  support  several
          users at the same time.
      o   explictly return the outcome (success/failure)  of  each
          request  (open,  send,  receive), and provide a means of
          querying the  status  of  a  connection  (unacknowledged
          message count, etc.).


      Data is passed from the application program to the LDP  user
 process  in  the  form of commands.  In the case of an LDP server
 process, command responses originate in LDP itself.  Below LDP is
 the  transport  protocol.  The  Reliable  Data  Protocol  (RDP --
 RFC 908) is the recommended transport procotol.  Data  is  passed
 across  the  LDP/RDP interface in the form of messages.  (TCP may
 be used in place of RDP, but it will be  less  efficient  and  it
 will  require  more  resources  to implement.)  An internet layer
 (IP) normally comes between RDP and the network  layer,  but  RDP
 may exchange data packets directly with the network layer.
      Figure  2  shows  the  flow  of  data  across  the  protocol
 interfaces:





                                                            Page 5


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



                           +------+
                           |      |
                           |Appli-|
                           |cation|
                           |      |
                           +------+
                              ^
                   Commands   |
                              V
                           +------+
                           |      |
                           | LDP  |
                           |      |
                           +------+
                              ^
                   Messages   |
                              V
                           +-----+
                           |     |
                           | RDP |
                           |     |
                           +-----+
                              ^
                   Segments   |
                              V
                            +----+
                            |    |
                            | IP |
                            |    |
                            +----+
                              ^
                   Datagrams  |
                              V
                          ?  *     !
                       $  =      ^   +
                         *
                      >    Internet
                        ,            ?
                             !    )
                          *   %     $


               Form of Data Exchange Between Layers
                             Figure 2



 Page 6


 LDP Specification                             General Description



























                                                            Page 7


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



























 Page 8


 LDP Specification                              Protocol Operation


                             CHAPTER 3


                        Protocol Operation


 3.1  Overview
      An LDP session consists  of  an  exchange  of  commands  and
 responses  between an LDP user process and an LDP server process.
 Normally,  the  user  process  resides  on  a  host  machine   (a
 timesharing  computer  used  for network monitoring and control),
 and the server process resides on a  target  machine  (PSN,  PAD,
 gateway,  etc.).   Throughout  this document, host and target are
 used  as  synonyms  for  user   process   and   server   process,
 respectively,  although  in  some implementations (the Butterfly,
 for example) this  correspondence  may  be  reversed.   The  host
 controls  the  session  by  sending commands to the target.  Some
 commands elicit responses, and all commands may elicit  an  error
 reply.
      The protocol contains five classes  of  commands:  protocol,
 data  transfer,  management,   control  and breakpoint.  Protocol
 commands are used to verify the command sequencing mechanism  and
 to handle erroneous commands.  Data transfer commands involve the
 transfer of data from one place to another, such  as  for  memory
 examine/deposit,  or  loading.  Management  commands are used for
 creating   and   deleting   objects   (processes,    breakpoints,
 watchpoints,  etc.)  in the target machine.  Control commands are
 used to control the execution of  target  code  and  breakpoints.
 Breakpoint commands are used to control the execution of commands
 inside breakpoints and watchpoints.


 3.2  Session Management
      An LDP session consists of a series of commands sent from  a
 host  LDP  to  a  target  LDP,  some  of which may be followed by
 responses from the target.  A session begins when a host opens  a
 transport  connection to a target listening on a well known port.
 LDP uses RDP port number zzz or TCP port number  yyy.   When  the
 connection  has been established, the host sends a HELLO command,
 and the target  replies  with  a  HELLO_REPLY.   The  HELLO_REPLY
 contains  parameters that describe the target's implementation of
 LDP, including protocol  version,  implementation  level,  system


                                                            Page 9


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


 type,  and  address format.  The session terminates when the host
 closes the underlying  transport  connection.   When  the  target
 detects  that the transport connection has been closed, it should
 deallocate any resources dedicated to the session.
      The target process is the passive partner in an LDP session,
 and  it  waits for the host process to terminate the session.  As
 an implementation consideration, either LDP  or  the   underlying
 transport  protocol  in  the  target  should  have  a  method for
 detecting if the host process  has  died.   Otherwise,   an   LDP
 target  that  supported  only  one  connection  could be rendered
 useless by a host that crashed in the  middle of a session.   The
 problem  of  detecting  half-dead  connections  can be avoided by
 taking a different tack:  the target could allow new  connections
 to  usurp  inactive  connections.  A  connection with no activity
 could be declared 'dead', but would  not  be  usurped  until  the
 connection  resource  was  needed.   However,  this  would  still
 require the transport layer to support two  connection  channels:
 one  to  receive  connection  requests, and another to use for an
 active connection.



 3.3  Command Sequencing
      Each command sent from the host to the target has a sequence
 number.   The  sequence  number is used by the target to refer to
 the command in normal replies and error replies.  To save  space,
 these  numbers  are  not  actually  included  in  host  commands.
 Instead, each command sent from the host is assigned an  implicit
 sequence  number.   The  sequence  number  starts  at zero at the
 beginning of the LDP  session  and  increases  by  one  for  each
 command sent.  The host and target each keep track of the current
 number.  The SYNCH <sequence number> command may be used  by  the
 host to synchronize the sequence number.



 3.4  Data Packing and Transmission
      The convention for the order of data packing was chosen  for
 its  simplicity:  data  are packed most significant bit first, in
 order of increasing target address, into  eight-bit  octets.  The
 octets of packed data are transmitted in sequential order.


 Page 10


 LDP Specification                              Protocol Operation


      Data are always packed according to the  address  format  of
 the  target  machine.   For  example, in an LDP session between a
 20-bit host and  a  16-bit  target,  16-bit  words  (packed  into
 octets)   are  transmitted  in  both  directions.   For  ease  of
 discussion, targets are treated here  as  if  they  have  uniform
 address  spaces.  In practice, the size of address units may vary
 within a target -- 16-bit macromemory, 32-bit micromemory, 10-bit
 dispatch  memory,  etc.   Data packing between host and target is
 tailored to the units of the current target address space.
      Figures showing the packing of data for targets with various
 address  unit  sizes  are given below.  The order of transmission
 with respect to the diagrams is top to bottom.  Bit numbering  in
 the  following diagrams refers to significance in the octet:  bit
 zero  is  the  least  significant  bit  in  an  octet.   For   an
 explanation  of  the bit numbering convention that applies in the
 rest of this document, please see Appendix A.
      The packing of data for targets with word lengths  that  are
 multiples   of  8  is  straightforward.   The  following  diagram
 illustrates 16-bit packing:


                      7                               0
                      ---------------------------------
           Octet 0    |      WORD 0 bits 15-08        |
                      ---------------------------------
           Octet 1    |      WORD 0 bits 07-00        |
                      ---------------------------------
           Octet 2    |      WORD 1 bits 15-08        |
                      ---------------------------------
           Octet 3    |      WORD 1 bits 07-00        |
                      ---------------------------------
                                    *
                                    *
                                    *
                      ---------------------------------
           Octet 2n-1 |      WORD n bits 07-00        |
                      ---------------------------------


                      Packing of 16-bit Words
                             Figure 3




                                                           Page 11


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


 Packing  for  targets  with  peculiar  word   lengths   is   more
 complicated.   For  20-bit  machines,  2 words of data are packed
 into  5  octets.   When  an  odd  number  of  20-bit  words   are
 transmitted,  the  partially used octet is included in the length
 of the command, and the octet is padded to the right with zeroes.


                      7                               0
                      ---------------------------------
           Octet 0    |      WORD 0 bits 19-12        |
                      ---------------------------------
           Octet 1    |      WORD 0 bits 11-04        |
                      ---------------------------------
           Octet 2    |  WORD 0 03-00 |  WORD 1 19-16 |
                      ---------------------------------
           Octet 3    |      WORD 1 bits 15-08        |
                      ---------------------------------
           Octet 4    |      WORD 1 bits 07-00        |
                      ---------------------------------


                      Packing of 20-bit Words
                             Figure 4




 3.5  Implementations
      A subset of LDP commands may be implemented in targets where
 machine  resources  are  limited and the full capabilities of LDP
 are  not  needed.  There  are  three  basic  levels   of   target
 implementations:       LOADER_DUMPER,      BASIC_DEBUGGER     and
 FULL_DEBUGGER.  The target communicates  its  LDP  implementation
 level  to the host during session initiation.  The implementation
 levels are described below:






 Page 12


 LDP Specification                              Protocol Operation


 LOADER_DUMPER
      Used  for   loading/dumping    of   the   target    machine.
      Includes   all  protocol   class  commands and replies; data
      transfer commands READ, WRITE,  MOVE  and  their  responses;
      control   command   START  and  control  reply    EXCEPTION.
      Understands at least PHYS_MACRO and HOST  addressing  modes;
      others if desired.
 BASIC_DEBUGGER
      Implements  LOADER_DUMPER  commands,  all  control commands,
      all  addressing modes appropriate to the target machine, but
      does  not  have finite state machine  (FSM)  breakpoints  or
      watchpoints.   Default  breakpoints  are  implemented.   The
      target understands long addressing mode.
 FULL_DEBUGGER
      Implements all commands and addressing modes appropriate  to
      the   target  machine,  and  includes  breakpoint  commands,
      conditional commands and BREAKPOINT_DATA.   Watchpoints  are
      optional.














                                                           Page 13


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



























 Page 14


 LDP Specification                            Commands and Formats


                             CHAPTER 4


                       Commands and Formats


 4.1  Packet Format
      LDP commands are enclosed in RDP transport messages.  An RDP
 message  may contain more than one command, but each command must
 fit entirely within a single message.  Network packets containing
 LDP commands have the format shown in Figure 5.


                  +----------------+
                  |  Local Network |
                  |    Header(s)   |
                  +----------------+
                  |   IP Header    |
                  +----------------+
                  |   RDP Header   |
                  +----------------+     +-+
                  |   LDP Command  |      |
                  |   Header       |      |
                  +----------------+      |
                  |   Optional     |      |
                  .   LDP          .      | LDP Command
                  .   Data         .      | Format
                  |                |      |
                  +----------------+      |
                  |   LDP Padding  |      |
                  +----------------+     +-+
                  |   Additional   |
                  .   LDP          .
                  .   Commands     .
                  .                .
                  +----------------+


                       Network Packet Format
                             Figure 5





                                                           Page 15


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


 4.2  Command Format
      LDP commands consist of a standard two-word header  followed
 optionally  by  additional data.  To facilitate parsing of multi-
 command messages, all commands contain an even number of  octets.
 Commands that contain an odd number of data octets must be padded
 with a null octet.
      The commands defined by the LDP specification  are  intended
 to  be of universal application to provide a common basis for all
 implementations.  Command class and type codes from 0 to 63.  are
 reserved  by the protocol.  Codes above 63. are available for the
 implementation of target-specific commands.



 4.2.1  Command Header
      LDP commands begin with a fixed length header.   The  header
 specifies the type of command and its length in octets.


                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |     Command Length (octets)   |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 | Command Class | Command Type  |
                  +---------------+---------------+


                     LDP Command Header Format
                             Figure 6


 HEADER FIELDS:
 Command Length
      The command length gives the total number of octets  in  the
      command,  including the length field and data, and excluding
      padding.
 Command Class
 Command Type



 Page 16


 LDP Specification                            Commands and Formats


      The command class and type  together  specify  a  particular
      command.   The  class selects one of six command categories,
      and the type gives the command within  that  category.   All
      codes are decimal.  The symbols given in Figures 7 and 8 for
      command classes and types are used in the remainder of  this
      document for reference.
      The command classes that have been defined are:


                 Command Class  |  Symbol
                ----------------+-----------
                        1       | PROTOCOL
                        2       | DATA_TRANSFER
                        3       | CONTROL
                        4       | MANAGEMENT
                        5       | BREAKPOINT
                        6       | CONDITION
                        7 - 63  | <reserved>


                          Command Classes
                             Figure 7


      Command  type  codes  are  assigned  in  order  of  expected
      frequency  of use.  Commands and their responses/replies are
      numbered  sequentially.   The  command  types,  ordered   by
      command class, are:











                                                           Page 17


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



                 Command Class  |  Command Type | Symbol
                ----------------+---------------+----------
                  PROTOCOL      |       1       | HELLO
                                |       2       | HELLO_REPLY
                                |       3       | SYNCH
                                |       4       | SYNCH_REPLY
                                |       5       | ERROR
                                |       6       | ERRACK
                                |       7       | ABORT
                                |       8       | ABORT_DONE
                                |       9 - 63  | <reserved>
                                |               |
                  DATA_TRANSFER |       1       | WRITE
                                |       2       | READ
                                |       3       | READ_DONE
                                |       4       | READ_DATA
                                |       5       | MOVE
                                |       6       | MOVE_DONE
                                |       7       | MOVE_DATA
                                |       8       | REPEAT_DATA
                                |       9       | BREAKPOINT_DATA
                                |       10      | WRITE_MASK
                                |       11 - 63 | <reserved>
                                |               |
                  CONTROL       |       1       | START
                                |       2       | STOP
                                |       3       | CONTINUE
                                |       4       | STEP
                                |       5       | REPORT
                                |       6       | STATUS
                                |       7       | EXCEPTION
                                |       8 - 63  | <reserved>
                                |               |
                  MANAGEMENT    |       1       | CREATE
                                |       2       | CREATE_DONE
                                |       3       | DELETE
                                |       4       | DELETE_DONE
                                |       5       | LIST_ADDRESSES
                                |       6       | ADDRESS_LIST
                                |       7       | GET_PHYS_ADDRESS
                                |       8       | GOT_PHYS_ADDRESS
                                |       9       | GET_OBJECT
                                |       10      | GOT_OBJECT
                                |       11      | LIST_BREAKPOINTS
                                |       12      | BREAKPOINT_LIST


 Page 18


 LDP Specification                            Commands and Formats


                                |       13      | LIST_NAMES
                                |       14      | NAME_LIST
                                |       15      | LIST_PROCESSES
                                |       16      | PROCESS_LIST
                                |       17 - 63 | <reserved>
                                |               |
                  BREAKPOINT    |       1       | INCREMENT
                                |       2       | INC_COUNT
                                |       3       | OR
                                |       4       | SET_PTR
                                |       5       | SET_STATE
                                |       6 - 63  | <reserved>
                                |               |
                  CONDITION     |       1       | CHANGED
                                |       2       | COMPARE
                                |       3       | COUNT_EQ
                                |       4       | COUNT_GT
                                |       5       | COUNT_LT
                                |       6       | TEST
                                |       7 - 63  | <reserved>


                           Command Types
                             Figure 8



 4.3  Addressing
      Addresses are used  in  LDP  commands  to  refer  to  memory
 locations,  processes,  buffers,  breakpoints and other entities.
 Many of these entities are machine-dependent; some machines  have
 named  objects,  some  machines have multiple address spaces, the
 size of address spaces varies, etc.  The  format  for  specifying
 addresses  needs  to  be  general  enough  to handle all of these
 cases.   This  speaks  for  a  large,  hierarchically  structured
 address  format.   However, the disadvantage of a large format is
 that it imposes extra overhead on communication with targets that
 have simpler address schemes.
      LDP resolves this conflict by employing two address formats:
 a  short  three-word format for addressing simpler targets, and a
 long five-word format for others.  Each target LDP is required to
 implement  at least one of these formats.  At the start of an LDP
 session, the target specifies the address format(s)  it  uses  in


                                                           Page 19


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


 the  Flag field of the HELLO_REPLY message.  In each address, the
 first bit of the mode octet is a format flag:  0  indicates  LONG
 address format, and 1 indicates SHORT format.



 4.3.1  Long Address Format
      The long address format is five words long and consists of a
 three-word  address  descriptor and a two-word offset (see Figure
 9). The descriptor specifies an address space to which the offset
 is applied.  The descriptor is subdivided into several fields, as
 described below.  The structuring of the descriptor  is  designed
 to  support  complex  addressing  modes.  For example, on targets
 with  multiple  processes,  descriptors  may  reference   virtual
 addresses,  registers,  and  other  entities  within a particular
 process.
      The addressing modes defined below are intended as a base to
 which  target-specific  modes  may be added.  Modes up to 63. are
 reserved by the protocol.  The range 64. to 127. may be used  for
 target-specific address modes.


           Long Format - Format bit is LONG=0
            0             0 0   1         1
            0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
           +-------------------------------+  +-+
           |0|       Mode  |  Mode Arg     |   |
           +-------------------------------+   |
           |                    (31-16)    |   | Descriptor
           +----          ID            ---+   |
           |                    (15-0)     |   |
           +-------------------------------+  +-+
           |                    (31-16)    |   |
           +----        Offset          ---+   | Offset
           |                    (15-0)     |   |
           +-------------------------------+  +-+


                        Long Address Format
                             Figure 9


 LONG ADDRESS FIELDS:


 Page 20


 LDP Specification                            Commands and Formats


 Mode
      The address mode identifies the type of address space  being
      referenced.   The mode is qualified by the mode argument and
      the ID field.  Implementation of modes other  than  physical
      and  host is machine-dependent.  Currently defined modes and
      the address space they reference are shown in Figure 10.


      Mode | Symbol               | Address space
      -----+----------------------+---------------------------
        0    HOST                   Host
        1    PHYS_MACRO             Macromemory
        2    PHYS_MICRO             Micromemory
        3    PHYS_I/O               I/O space
        4    PHYS_MACRO_PTR         Macro contains a pointer
        5    PHYS_REG               Register
        6    PHYS_REG_OFFSET        Register plus offset
        7    PHYS_REG_INDIRECT      Register contains address
                                    of a pointer
        8    PROCESS_CODE           Process code space
        9    PROCESS_DATA           Process data space
       10    PROCESS_DATA_PTR       Process data contains a ptr
       11    PROCESS_REG            Process virtual register
       12    PROCESS_REG_OFFSET     Process register plus offset
       13    PROCESS_REG_INDIRECT   Process register contains
                                    address of a pointer
       14    OBJECT_OFFSET          Memory object (queue, pool)
       15    OBJECT_HEADER          System header for an object
       16    BREAKPOINT             Breakpoint
       17    WATCHPOINT             Watchpoint
       18    BPT_PTR_OFFSET         Breakpoint ptr plus offset
       19    BPT_PTR_INDIRECT       Breakpoint ptr plus offset
                                    gives address of a pointer
       20 -  <reserved>
       63


                        Long Address Modes
                             Figure 10


 Mode Argument


                                                           Page 21


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


      Provides a numeric argument to the  mode  field.   Specifies
      the  register  in  physical  and  process REG and REG_OFFSET
      modes.
 ID Field
      Identifies a particular process, buffer or object.
 Offset
      The offset into the linear  address  space  defined  by  the
      mode.  The size of the machine word determines the number of
      significant bits in the offset.   Likewise,  the  addressing
      units of the target are the units of the offset.
 The interpretation of the mode argument, ID field and offset  for
 each address mode is given below:
 HOST
      The ID and offset fields are numbers assigned arbitrarily by
      the  host  side  of the debugger.  These numbers are used in
      MOVE and MOVE_DATA messages.  MOVE_DATA responses containing
      this  mode  as the destination are sent by the target to the
      host.  This may occur in debugging when data is sent to  the
      host from the target breakpoint.
 PHYS_MACRO
      The  offset  contains  the  32-bit  physical  address  of  a
      location in macromemory.  The mode argument and ID field are
      not used.   For  example,  mode=PHYS_MACRO  and  offset=1000
      specifies location 1000 in physical memory.
 PHYS_MICRO
      Like PHYS_MACRO, but the location is in micromemory.
 PHYS_I/O
      Like PHYS_MACRO, but the location is in I/O space.
 PHYS_MACRO_PTR
      The offset contains the address of a pointer in macromemory.
      The  location  pointed to (the effective address) is also in
      macromemory.  The mode argument and ID field are unused.


 Page 22


 LDP Specification                            Commands and Formats


 PHYS_REG
      The mode argument  gives  the  physical  register.   If  the
      register  is  used by the LDP target process, then the saved
      copy from  the  previous  context  is  used.   This  comment
      applies  to  PHYS_REG_OFFSET  mode as well.  The ID field is
      not used.
 PHYS_REG_OFFSET
      The offset is added to the contents of a register  given  as
      the mode argument.  The result is used as a physical address
      in macromemory.  ID is unused.
 PHYS_REG_INDIRECT
      The register specified in the mode arg contains the  address
      of  a  pointer in macromemory.  The effective address is the
      macromemory location specified  in  the  pointer,  plus  the
      offset.  The ID field is unused.
 PROCESS_CODE
      The ID is a process ID, the offset is into  the  code  space
      for this process.  Mode argument is not used.
 PROCESS_DATA
      The ID is a process ID, the offset is into  the  data  space
      for  this  process.   Mode argument is not used.  On systems
      that do not distinguish between code and data  space,  these
      two  modes are equivalent, and reference the virtual address
      space of the process.
 PROCESS_DATA_PTR
      The offset contains the address of a  pointer  in  the  data
      space  of  the  process  specified  by the ID.  The location
      pointed to (the effective  address)  is  also  in  the  data
      space.  The mode argument is not used.
 PROCESS_REG
      Accesses the  registers  (and  other  system  data)  of  the
      process  given  by the ID field.  Mode argument 0 starts the
      registers.  After the registers, the  mode  argument  is  an
      offset into the system area for the process.


                                                           Page 23


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


 PROCESS_REG_OFFSET
      The offset plus the contents of the register  given  in  the
      mode  argument specifies a location in the data space of the
      process specified by the ID.
 PROCESS_REG_INDIRECT
      The register specified in the mode arg contains the  address
      of  a  pointer in the data space of the process given by the
      ID.  The effective address is the location in  process  data
      space specified in the pointer, plus the offset.
 OBJECT_OFFSET (optional)
      The offset is into the memory space defined by the object ID
      in   ID.    Recommended  for  remote  control  of  parameter
      segments.
 OBJECT_HEADER (optional)
      The  offset  is  into  the  system  header  for  the  object
      specified by the ID.  Intended for use with the Butterfly.
 BREAKPOINT
      The descriptor specifies a breakpoint.  The offset is  never
      used,  this  type  is  only used in descriptors referring to
      breakpoints.  (See Breakpoints and Watchpoints,  below,  for
      an explanation of breakpoint descriptors.)
 WATCHPOINT
      The descriptor specifies a watchpoint.  The offset is  never
      used,  this  type  is  only used in descriptors referring to
      watchpoints.  (See Breakpoints and Watchpoints,  below,  for
      an explanation of watchpoint descriptors).
 BPT_PTR_OFFSET
      For  this  mode  and  BPT_PTR_INDIRECT,  the  mode  argument
      specifies  one  of two breakpoint pointer variables local to
      the breakpoint in which this address occurs.  These pointers
      and  the  SET_PTR command which manipulates them provide for
      an  arbitrary  amount  of  address  indirection.   They  are
      intended for use in traversing data structures: for example,
      chasing queues.  In BPT_PTR_OFFSET, the offset is  added  to


 Page 24


 LDP Specification                            Commands and Formats


      the  pointer  variable  to  give  the effective address.  In
      targets which support multiple processes, the location is in
      the  data  space of the process given by the ID.  Otherwise,
      the  location  is  a  physical  address   in   macro-memory.
      BPT_PTR.*   modes   are   valid   only  in  breakpoints  and
      watchpoints.
 BPT_PTR_INDIRECT
      Like BPT_PTR_OFFSET, except that it uses one more  level  of
      indirection.    The  pointer  variable  given  by  the  mode
      argument plus the offset specify an address which points  to
      the    effective    address.    See   the   description   of
      BPT_PTR_OFFSET for a discussion of  usage,  limitations  and
      address space.



 4.3.2  Short Address Format
      The  short  address  format   is   intended   for   use   in
 implementations  where protocol overhead must be minimized.  This
 format is a subset of the long address format:  it  contains  the
 same  fields  except  for  the  ID  field.   Therefore, the short
 addressing format supports only HOST and  PHYS_*  address  modes.
 Only  the LOADER_DUMPER implementation level commands may be used
 with the short addressing format.  The short  address  format  is
 three  words  long,  consisting  of  a 16-bit word describing the
 address space, and a 32-bit offset.











                                                           Page 25


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



                Short Format - Format bit is SHORT=1
                 0             0 0   1         1
                 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                +-------------------------------+
                |1|       Mode  | Mode Argument |
                +-------------------------------+  +-+
                |                    (31-16)    |   |
                +----        Offset          ---+   | Offset
                |                    (15-0)     |   |
                +-------------------------------+  +-+


                       Short Address Format
                             Figure 11


 SHORT ADDRESS FIELDS:
 Mode
      The high-order  bit  is  1,  indicating  the  short  address
      format.   A  list  of  the  address modes supported is given
      below.  The interpretation of the  remaining  fields  is  as
      described above for the long addressing format.













 Page 26


 LDP Specification                            Commands and Formats



      Mode | Symbol             | Address space
      -----+--------------------+---------------------------
        0    HOST                 Host
        1    PHYS_MACRO           Macro-memory
        2    PHYS_MICRO           Micro-memory
        3    PHYS_I/O             I/O space
        4    PHYS_MACRO_PTR       Macro contains a pointer
        5    PHYS_REG             Register
        6    PHYS_REG_OFFSET      Register plus offset
        7    PHYS_REG_INDIRECT    Register contains address
                                  of a pointer
        8 -
        32   <reserved>


                        Short Address Modes
                             Figure 12
















                                                           Page 27


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



























 Page 28


 LDP Specification                               Protocol Commands


                             CHAPTER 5


                         Protocol Commands


      Protocol  commands  are  used  for   error   handling,   for
 synchronizing  the command sequence number, and for communicating
 protocol implementation parameters.  Every protocol command has a
 corresponding  reply.   All  protocol  commands are sent from the
 host  to  the  target,  with  replies  flowing  in  the  opposite
 direction.



 5.1  HELLO Command
      The HELLO command is sent by the host to signal the start of
 an LDP session.  The target responds with HELLO_REPLY.


                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |               4               |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   PROTOCOL    |    HELLO      |
                  +---------------+---------------+


                       HELLO Command Format
                             Figure 13




 5.2  HELLO_REPLY
      A HELLO_REPLY is sent by the target in response to the HELLO
 command  at  the  start of an LDP session.  This reply is used to
 inform the host about the  target's implementation of LDP.



                                                           Page 29


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |               10              |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |    PROTOCOL   |   HELLO_REPLY |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                2 |   LDP Version |  System Type  |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                3 |   Options |W|S| Implementation|
                  +---------------+---------------+
                4 | Address Code  |    Reserved   |
                  +---------------+---------------+


                        HELLO_REPLY Format
                             Figure 14


 HELLO_REPLY FIELDS:
 LDP Version
      The  target's  LDP  protocol  version.    If   the   current
      host  protocol  version  does not agree  with  the  target's
      protocol  version,  the  host may terminate the session,  or
      may  continue it, at the discretion of the implementor.  The
      current version number is 2.
 System Type
      The type of system running on the target.  This is used as a
      check  against what the host thinks the target is.  The host
      is expected to have a table  of  target  system  types  with
      information  about  target  address  spaces, target-specific
      commands and addressing modes, and so forth.
      Currently defined system types are shown in Figure 15.  This
      list  includes  some  systems normally thought of as 'hosts'
      (e.g. C70, VAX), for implementations where targets  actively
      initiate and direct a load of themselves.




 Page 30


 LDP Specification                               Protocol Commands



         Code |  System       |  Description
      --------+---------------+---------------------------
           1     C30_16_BIT      BBN 16-bit C30
           2     C30_20_BIT      BBN 20-bit C30
           3     H316            Honeywell-316
           4     BUTTERFLY       BBN Butterfly
           5     PDP-11          DEC PDP-11
           6     C10             BBN C10
           7     C50             BBN C50
           8     PLURIBUS        BBN Pluribus
           9     C70             BBN C70
          10     VAX             DEC VAX
          11     MACINTOSH       Apple MacIntosh


                           System Types
                             Figure 15


 Address Code
      The address code indicates which LDP address  format(s)  the
      target is prepared to use.  Address codes are show in Figure
      16.


       Address Code |  Symbol       | Description
      --------------+---------------+-----------------------------
            1         LONG_ADDRESS    Five word address format.
                                      Supports all address modes
                                      and commands.
            2         SHORT_ADDRESS   Three word address format.
                                      Supports only physical and
                                      host address modes.  Only
                                      the LOADER_DUMPER set of
                                      commands are supported.


                       Target Address Codes
                             Figure 16


 Implementation


                                                           Page 31


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


      The implementation level   specifies   which   features   of
      the   protocol   are  implemented  in the target.  There are
      three levels of protocol implementation.  These  levels  are
      intended to correspond to the three most likely applications
      of LDP:  simple loading and dumping,  basic  debugging,  and
      full  debugging.   (Please see Implementations, above, for a
      detailed description of implementation  levels.)  There  are
      are  also several optional features that are not included in
      any particular level.
      Implementation levels are cumulative, that is,  each  higher
      level  includes  the  features  of all previous levels.  The
      levels are shown in Figure 17.


      Feature Level |  Symbol       | Description
      --------------+---------------+-----------------------------
             1        LOADER_DUMPER   Loader/dumper subset of LDP
             2        BASIC_DEBUGGER  Control commands, CREATE
             3        FULL_DEBUGGER   FSM breakpoints


                          Feature Levels
                             Figure 17


 Options
      The options field (see  Figure  18)  is  an  eight-bit  flag
      field.   Bit  flags  are  used to indicate if the target has
      implemented particular optional commands.  Not all  optional
      commands  are  referenced  in  this  field.  Commands  whose
      implementation   depends  on  target  machine  features  are
      omitted.   The  LDP  application is expected to 'know' about
      target features that are  not  intrinsic  to  the  protocol.
      Examples  of  target-dependent  commands  are  commands that
      refer to named objects (CREATE, LIST_NAMES).






 Page 32


 LDP Specification                               Protocol Commands



            Mask |  Symbol     | Description
           ------+-------------+---------------+-----------------
             1     STEP          The STEP command is implemented
             2     WATCHPOINTS   Watchpoints are implemented


                              Options
                             Figure 18




 5.3  SYNCH Command
      The SYNCH command is sent by the host  to  the  target.  The
 target  responds  with  a  SYNCH_REPLY.   The SYNCH - SYNCH_REPLY
 exchange serves two functions: it synchronizes the host-to-target
 implicit sequence number and acts as a cumulative acknowledgement
 of the receipt and execution of  all  host  commands  up  to  the
 SYNCH.


                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |               6               |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   PROTOCOL    |    SYNCH      |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                2 |       Sequence Number         |
                  +---------------+---------------+


                       SYNCH Command Format
                             Figure 19


 SYNCH FIELDS:
 Sequence Number



                                                           Page 33


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


      The sequence number of this command.  If this  is  not  what
      the  target  is  expecting,  the target will reset to it and
      respond with an ERROR reply.



 5.4  SYNCH_REPLY
      A SYNCH_REPLY is sent by the target in reponse  to  a  valid
 SYNCH  command.   A SYNCH command is valid if its sequence number
 agrees  with  the  sequence  number  the  target  is   expecting.
 Otherwise, the target will reset its sequence number to the SYNCH
 command and send an ERROR reply.


                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |               6               |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   PROTOCOL    |  SYNCH_REPLY  |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                2 |       Sequence Number         |
                  +---------------+---------------+


                        SYNCH_REPLY Format
                             Figure 20


 SYNCH_REPLY FIELDS:
 Sequence Number
      The sequence number of  the  SYNCH  command  to  which  this
      SYNCH_REPLY is the response.







 Page 34


 LDP Specification                               Protocol Commands


 5.5  ABORT Command
      The ABORT command is sent from the host to abort all pending
 operations  at  the target.  The target responds with ABORT_DONE.
 This is primarily intended to stop large data transfers from  the
 target.  A likely application would be during a debugging session
 when the user types an interrupt to abort  a  large  printout  of
 data  from  the  target.   The ABORT command has no effect on any
 breakpoints or watchpoints that may be enabled in the target.
      As a practical matter, the ABORT command may be difficult to
 implement  on  some  targets.   Its  ability to interrupt command
 processing on the target depends on the target being able to look
 ahead at incoming commands and receive an out-of-band signal from
 the host.  However, the effect of an ABORT  may  be  achieved  by
 simply closing and reopening the transport connection.


                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |               4               |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   PROTOCOL    |    ABORT      |
                  +---------------+---------------+


                       ABORT Command Format
                             Figure 21




 5.6  ABORT_DONE Reply
      The ABORT_DONE reply is sent from the target to the host  in
 response to an ABORT command.  This indicates that the target has
 terminated all  operations  that  were  pending  when  the  ABORT
 command  was  received.  The sequence number of the ABORT command
 is included in the reply.





                                                           Page 35


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |               4               |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   PROTOCOL    |    ABORT_DONE |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                2 |       Sequence Number         |
                  +---------------+---------------+


                      ABORT_DONE Reply Format
                             Figure 22


 ABORT_DONE FIELDS:
 Sequence Number
      The sequence number of the ABORT command that elicited  this
      reply.   This  enables   the  host  to  distinguish  between
      replies to multiple aborts.



 5.7  ERROR Reply
      The ERROR reply is sent by the target in response to  a  bad
 command.   The  ERROR  reply  gives  the  sequence  number of the
 offending command and a reason code.  The target ignores  further
 commands   until  an  ERRACK command is received.  The reason for
 ignoring commands is that the  proper  operation  of  outstanding
 commands  may  be  predicated  on  the execution of the erroneous
 command.






 Page 36


 LDP Specification                               Protocol Commands



                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |        Command Length         |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   PROTOCOL    |    ERROR      |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                2 |   Command Sequence Number     |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                3 |          Error code           |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                4 |       Optional Data           |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                                  *
                                  *
                                  *
                  +---------------+---------------+
                n |       Optional Data           |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                        ERROR Reply Format
                             Figure 23


 ERROR Reply FIELDS:
 Command Sequence Number
      The implicit sequence number of the erroneous command.
 Error Code
      A code specifying what error has taken place.  The currently
      defined codes are shown in Figure 24.








                                                           Page 37


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



                Error Code |  Symbol
                -----------+------------------------
                    1         BAD_COMMAND
                    2         BAD_ADDRESS_MODE
                    3         BAD_ADDRESS_ID
                    4         BAD_ADDRESS_OFFSET
                    5         BAD_CREATE_TYPE
                    6         NO_RESOURCES
                    7         NO_OBJECT
                    8         OUT_OF_SYNCH
                    9         IN_BREAKPOINT


                            ERROR Codes
                             Figure 24


      An explanation of each of these error codes follows:
      BAD_COMMAND
           The command was not meaningful to the  target  machine.
           This includes commands that are valid but unimplemented
           in this target.  Also, the command  was  not  valid  in
           this context.  For example, a command given by the host
           that  is  only  legal  in  a   breakpoint   (e.g.   IF,
           SET_STATE).
      BAD_ADDRESS_MODE <offending-address>
           The mode of an address given  in  the  command  is  not
           meaningful  to  this  target  system.   For  example, a
           PROCESS address mode on a target that does not  support
           multi-processing.
      BAD_ADDRESS_ID <offending-address>
           The ID field of an  address  didn't  correspond  to  an
           appropriate  thing.  For example, for a PROCESS address
           mode, the ID of a non-existent process.
      BAD_ADDRESS_OFFSET <offending-address>
           The offset field of the address was outside  the  legal
           range  for the thing addressed.  For example, an offset
           of 200,000 in PHYS_MACRO mode on a target with  64K  of


 Page 38


 LDP Specification                               Protocol Commands


           macro-memory.
      BAD_CREATE_TYPE
           The object type in a CREATE command was unknown.
      NO_RESOURCES
           A CREATE  command  failed  due  to  lack  of  necessary
           resources.
      NO_OBJECT
           A GET_OBJECT command failed to find the named object.
      OUT_OF_SYNCH
           The sequence  number  of  the  SYNCH  command  was  not
           expected  by the target.  The target has resynchronized
           to it.
      IN_BREAKPOINT <breakpoint-descriptor> <breakpoint-sequence#>
           <reason-code> [<optional-info>]
           An error occurred within  a  breakpoint  command  list.
           The given 16-bit sequence-number refers to the sequence
           number  of  the  CREATE  command   that   created   the
           breakpoint,  while  breakpoint-sequence#  refers to the
           sequence number of the command  within  the  breakpoint
           given by <breakpoint-descriptor>.



 5.8  ERRACK Acknowledgement
      An  ERRACK  is sent by the host  in  response  to  an  ERROR
 reply  from  the  target.  The ERRACK is used to acknowledge that
 the host has received the ERROR reply.






                                                           Page 39


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |               4               |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   PROTOCOL    |    ERRACK     |
                  +---------------+---------------+


                       ERRACK Command Format
                             Figure 25



















 Page 40


 LDP Specification                          Data Transfer Commands


                             CHAPTER 6


                      Data Transfer Commands


      Data transfer commands  transfer data between the  host  and
 the  target.  These commands are used for loading and dumping the
 target, and examining and depositing  locations  on  the  target.
 The  READ  command  reads  data from the target, the MOVE command
 moves data within the  target  or  from  the  target  to  another
 entity,  and  the  WRITE  command  writes  data  to  the  target.
 REPEAT_DATA makes copies of a pattern to  the  target  --  it  is
 useful  for  zeroing memory.  WRITE_MASK writes data with a mask,
 and is intended for modifying target  parameter tables.
      Data transmitted to  and from the target always  contains  a
 target  address.   In  writes  to the target, this is used as the
 destination of the data.  In reads from the  target,  the  target
 address  is  used by the host to identify where in the target the
 data came from.  In addition, the  MOVE  command  may  contain  a
 'host'  address  as  its  destination;  this  permits the host to
 further discriminate between possible sources of  data  from  the
 target -- from different breakpoints, debugging windows, etc.
      A read request to  the  target  may  generate  one  or  more
 response  messages.   In  particular,  responses  to requests for
 large amounts of data -- core  dumps,  for  example  --  must  be
 broken  up into multiple messages, if the block of data requested
 plus the LDP header exceeds the transport layer message size.
      In commands which contain data (WRITE, READ_DATA,  MOVE_DATA
 and REPEAT_DATA), if there are an odd number of data octets, then
 a  null octet is appended.  This is so that the next  command  in
 the  message,  if  any, will begin on an even octet.  The command
 length is the sum of the number of octets in the  command  header
 and  the  number  of octets of data, excluding the null octet, if
 any.
      The addressing formats which may be used with data  transfer
 commands  are  specified for each LDP session at the start of the
 session by the target  in  the  HELLO_REPLY  response.   See  the
 section  entitled  'Addressing',  above, for a description of LDP
 addressing formats and modes.   In  the  command  diagrams  given
 below,  the  short  addressing  format  is  illustrated.  For LDP
 sessions using long addressing, addresses are  five  words  long,


                                                           Page 41


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


 instead of three words, as shown here.  In both addressing modes,
 descriptors are three words and offsets are two words.


 6.1  WRITE Command
      The WRITE command is used to send octets of  data  from  the
 host  to  the  target.  This command specifies the address in the
 target where the data is to be stored, followed by  a  stream  of
 data  octets.   If  the  data  stream  contains  an odd number of
 octets, then a  null octet is appended so that the next  command,
 if  any,  will  begin  on  an even octet.  Since LDP must observe
 message size limitations  imposed  by  the  underlying  transport
 layer,  a  single  logical  write  may  need to be broken up into
 multiple WRITEs in separate transport messages.


                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |        Command Length         |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 | DATA_TRANSFER |    WRITE      |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                2 |                               |
                  +--          Target           --+
                3 |            Start              |
                  +--          Address          --+
                4 |                               |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                5 |  Data Octet   |  Data Octet   |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                                  *
                                  *
                                  *
                  +---------------+---------------+
                n |  Data Octet   | Data or Null  |
                  +---------------+---------------+


                       WRITE Command Format
                             Figure 26




 Page 42


 LDP Specification                          Data Transfer Commands


 WRITE FIELDS:
 Command Length
      The command  length  gives  the  number  of  octets  in  the
      command,  including  data  octets, but excluding the padding
      octet, if any.
 Target Start Address
      This is the address to begin storing  data  in  the  target.
      The  length  of the data to be stored may be inferred by the
      target from the command length.  An illegal address or range
      will generate an ERROR reply.
 Data Octets
      Octets of data to be stored in the target.  Data are  packed
      according  to  the packing convention described above.  Ends
      with a null octet if there are an odd number of data octets.



 6.2  READ Command
      The host uses the READ command  to   ask   the   target   to
 send  back  a contiguous block of data.  The data is specified by
 a target starting address and a count.  The  target  returns  the
 data  in  one or more READ_DATA commands, which give the starting
 address (in the target) of each segment of returned  data.   When
 the  transfer  is completed, the target sends a READ_DONE command
 to the host.









                                                           Page 43


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |               14              |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 | DATA_TRANSFER |    READ       |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                2 |                               |
                  +--          Target           --+
                3 |            Start              |
                  +--          Address          --+
                4 |                               |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                5 |            Address            |
                  +--          Unit             --+
                6 |            Count              |
                  +---------------+---------------+


                        READ Command Format
                             Figure 27


 READ FIELDS:
 Target Start Address
      The starting address of the requested block of target  data.
      The  target  sends an ERROR reply if the starting address is
      illegal, if the ending address computed from the sum of  the
      start  and the count is illegal, or if holes are encountered
      in the middle of the range.
 Address Unit Count
      The count of the number  of  target  indivisibly-addressable
      units  to be transferred.  For example, if the address space
      is PHYS_MACRO, a count of two and a start  address  of  1000
      selects the contents of locations 1000 and 1001.  'Count' is
      used instead of 'length' to avoid the problem of determining
      units  the  length  should be denominated in (octets, words,
      etc.).  The size and type of the unit will vary depending on
      the address space selected by the target start address.  The
      target should  reply  with  an  error  (if  it  is  able  to


 Page 44


 LDP Specification                          Data Transfer Commands


      determine  in  advance of a transfer) if the inclusive range
      of addresses specified by the start address  and  the  count
      contains an illegal or nonexistent address.



 6.3  READ_DATA Response
      The target uses the  READ_DATA  response  to  transmit  data
 requested  by  a  host  READ  command.   One  or  more  READ_DATA
 responses  may  be  needed  to  fulfill  a  given  READ  command,
 depending  on  the  size  of  the  data  block  requested and the
 transport layer message size  limits.   Each  READ_DATA  response
 gives the target starting address of its segment of data.  If the
 response contains an odd number of data octets, the  target  ends
 the response with a null octet.

















                                                           Page 45


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |        Command Length         |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 | DATA_TRANSFER |    READ_DATA  |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                2 |                               |
                  +--          Target           --+
                3 |            Start              |
                  +--          Address          --+
                4 |                               |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+
                5 |  Data Octet   |  Data Octet   |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                                  *                   |
                                  *                   | Data
                                  *                   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                n |  Data Octet   | Data or Null  |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+


                       DATA Response Format
                             Figure 28


 READ_DATA FIELDS:
 Command Length
      The command  length  gives  the  number  of  octets  in  the
      command,  including  data  octets, but excluding the padding
      octet, if any.  The host can calculate  the  length  of  the
      data  by  subtracting  the  header  length  from the command
      length.  Since the target address may be either three  words
      (short format) or five words (long format), the address mode
      must be checked to determine which is being used.
 Target Start Address
      This is the starting address of the  data  segment  in  this
      message.  The host may infer the length of the data from the
      command length.  The address format (short or long)  is  the


 Page 46


 LDP Specification                          Data Transfer Commands


      same as on the initial READ command.
 Data Octets
      Octets of data from the target.  Data are  packed  according
      to the packing convention described above.  Ends with a null
      octet if there are an odd number of data octets.



 6.4  READ_DONE Reply
      The target sends a READ_DONE reply to the host after it  has
 finished  transferring  the  data  requested  by  a READ command.
 READ_DONE specifies the sequence number of the READ command.


                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |               6               |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 | DATA_TRANSFER |    READ_DONE  |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                2 |      READ Sequence Number     |
                  +---------------+---------------+


                      READ_DONE Reply Format
                             Figure 29


 READ_DONE FIELDS:
 READ Sequence Number
      The sequence number of the READ command this is a reply to.






                                                           Page 47


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


 6.5  MOVE Command
      The MOVE command is sent by the host to move a block of data
 from  the  target  to  a  specified destination.  The destination
 address may specify a location in the target, in the host, or  in
 another  target  (for loading one target from another).  The data
 is specified by a target starting address  and  an  address  unit
 count.   The  target sends an ERROR reply if the starting address
 is illegal, if the ending address computed from the  sum  of  the
 start  and  the  count is illegal, or if holes are encountered in
 the middle of the range.  If the MOVE destination is  off-target,
 the  target  moves the data in one or MOVE_DATAs.  Other commands
 arriving at the target during the transfer should be processed in
 a  timely fashion, particularly the ABORT command.  When the data
 has been moved,  the  target  sends  a  MOVE_DONE  to  the  host.
 However,   a  MOVE  within  a  breakpoint  will  not  generate  a
 MOVE_DONE.
      A MOVE with a host destination differs from a READ  in  that
 it contains a host address.  This field is specified  by the host
 in the MOVE command and copied by the target into the  responding
 MOVE_DATA(s).   The   address   may   be  used  by  the  host  to
 differentiate data returned from multiple  MOVE  requests.   This
 information   may  be  useful  in  breakpoints,  in  multi-window
 debugging  and  in  communication  with  targets  with   multiple
 processors.   For example, the host sends the MOVE command to the
 target to  be  executed  during  a breakpoint.  The ID  field  in
 the  host address might be an index into a host breakpoint table.
 When the breakpoint executes,  the  host  would  use  the  ID  to
 associate the returning MOVE_DATA with this breakpoint.











 Page 48


 LDP Specification                          Data Transfer Commands



                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |        Command Length         |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 | DATA_TRANSFER |    MOVE       |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                2 |                               |
                  +--          Source           --+
                3 |            Start              |
                  +--          Address          --+
                4 |                               |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                5 |            Address            |
                  +--          Unit             --+
                6 |            Count              |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                7 |                               |
                  +--          Destination      --+
                8 |            Start              |
                  +--          Address          --+
                9 |                               |
                  +---------------+---------------+


                        MOVE Command Format
                             Figure 30


 MOVE  FIELDS:
 Source Start Address
      The starting address of the requested block of target  data.
      An illegal address type will generate an error reply.
 Address Unit Count
      The count of the number  of  target  indivisibly-addressable
      units  to be transferred.  For example, if the address space
      is PHYS_MACRO, a count of two and a start  address  of  1000
      selects the contents of locations 1000 and 1001.  'Count' is
      used instead of 'length' to avoid the problem of determining
      units  the  length  should be denominated in (octets, words,


                                                           Page 49


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


      etc.).  The size and type of the unit will vary depending on
      the address space selected by the target start address.  The
      target should  reply  with  an  error  (if  it  is  able  to
      determine  in  advance of a transfer) if the inclusive range
      of addresses specified by the start address  and  the  count
      contains an illegal or nonexistent address.
 Destination Address
      The destination of the MOVE.  If the address space is on the
      target,  the address unit size should agree with that of the
      source address space.  If the address  mode  is  HOST,   the
      values  and  interpretations of the remaining address fields
      are   arbitrary,   and   are   determined   by   the    host
      implementation.    For  example,  the  mode  argument  might
      specify a table (breakpoint, debugging window, etc.) and the
      ID field an index into the table.




 6.6  MOVE_DATA Response
      The target uses the MOVE_DATA  responses  to  transmit  data
 requested  by  a  host  MOVE  command.   One  or  more  MOVE_DATA
 responses  may  be  needed  to  fulfill  a  given  MOVE  command,
 depending  on  the  size  of  the  data  block  requested and the
 transport layer message size  limits.   Each  MOVE_DATA  response
 gives the target starting address of its segment of data.  If the
 response contains an odd number of data octets, the target should
 end the response with a null octet.









 Page 50


 LDP Specification                          Data Transfer Commands



                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |        Command Length         |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 | DATA_TRANSFER |    MOVE_DATA  |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                2 |                               |
                  +--          Source           --+
                3 |            Start              |
                  +--          Address          --+
                4 |                               |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                5 |                               |
                  +--          Destination      --+
                6 |            Start              |
                  +--          Address          --+
                7 |                               |
                  +---------------+---------------+    +-+
                8 |  Data Octet   |  Data Octet   |     |
                  +---------------+---------------+     |
                                  *                     |
                                  *                     | Data
                                  *                     |
                  +---------------+---------------+     |
                n |  Data Octet   | Data or Null  |     |
                  +---------------+---------------+    +-+


                     MOVE_DATA Response Format
                             Figure 31


 MOVE_DATA FIELDS:
 Command Length
      The command  length  gives  the  number  of  octets  in  the
      command,  including  data  octets, but excluding the padding
      octet, if any.
 Source Start Address
      This is the starting address of the  data  segment  in  this


                                                           Page 51


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


      message.   The  host  may  infer length of the data from the
      command length.
 Destination Address
      The destination address copied from the  MOVE  command  that
      initiated this transfer.  In the case of HOST MOVEs, this is
      used by the host to identify the source of the data.
 Data Octets
      Octets of data from the target.  Data are  packed  according
      to the packing convention described above.  Ends with a null
      octet if there are an odd number of data octets.



 6.7  MOVE_DONE Reply
      The target sends a MOVE_DONE reply to the host after it  has
 finished  transferring  the  data  requested  by  a MOVE command.
 MOVE_DONE specifies the sequence number of the MOVE command.


                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |               6               |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 | DATA_TRANSFER |    MOVE_DONE  |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                2 |      MOVE Sequence Number     |
                  +---------------+---------------+


                      MOVE_DONE Reply Format
                             Figure 32


 MOVE_DONE FIELDS:
 MOVE Sequence Number
      The sequence number of the MOVE command this is a reply to.


 Page 52


 LDP Specification                          Data Transfer Commands


 6.8  REPEAT_DATA
      The REPEAT_DATA command is sent by the host to write  copies
 of  a  specified  pattern  into  the  target.   This  provides an
 efficient way of zeroing target memory  and  initializing  target
 data  structures.   The  command  specifies  the  target starting
 address, the number of copies of the pattern to be  made,  and  a
 stream of octets that constitutes the pattern.
      This command differs from the other data  transfer  commands
 in  that  the effect of a REPEAT_DATA with a large pattern cannot
 be duplicated by sending the data in smaller chunks over  several
 commands.   Therefore,  the maximum size of a pattern that can be
 copied with REPEAT_DATA will depend on the message size limits of
 the transport layer.


                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |        Command Length         |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 | DATA_TRANSFER | REPEAT_DATA   |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                2 |                               |
                  +--          Target           --+
                3 |            Start              |
                  +--          Address          --+
                4 |                               |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                6 |         Repeat Count          |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+
                7 |  Data Octet   |  Data Octet   |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                                  *                   |
                                  *                   | Pattern
                                  *                   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                n |  Data Octet   | Data or Null  |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+


                    REPEAT_DATA Command Format
                             Figure 33



                                                           Page 53


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


 REPEAT_DATA FIELDS:
 Command Length
      The command  length  gives  the  number  of  octets  in  the
      command, including data octets in the pattern, but excluding
      the padding octet, if any.
 Target Start Address
      This is the starting address where the  first  copy  of  the
      pattern  should be written in the target.  Successive copies
      of the  pattern  are  made  contiguously  starting  at  this
      address.
 Repeat Count
      The repeat count specifies  the  number  of  copies  of  the
      pattern that should be made in the target.  The repeat count
      should be greater than zero.
 Pattern
      The pattern to be copied into  the  target,  packed  into  a
      stream  of octets.  Data are packed according to the packing
      convention described above.  Ends with a null octet if there
      are an odd number of data octets.



 6.9  WRITE_MASK Command (Optional)
      The host sends a WRITE_MASK command to the target  to  write
 one  or  more  masked  values.   The  command  uses an address to
 specify a target base location, followed by one or  more  offset-
 mask-value triplets.  Each triplet gives an offset from the base,
 a value, and a mask indicating which bits in the location at  the
 offset are to be changed.
      This optional command is intended for use in controlling the
 target  by changing locations in a table.  For example, it may be
 used  to  change  entries  in  a  target  parameter  table.   The
 operation  of  modifying a specified location with a masked value
 is intended to be atomic.  In other words, another target process
 should  not be able to access the location to be modified between


 Page 54


 LDP Specification                          Data Transfer Commands


 the start and the end of the modification.

























                                                           Page 55


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |        Command Length         |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 | DATA_TRANSFER | WRITE_MASK    |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                2 |                               |
                  +--          Target           --+
                3 |            Base               |
                  +--          Address          --+
                4 |                               |
                  +---------------+---------------+   +-+
                5 |                               |    |
                  +--          Offset           --+    |
                6 |                               |    |
                  +---------------+---------------+    | Offset-Mask-Value
                7 |                               |    | Triplet
                  +--          Mask             --+    |
                8 |                               |    |
                  +---------------+---------------+    |
                9 |                               |    |
                  +--          Value            --+    |
                10|                               |    |
                  +---------------+---------------+   +-+
                                  *
                                  *
                                  *
                  +---------------+---------------+   +-+
                  |                               |    |
                  +--          Offset           --+    |
                  |                               |    |
                  +---------------+---------------+    | Offset-Mask-Value
                  |                               |    | Triplet
                  +--          Mask             --+    |
                  |                               |    |
                  +---------------+---------------+    |
                  |                               |    |
                  +--          Value            --+    |
                  |                               |    |
                  +---------------+---------------+   +-+


                         WRITE_MASK Format
                             Figure 34


 Page 56


 LDP Specification                          Data Transfer Commands


 WRITE_MASK FIELDS:
 Command Length
      The command  length  gives  the  number  of  octets  in  the
      command.  The number of offset-value pairs may be calculated
      from this, since the command  header  is  either  10  or  12
      octets  long  (short  or  long  address  format),  and  each
      offset-mask-value triplet is 12 octets long.
 Target Base Address
      Specifies the target location to which the offset  is  added
      to yield the location to be modified.
 Offset
      An offset to be added to the base to select a location to be
      modified.
 Mask
      Specifies which bits in the value are to be copied into  the
      location.
 Value
      A value to be stored at the specified offset from the  base.
      The  set  bits in the mask determine which bits in the value
      are applied to the location.  The following  algorithm  will
      achieve  the  intended result:  take the one's complement of
      the mask and AND it with the location, leaving the result in
      the  location.   Then AND the mask and the value, and OR the
      result into the location.










                                                           Page 57


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



























 Page 58


 LDP Specification                                Control Commands


                             CHAPTER 7


                         Control Commands


      Control commands are used to control the execution of target
 code,  breakpoints  and  watchpoints.  They are also used to read
 and report  the  state  of  these  objects.   The  object  to  be
 controlled  or reported on is specified with a descriptor.  Valid
 descriptor modes include PHYS_* (for some commands) PROCESS_CODE,
 BREAKPOINT  and  WATCHPOINT.   Control  commands which change the
 state of the target are START, STOP, CONTINUE and  STEP.   REPORT
 requests  a  STATUS  report  on  a target object.  EXCEPTION is a
 spontaneous report on an  object,  used  to  report  asynchronous
 events such as hardware traps.  The host may verify the action of
 a START, STOP, STEP or CONTINUE command by following  it  with  a
 REPORT command.



 7.1  START Command
      The START command is sent by the host to start execution  of
 a  specified  object  in  the  target.  For targets which support
 multiple processes, a PROCESS_CODE address specifies the  process
 to  be  started.  Otherwise, one of the  PHYS_* modes may specify
 a location  in  macro-memory  where  execution  is  to  continue.
 Applied  to  a  breakpoint or watchpoint, START sets the value of
 the object's state variable, and activates the  breakpoint.   The
 breakpoint counter and pointer variables are initialized to zero.









                                                           Page 59


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |               14              |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   CONTROL     |     START     |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+
                2 |    Mode       |     0         |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                3 |                               |   |
                  +--            ID             --+   |
                4 |              Field            |   |  Address
                  +-------------------------------+   |
                5 |                               |   |
                  +--            Offset         --+   |
                6 |                               |   |
                  +-------------------------------+  +-+


                       START Command Format
                             Figure 35


 START FIELDS:
 Address
      The descriptor specifies the object to be started.   If  the
      mode  is  PROCESS_CODE,  ID  specifies  the  process  to  be
      started, and offset gives the  process  virtual  address  to
      start at.  If the mode is PHYS_*, execution of the target is
      continued at the specified address.
      For modes of BREAKPOINT and WATCHPOINT, the offset specifies
      the  new  value  of the FSM state variable.  This is for FSM
      breakpoints and watchpoints.






 Page 60


 LDP Specification                                Control Commands


 7.2  STOP Command
      The STOP command is sent by the host to stop execution of  a
 specified  object  in  the  target.   A  descriptor specifies the
 object. Applied to a breakpoint or watchpoint,  STOP  deactivates
 it.   The  breakpoint/watchpoint may be re-activated by issuing a
 START or a CONTINUE command for it.


                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |               10              |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   CONTROL     |     STOP      |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+
                2 |    Mode       |     0         |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                3 |                               |   |  Descriptor
                  +--            ID             --+   |
                4 |              Field            |   |
                  +-------------------------------+  +-+


                        STOP Command Format
                             Figure 36


 STOP FIELDS:
 Descriptor
      The  descriptor  specifies  the  object  to  be  stopped  or
      disarmed.  If the mode is PROCESS_CODE, the ID specifies the
      process to be stopped.
      For  modes  of  BREAKPOINT  and  WATCHPOINT,  the  specified
      breakpoint  or  watchpoint  is  deactivated.   It may be re-
      activated by a CONTINUE or START command.






                                                           Page 61


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


 7.3  CONTINUE Command
      The CONTINUE command is sent by the host to resume execution
 of  a specified object in the target.  A descriptor specifies the
 object. Applied to a breakpoint or watchpoint, CONTINUE activates
 it.


                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |               10              |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   CONTROL     |     CONTINUE  |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+
                2 |    Mode       |     0         |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                3 |                               |   |  Descriptor
                  +--            ID             --+   |
                4 |              Field            |   |
                  +-------------------------------+  +-+


                      CONTINUE Command Format
                             Figure 37


 CONTINUE FIELDS:
 Descriptor
      The descriptor specifies the object to be resumed or  armed.
      If the mode is PROCESS_CODE, the ID specifies the process to
      be resumed.
      For  modes  of  BREAKPOINT  and  WATCHPOINT,  the  specified
      breakpoint or watchpoint is armed.


 7.4  STEP Command
      The STEP command is sent by the  host  to  the  target.   It
 requests   the  execution  of  one  instruction  (or  appropriate
 operation) in the object specified by the descriptor.



 Page 62


 LDP Specification                                Control Commands



                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |               10              |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   CONTROL     |     STEP      |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+
                2 |    Mode       |     0         |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                3 |                               |   |  Descriptor
                  +--            ID             --+   |
                4 |              Field            |   |
                  +-------------------------------+  +-+


                        STEP Command Format
                             Figure 38


 STEP FIELDS:
 Descriptor
      The descriptor specifies the object to be stepped.   If  the
      mode is PROCESS_CODE, the ID specifies a process.


 7.5  REPORT Command
      The REPORT command is sent by the host to request  a  status
 report on a specified target object.  The status is returned in a
 STATUS reply.








                                                           Page 63


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |               10              |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   CONTROL     |     REPORT    |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+
                2 |    Mode       |     0         |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                3 |                               |   |  Descriptor
                  +--            ID             --+   |
                4 |              Field            |   |
                  +-------------------------------+  +-+


                       REPORT Command Format
                             Figure 39


 REPORT FIELDS:
 Descriptor
      The descriptor specifies  the  object  for  which  a  STATUS
      report  is  requested.   For  a mode of PROCESS_CODE, the ID
      specifies a process.  Other valid modes are  PHYS_MACRO,  to
      query  the  status of the target application, and BREAKPOINT
      and WATCHPOINT,  to  get  the  status  of  a  breakpoint  or
      watchpoint.


 7.6  STATUS Reply
      The target sends a STATUS reply  in  response  to  a  REPORT
 command  from  the  host.   STATUS gives the state of a specified
 object.  For example, it may tell  whether  a  particular  target
 process is running or stopped.






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 LDP Specification                                Control Commands



                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |         Command Length        |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   CONTROL     |     STATUS    |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+
                2 |    Mode       |     0         |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                3 |                               |   |  Descriptor
                  +--            ID             --+   |
                4 |              Field            |   |
                  +-------------------------------+  +-+
                5 |              Status           |
                  +-------------------------------+  +-+
                                  *                   |
                                  *                   |
                                  *                   |  Other Data
                  +-------------------------------+   |
                n |        Other Data             |   |
                  +-------------------------------+  +-+


                        STATUS Reply Format
                             Figure 40


 STATUS FIELDS:
 Descriptor
      The descriptor specifies the object whose  status  is  being
      given.  If the mode is PROCESS_CODE, then the ID specifies a
      process.  If the mode is PHYS_MACRO, then the status is that
      of the target application.
 Status
      The status code describes the status of the object.   Status
      codes  are  0=STOPPED  and  1=RUNNING.   For breakpoints and
      watchpoints, STOPPED means disarmed and RUNNING means armed.
 Other Data
      For breakpoints and watchpoints, Other Data  consists  of  a


                                                           Page 65


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


      16-bit  word  giving  the  current  value  of  the FSM state
      variable.



 7.7  EXCEPTION Trap
      An EXCEPTION is a spontaneous message sent from  the  target
 indicating   a   target-machine   exception   associated  with  a
 particular object. The object is specified by an address.


                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |         Command Length        |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   CONTROL     |   EXCEPTION   |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+
                2 |    Mode       |     0         |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                3 |                               |   |
                  +--            ID             --+   |
                4 |              Field            |   |  Address
                  +-------------------------------+   |
                5 |                               |   |
                  +--            Offset         --+   |
                6 |                               |   |
                  +-------------------------------+  +-+
                7 |              Type             |
                  +-------------------------------+  +-+
                                  *                   |
                                  *                   |
                                  *                   |  Other Data
                  +-------------------------------+   |
                n |        Other Data             |   |
                  +-------------------------------+  +-+


                         EXCEPTION Format
                             Figure 41


 EXCEPTION FIELDS:
 Address


 Page 66


 LDP Specification                                Control Commands


      The address specifies the object the exception is for.
 Type
      The type of exception.  Values are target-dependent.
 Other Data
      Values are target-dependent.





















                                                           Page 67


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 Page 68


 LDP Specification                             Management Commands


                             CHAPTER 8


                        Management Commands


      Management commands are used to  control  resources  in  the
 target  machine.   There  are  two kinds of commands:  those that
 interrogate the remote machine about resources,  and  those  that
 allocate  and  free  resources.  There are management commands to
 create,  list  and  delete  breakpoints.    All   commands   have
 corresponding  replies  which  include the sequence number of the
 request command.  Failing requests produce ERROR replies.
      There are  two  resource  allocation  commands,  CREATE  and
 DELETE,  which  create  and delete objects in the remote machine.
 There are a number of listing commands for listing a  variety  of
 target objects -- breakpoints, watchpoints, processes, and names.
 The amount of data returned  by  listing  commands  may  vary  in
 length,  depending  on the state of the target.  If a list is too
 large to fit in a single message, the  target  will  send  it  in
 several  list  replies.   A  flag in each reply specifies whether
 more messages are to follow.



 8.1  CREATE Command
      The CREATE command is sent from the host to  the  target  to
 create  a target object.  If the CREATE is successful, the target
 returns  a  CREATE_DONE  reply,  which  contains   a   descriptor
 associated  with  the  CREATEd object.  The types of objects that
 may be specified in  a  CREATE  include  breakpoints,  processes,
 memory  objects  and  descriptors.   All  are optional except for
 breakpoints.







                                                           Page 69


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |        Command Length         |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 | MANAGEMENT    |     CREATE    |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                2 |           Create Type         |
                  +---------------+---------------+   +-+
                                  *                    |
                                  *                    |  Create
                                  *                    |  Arguments
                  +---------------+---------------+    |
                n |         Create Arguments      |    |
                  +---------------+---------------+   +-+


                       CREATE Command Format
                             Figure 42


 CREATE FIELDS:
 Create Type
      The type of object to be created.  Arguments vary  with  the
      type.   Currently defined types are shown in Figure 43.  All
      are optional except for BREAKPOINT.


                Create Type  |  Symbol
                -------------+----------------
                   0            BREAKPOINT
                   1            WATCHPOINT
                   2            PROCESS
                   3            MEMORY_OBJECT
                   4            DESCRIPTOR


                           Create Types
                             Figure 43



 Page 70


 LDP Specification                             Management Commands


 Create Arguments
      Create arguments depend on the type of object being created.
      The formats for each type of object are described below.


                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |               22              |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   MANAGEMENT  |     CREATE    |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                2 |           BREAKPOINT          |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+
                3 |    Mode       | Mode Argument |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                4 |                               |   |
                  +--            ID             --+   |  Create
                5 |              Field            |   |  BREAKPOINT
                  +-------------------------------+   |  Arguments
                6 |                               |   |
                  +--            Offset         --+   |
                7 |                               |   |
                  +-------------------------------+   |
                8 |        Maximum States         |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                9 |        Maximum Size           |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                10|     Maximum Local Variables   |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+


                     CREATE BREAKPOINT Format
                             Figure 44


 BREAKPOINT and WATCHPOINT
      The format  is the same for  CREATE  BREAKPOINT  and  CREATE
      WATCHPOINT.   In  the following discussion, 'breakpoint' may
      be taken to mean either breakpoint or watchpoint.
      The address is the location where the breakpoint  is  to  be
      set.   In  the  case of watchpoints it is the location to be


                                                           Page 71


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


      watched.  Valid modes are any  PHYS_*  mode  that  addresses
      macro-memory,  PROCESS_CODE for breakpoints and PROCESS_DATA
      for watchpoints.
      'Maximum states' is the number of states  the  finite  state
      machine  for  this  breakpoint  will  have.  A value of zero
      indicates a default breakpoint, for  targets  which  do  not
      implement finite state machine (FSM) breakpoints.  A default
      breakpoint is the same as an FSM with one  state  consisting
      of  a  STOP  and a REPORT command for the process containing
      the breakpoint.
      'Maximum  size'  is  the  total  size,  in  octets,  of  the
      breakpoint  data  to  be sent via subsequent BREAKPOINT_DATA
      commands.  This is the size of the data only, and  does  not
      include the LDP command headers and breakpoint descriptors.
      'Maximum local variables' is the number of 32-bit  longs  to
      reserve  for  local variables for this breakpoint.  Normally
      this value will be zero.
 PROCESS
      Creates a new process.  Arguments are target-dependent.














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 LDP Specification                             Management Commands



                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |        Command Length         |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   MANAGEMENT  |     CREATE    |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                2 |         MEMORY_OBJECT         |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                3 |         Object Size           |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                4 |           Name Size           |
                  +-------------------------------+  +-+
                5 |    Name char  |  Name char    |   |
                  +-------------------------------+   |
                                  *                   |  Object
                                  *                   |  Name
                                  *                   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                n | 0 or Name char|       0       |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+


                    CREATE MEMORY_OBJECT Format
                             Figure 45



 MEMORY_OBJECT
      Creates an object of size Object Size, with the given  name.
      Object  Size  is in target dependent units.  The name may be
      the null string for unnamed objects.  Name  Size  gives  the
      number  of  characters  in  Object  Name,  and must be even.
      Always ends with a null octect.
 DESCRIPTOR
      Used for obtaining descriptors from IDs  on  target  systems
      where  IDs  are  longer  than  32  bits.   There is a single
      argument, Long ID, whose length is target dependent.




                                                           Page 73


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


 8.2  CREATE_DONE Reply
      The target sends a CREATE_DONE reply to the host in response
 to  a successful CREATE command.  The reply contains the sequence
 number of the CREATE request, and a  descriptor  for  the  object
 created.   This  descriptor  is  used  by the host to specify the
 object in subsequent commands referring to  it.   Commands  which
 refer  to  created  objects  include  LIST_* commands, DELETE and
 BREAKPOINT_DATA.  For example, to delete a  CREATEd  object,  the
 host  sends  a  DELETE  command  that  specifies  the  descriptor
 returned by the CREATE_DONE reply.


                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |               12              |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   MANAGEMENT  |  CREATE_DONE  |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                2 |     Create Sequence Number    |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+
                3 |    Mode       | Mode Argmuent |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |  Created
                4 |                               |   |  Object
                  +--            ID             --+   |  Descriptor
                5 |              Field            |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+


                     CREATE_DONE Reply Format
                             Figure 46


 CREATE_DONE FIELDS:
 Create Sequence Number
      The sequence number of the CREATE command to which  this  is
      the reply.
 Created Object Descriptor
      A descriptor assigned by the target to the  created  object.
      The  contents  of  the  descriptor  fields  are  arbitrarily


 Page 74


 LDP Specification                             Management Commands


      assigned by the target at its convenience.  The host  treats
      the  descriptor  as  a unitary object, used for referring to
      the created object in subsequent commands.



 8.3  DELETE Command
      The host sends a DELETE command to remove an object  created
 by  an  earlier  CREATE  command.   The  object  to be deleted is
 specified  with  a  descriptor.   The  descriptor  is  from   the
 CREATE_DONE reply to the original CREATE command.


                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |               10              |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   MANAGEMENT  |    DELETE     |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+
                2 |    Mode       | Mode Argument |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                3 |                               |   |  Created
                  +--            ID             --+   |  Object
                4 |              Field            |   |  Descriptor
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+


                       DELETE Command Format
                             Figure 47


 DELETE FIELDS:
      Created Object Descriptor
      Specifies the object to be deleted.  This is the  descriptor
      that  was returned by the target in the CREATE_DONE reply to
      the original CREATE command.




                                                           Page 75


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


 8.4  DELETE_DONE Reply
      The target sends a DELETE_DONE reply to the host in response
 to  a successful DELETE command.  The reply contains the sequence
 number of the DELETE request.


                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |               6               |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   MANAGEMENT  | DELETE_DONE   |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                2 |     Delete Sequence Number    |
                  +---------------+---------------+


                     DELETE_DONE Reply Format
                             Figure 48


 DELETE_DONE FIELDS:
 Request Sequence Number
      The sequence number of the DELETE command to which  this  is
      the reply.



 8.5  LIST_ADDRESSES Command
      The host sends a LIST_ADDRESSES command to request a list of
 valid address ranges for a specified object.  The object is given
 by a descriptor.  Typical objects are a target  process,  or  the
 target   physical   machine.    The   target   responds  with  an
 ADDRESS_LIST reply.  This command is used for obtaining the  size
 of dynamic address spaces and for determining dump ranges.




 Page 76


 LDP Specification                             Management Commands



                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |               10              |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   MANAGEMENT  | LIST_ADDRESSES|
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+
                2 |    Mode       | Mode Argument |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |  Object
                3 |                               |   |  Descriptor
                  +--            ID             --+   |
                4 |              Field            |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+


                   LIST_ADDRESSES Command Format
                             Figure 49


 LIST_ADDRESSES FIELDS:
      Object Descriptor
      Specifies the object whose address ranges are to be  listed.
      Valid  modes  include  PHYS_MACRO, PHYS_MICRO, PROCESS_CODE,
      and PROCESS_DATA.




 8.6  ADDRESS_LIST Reply
      The target sends  an  ADDRESS_LIST  reply  to  the  host  in
 response  to  a  successful  LIST_ADDRESSES  command.   The reply
 contains the sequence number of the LIST_ADDRESSES  request,  the
 descriptor  of  the  object being listed, and a list of the valid
 address ranges within the  object.





                                                           Page 77


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |        Command Length         |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   MANAGEMENT  | ADDRESS_LIST  |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                2 |      List Sequence Number     |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                3 |   Flags     |M| Item Count    |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                4 |                               |
                  +--                           --+
                5 |          Descriptor           |
                  +--                           --+
                6 |                               |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+
                7 |                               |   |
                  +--        First Address      --+   | First
                8 |                               |   | Address
                  +-------------------------------+   | Range
                9 |                               |   |
                  +--         Last Address      --+   |
                10|                               |   |
                  +-------------------------------+  +-+
                                  *
                                  *
                                  *
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+
                  |                               |   |
                  +--        First Address      --+   | Last
                  |                               |   | Address
                  +-------------------------------+   | Range
                  |                               |   |
                  +--         Last Address      --+   |
                  |                               |   |
                  +-------------------------------+  +-+


                     ADDRESS_LIST Reply Format
                             Figure 50




 Page 78


 LDP Specification                             Management Commands


 ADDRESS_LIST FIELDS:
 List Sequence Number
      The sequence number of the LIST_ADDRESSES command  to  which
      this is the reply.
 Flags
      If M=1, the  address  list  is  continued  in  one  or  more
      subsequent  ADDRESS_LIST replies.  If M=0, this is the final
      ADDRESS_LIST.
 Item Count
      The number of address ranges described in this command.
 Descriptor
      The descriptor of the object being listed.
 Address Range
      Each address range is composed of a pair of 32-bit addresses
      which  give  the  first and last addresses of the range.  If
      there are 'holes' in the address space of the  object,  then
      multiple  address  ranges will be used to describe the valid
      address space.




 8.7  LIST_BREAKPOINTS Command
      The host sends a LIST_BREAKPOINTS command to request a  list
 of  all  breakpoints associated with the current connection.  The
 target replies with BREAKPOINT_LIST.






                                                           Page 79


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |               4               |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   MANAGEMENT  |LIST_BREAKPOINTS
                  +---------------+---------------+


                  LIST_BREAKPOINTS Command Format
                             Figure 51




 8.8  BREAKPOINT_LIST Reply
      The target sends a BREAKPOINT_LIST  reply  to  the  host  in
 response  to  a LIST_BREAKPOINTS command.  The reply contains the
 sequence number of the LIST_BREAKPOINTS request, and  a  list  of
 all  breakpoints  associated  with  the  current connection.  The
 descriptor and address of each breakpoint are listed.












 Page 80


 LDP Specification                             Management Commands



                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |        Command Length         |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   MANAGEMENT  |BREAKPOINT_LIST|
                  +---------------+---------------+
                2 |      List Sequence Number     |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                3 |   Flags     |M| Item Count    |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+
                4 |    Mode       |     0         |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                5 |                               |   |  Breakpoint
                  +--            ID             --+   |  Descriptor
                6 |              Field            |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+
                7 |    Mode       | Mode Argument |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                8 |                               |   |
                  +--            ID             --+   |  Breakpoint
                9 |              Field            |   |  Address
                  +-------------------------------+   |
                10|                               |   |
                  +--            Offset         --+   |
                11|                               |   |
                  +-------------------------------+  +-+
                                  *                   |  Additional
                                  *                   |  Descriptor-Address
                                  *                   |  Pairs
                                                     +-+


                   BREAKPOINT_LIST Reply Format
                             Figure 52


 BREAKPOINT_LIST FIELDS:
 List Sequence Number
      The sequence number of the LIST_BREAKPOINTS command to which
      this is the reply.
 Flags


                                                           Page 81


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


      If M=1, the breakpoint list is  continued  in  one  or  more
      subsequent  BREAKPOINT_LIST  replies.   If  M=0, this is the
      final BREAKPOINT_LIST.
 Item Count
      The number of breakpoints described in this list.
 Breakpoint Descriptor
      A descriptor assigned by  the  target  to  this  breakpoint.
      Used   by   the   host   to   specify   this  breakpoint  in
      BREAKPOINT_DATA and DELETE commands.
 Breakpoint Address
      The address at which this breakpoint is set.




 8.9  LIST_PROCESSES Command
      The host sends a LIST_PROCESSES command to request a list of
 descriptors  for all processes on the target.  The target replies
 with PROCESS_LIST.


                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |               4               |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   MANAGEMENT  |LIST_PROCESSES |
                  +---------------+---------------+


                   LIST_PROCESSES Command Format
                             Figure 53





 Page 82


 LDP Specification                             Management Commands


 8.10  PROCESS_LIST Reply
      The target  sends  a  PROCESS_LIST  reply  to  the  host  in
 response  to  a  LIST_PROCESSES  command.  The reply contains the
 sequence number of the LIST_PROCESSES request, and a list of  all
 processes  in  the  target.  For each process, a descriptor and a
 target-dependent amount of process data are given.


                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |        Command Length         |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   MANAGEMENT  | PROCESS_LIST  |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                2 |      List Sequence Number     |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                3 |   Flags     |M| Item Count    |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+
                4 | PROCESS_CODE  |     0         |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                5 |                               |   |  Process
                  +--            ID             --+   |  Descriptor
                6 |              Field            |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+
                7 |       Process data count      |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                8 |  Process data |  Process data |   |
                  +-------------------------------+   |  Process
                                  *                   |  Data
                                  *                   |
                                  *                   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                n |  Process data |  Process data |   |
                  +-------------------------------+  +-+
                                  *                   |  Additional
                                  *                   |  Descriptor-Data
                                  *                   |  Pairs
                                                     +-+


                     PROCESS_LIST Reply Format
                             Figure 54



                                                           Page 83


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


 PROCESS_LIST FIELDS:
 List Sequence Number
      The sequence number of the LIST_PROCESSES command  to  which
      this is the reply.
 Flags
      If M=1, the  process  list  is  continued  in  one  or  more
      subsequent  PROCESS_LIST replies.  If M=0, this is the final
      PROCESS_LIST.
 Item Count
      The number of processes described in this  list.   For  each
      process  there  is  a  descriptor  and  a variable number of
      octets of process data.
 Process Descriptor
      A descriptor assigned by the target to this  process.   Used
      by the host to specify this PROCESS in a DELETE command.
 Process Data Count
      Number of octets of process data for this process.  Must  be
      even.
 Process Data
      Target-dependent information about this process.  Number  of
      octets is given by the process data count.




 8.11  LIST_NAMES Command
      The host sends a LIST_NAMES command to  request  a  list  of
 available names as strings.  The target replies with NAME_LIST.




 Page 84


 LDP Specification                             Management Commands



                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |               4               |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   MANAGEMENT  | LIST_NAMES    |
                  +---------------+---------------+


                     LIST_NAMES Command Format
                             Figure 55




 8.12  NAME_LIST Reply
      The target sends a NAME_LIST reply to the host  in  response
 to  a LIST_NAMES command.  The reply contains the sequence number
 of the LIST_NAMES request, and a list of  all  target  names,  as
 strings.













                                                           Page 85


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |        Command Length         |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   MANAGEMENT  | NAME_LIST     |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                2 |      List Sequence Number     |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                3 |   Flags     |M| Item Count    |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+
                4 |           Name Size           |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                5 |  Name Char    |   Name Char   |   |  Name
                  +---------------+---------------+   |  String
                                  *                   |
                                  *                   |
                                  *                   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                n | 0 or Name Char|       0       |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+
                                  *                   |  Additional
                                  *                   |  Name
                                  *                   |  Strings
                                                     +-+


                      NAME_LIST Reply Format
                             Figure 56


 NAME_LIST FIELDS:
 List Sequence Number
      The sequence number of the LIST_NAMES command to which  this
      is the reply.






 Page 86


 LDP Specification                             Management Commands


 Flags
      If M=1, the name list is continued in one or more subsequent
      NAME_LIST replies.  If M=0, this is the final NAME_LIST.
 Item Count
      The number of name strings in this list.  Each  name  string
      consists  of  a character count and a null-terminated string
      of characters.
 Name Size
      The number of octets in this name string.  Must be even.
 Name Characters
      A string of octets composing the name.   Ends  with  a  null
      octet.   The  number  of  characters must be even, so if the
      terminating null comes on an  odd  octet,  another  null  is
      appended.




 8.13  GET_PHYS_ADDR Command
      The host sends a GET_PHYS_ADDR command to convert an address
 into physical form.  The target returns the physical address in a
 GOT_PHYS_ADDR  reply.   For  example,  the  host  could  send   a
 GET_PHYS_ADDR  command  containing a register-offset address, and
 the target would return the physical address derived from this in
 a GOT_PHYS_ADDR reply.








                                                           Page 87


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |               14              |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   MANAGEMENT  | GET_PHYS_ADDR |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+
                2 |    Mode       | Mode Argument |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                3 |              ID               |   |
                  +--            Field          --+   |
                4 |                               |   |  Address
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                5 |                               |   |
                  +--            Offset         --+   |
                6 |                               |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+


                   GET_PHYS_ADDR Command Format
                             Figure 57


 GET_PHYS_ADDR FIELDS:
 Address
      The address to be converted to a physical address.  The mode
      may    be   one   of   PHYS_REG_OFFSET,   PHYS_REG_INDIRECT,
      PHYS_MACRO_PTR, any OBJECT_* mode, and  any  PROCESS_*  mode
      except for PROCESS_REG.




 8.14  GOT_PHYS_ADDR Reply
      The target sends  a  GOT_PHYS_ADDR  reply  to  the  host  in
 response  to  a  successful  GET_PHYS_ADDR  command.   The  reply
 contains the sequence number of the  GET_PHYS_ADDR  request,  and
 the specified address converted into a physical address.



 Page 88


 LDP Specification                             Management Commands



                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |               16              |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   MANAGEMENT  | GOT_PHYS_ADDR |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                2 |      Get  Sequence Number     |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+
                3 | PHYS_MACRO    |      0        |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                4 |                               |   |
                  +--             0             --+   |
                5 |                               |   |  Address
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                6 |                               |   |
                  +--            Offset         --+   |
                7 |                               |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+


                    GOT_PHYS_ADDR Reply Format
                             Figure 58


 GOT_PHYS_ADDR FIELDS:
 Get Sequence Number
      The sequence number of the GET_PHYS_ADDR  command  to  which
      this is the reply.
 Address
      The address resulting from translating the address given  in
      the  GET_PHYS_ADDR command into a physical address.  Mode is
      always PHYS_MACRO and ID and mode argument are always  zero.
      Offset gives the 32-bit physical address.






                                                           Page 89


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


 8.15  GET_OBJECT Command
      The host sends a GET_OBJECT command to convert a name string
 into  a  descriptor.   The  target  returns  the  descriptor in a
 GOT_OBJECT reply.  Intended for use in finding control  parameter
 objects.


                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |        Command Length         |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   MANAGEMENT  | GET_OBJECT    |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+
                2 |           Name Size           |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                3 |  Name Char    |   Name Char   |   |  Name
                  +---------------+---------------+   |  String
                                  *                   |
                                  *                   |
                                  *                   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                n | 0 or Name Char|       0       |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+


                     GET_OBJECT Command Format
                             Figure 59


 GET_OBJECT FIELDS:
 Name String
      The name of an object.
 Name Size
      The number of octets in this name string.  Must be even.
 Name Characters
      A string of octets composing the name.   Ends  with  a  null
      octet.   The  number  of  characters must be even, so if the


 Page 90


 LDP Specification                             Management Commands


      terminating null comes on an  odd  octet,  another  null  is
      appended.




 8.16  GOT_OBJECT Reply
      The target sends a GOT_OBJECT reply to the host in  response
 to  a  successful  GET_OBJECT  command.   The  reply contains the
 sequence number of the  GET_OBJECT  request,  and  the  specified
 object name converted into a descriptor.


                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |               12              |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 |   MANAGEMENT  | GOT_OBJECT    |
                  +---------------+---------------+
                2 |      Get  Sequence Number     |
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+
                3 | Mode          | Mode Argument |   |
                  +---------------+---------------+   |
                4 |                               |   |
                  +--             ID            --+   |  Object
                5 |                               |   |  Descriptor
                  +---------------+---------------+  +-+


                      GOT_OBJECT Reply Format
                             Figure 60


 GOT_OBJECT FIELDS:
 Get Sequence Number
      The sequence number of the GET_OBJECT command to which  this
      is the reply.
 Descriptor


                                                           Page 91


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


      The  descriptor  of  the  object  named  in  the  GET_OBJECT
      command.

























 Page 92


 LDP Specification                     Breakpoints and Watchpoints


                             CHAPTER 9


                    Breakpoints and Watchpoints


      Breakpoints  and   watchpoints   are   used   in   debugging
 applications.   Each  breakpoint or watchpoint is associated with
 one debugger connection and one address.  When  a  breakpoint  or
 watchpoint is triggered, the target executes one or more commands
 associated with it.  A breakpoint is triggered when  its  address
 is  executed.   A  watchpoint  is  triggered  when its address is
 modified.  The same mechanism is used for structuring  breakpoint
 and  watchpoint  commands.  For brevity's sake, 'breakpoint' will
 be used in the remainder of this document to refer  to  either  a
 breakpoint or a watchpoint.
      The commands used by the host to manipulate breakpoints  are
 given in Figure 61, in the order in which they are normally used.
 All commands are sent from the  host  to  the  target,  and  each
 specifies the descriptor of a breakpoint.


  Command               Description
 ---------------------+------------------------------------
  CREATE                Create a breakpoint
  BREAKPOINT_DATA       Send commands to be executed in an
                        FSM breakpoint
  START                 Activate a breakpoint, set state
                        and initialize breakpoint variables
  STOP                  Deactivate a breakpoint
  CONTINUE              Activate a breakpoint
  LIST_BREAKPOINTS      List all breakpoints
  REPORT                Report the status of a breakpoint
  DELETE                Delete a breakpoint


                Commands to Manipulate Breakpoints
                             Figure 61





                                                           Page 93


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


      There are two kinds of breakpoints:  default breakpoints and
 finite state machine (FSM) breakpoints.  They differ in their use
 of commands.
      Default breakpoints  do  not  contain  any  commands.   When
 triggered,  a  default  breakpoint stops the target object (i.e.,
 target process or application) it is located in.  A STATUS report
 on  the  stopped  object is sent to the host.  At this point, the
 host may send further commands to debug the target.
      An FSM breakpoint has one or more conditional command lists,
 organized into a finite state machine.  When an FSM breakpoint is
 created, the total number of states is specified.  The host  then
 sends commands (using BREAKPOINT_DATA) to be associated with each
 state.  The target maintains a state variable for the breakpoint,
 which  determines  which  command  list  will  be executed if the
 breakpoint is triggered.  When  the  breakpoint  is  created  its
 state  variable is initialized to zero (zero is the first state).
 A breakpoint command, SET_STATE, may be used within a  breakpoint
 to  change  the  value  of  the state variable.  A REPORT command
 applied to a breakpoint descriptor returns its  address,  whether
 it is armed or disarmed, and the value of its state variable.
      Commands valid in breakpoints include all  implemented  data
 transfer and control commands, a set of conditional commands, and
 a set of breakpoint commands.  The conditional commands  and  the
 breakpoint  commands  act on a set of local breakpoint variables.
 The  breakpoint  variables  consist  of  the  state  variable,  a
 counter,  and  two  pointer  variables.  The conditional commands
 control the execution of breakpoint command lists  based  on  the
 contents  of  one  of  the  breakpoint variables.  The breakpoint
 commands are used to set the value of the  breakpoint  variables:
 SET_STATE  sets  the  state  variable,  SET_PTR  sets  one of the
 pointer  variables,  and  INC_COUNT  increments  the   breakpoint
 counter.   There may be implementation restrictions on the number
 of breakpoints, the number of states, the number  of  conditions,
 and  the  size  of  the  command  lists.  Management commands and
 protocol commands are forbidden in breakpoints.
      In FSM breakpoints, the execution of commands is  controlled
 as  follows.   When  a  breakpoint is triggered, the breakpoint's
 state  variable  selects  a  particular  state.   One   or   more
 conditional  command  lists  is  associated  with  this state.  A
 conditional  command  list  consists  of  a  list  of  conditions
 followed  by  a  list  of  commands  which  are  executed  if the
 condition list is satisfied.  The debugger starts a breakpoint by
 executing  the  first  of  these lists.  If the condition list is


 Page 94


 LDP Specification                     Breakpoints and Watchpoints


 satisfied, the debugger executes the associated command list  and
 leaves the breakpoint.  If the condition list fails, the debugger
 skips  to  the  next  conditional  command  list.   This  process
 continues  until  the  debugger  either  encounters  a successful
 condition list, or exhausts all the conditional command lists for
 the  state.   The  relationship  of commands, lists and states is
 shown in Figure 62 (IFs,  THENs  and  ELSEs  are  used  below  to
 clarify  the  logical structure within a state; they are not part
 of the protocol).


                State 0
                        IF <condition list 0>
                           THEN <command list 0>
                        ELSE IF <condition list 1>
                           THEN <command list 1>
                        *
                        *
                        *
                        ELSE IF <condition list n>
                            THEN <command list n>
                        ELSE <exit>
                  *
                  *
                  *
                State n


               Breakpoint Conditional Command Lists
                             Figure 62



 9.1  BREAKPOINT_DATA Command
      BREAKPOINT_DATA is a data transfer command used by the  host
 to  send  commands to be executed in breakpoints and watchpoints.
 The command  specifies  the  descriptor  of  the   breakpoint  or
 watchpoint, and a stream of commands to be appended to the end of
 the  breakpoint's  command  list.   BREAKPOINT_DATA  is   applied
 sequentially  to  successive  breakpoint  states,  and successive


                                                           Page 95


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


 command lists within each state.  Multiple  BREAKPOINT_DATAs  may
 be  sent  for a given breakpoint.  Breaks between BREAKPOINT_DATA
 commands may occur anywhere within the data stream,  even  within
 individual  commands  in the data.  Sufficient space to store the
 data must have been allocated by the maximum size  field  in  the
 CREATE BREAKPOINT/WATCHPOINT command.


              0             0 0   1         1
              0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
             +---------------+---------------+
           0 |        Command Length         |
             +---------------+---------------+
           1 | DATA_TRANSFER |BREAKPOINT_DATA|
             +---------------+---------------+  +-+
           2 |    Mode       | Mode Argument |   |
             +---------------+---------------+   |  Breakpoint or
           3 |                               |   |  Watchpoint
             +--            ID             --+   |  Descriptor
           4 |              Field            |   |
             +-------------------------------+  +-+
           5 |     Data      |  Data         |   |
             +-------------------------------+   |
                             *                   |
                             *                   |  Data
                             *                   |
             +---------------+---------------+   |
           n |     Data      |  Data or 0    |   |
             +---------------+---------------+  +-+


                  BREAKPOINT_DATA Command Format
                             Figure 63


 BREAKPOINT_DATA FIELDS:
 Command Length
      Total length of this  command  in  octets,  including  data,
      excluding the final padding octet, if any.
 Data
      A stream of data  to  be  appended  to  the  data  for  this
      breakpoint  or  watchpoint.  This stream has the form of one
      or more states, each  containing  one  or  more  conditional


 Page 96


 LDP Specification                     Breakpoints and Watchpoints


      command lists.  The first BREAKPOINT_DATA command sent for a
      breakpoint contains data starting with state zero.  The data
      for  each  state  starts with the state size.  A conditional
      command list is composed of two parts: a condition list, and
      a command list.  Each list begins with a word that gives its
      size in octets.


      <state 0 size>
               <condition list 0 size> <condition list 0>
               <command list 0 size>   <command list 0>
                          *
                          *
                          *
               <condition list n size> <condition list n>
               <command list n size>   <command list n>
      <state 1 size>
                        <etc>
           *
           *
           *
      <state n size>


                   Breakpoint Data Stream Format
                             Figure 64












                                                           Page 97


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


 Sizes
      All sizes are stored in 16-bit words, and include their  own
      length.   The state size gives the total number of octets of
      breakpoint data for the  state.   The  condition  list  size
      gives  the total octets of breakpoint data for the following
      condition list.  A condition list size  of  2  indicates  an
      empty  condition  list:  in  this case the following command
      list is executed unconditionally.   The  command  list  size
      gives  the total octets of breakpoint data for the following
      command list.
 Lists
      Condition  and  command  lists  come  in  pairs.   When  the
      breakpoint  occurs,  the condition list controls whether the
      following command list should be executed.  A condition list
      consists  of one or more commands from the CONDITION command
      class.  A command list consists one or  more  LDP  commands.
      Valid   commands  are  any  commands  from  the  BREAKPOINT,
      DATA_TRANSFER or CONTROL command classes.















 Page 98


 LDP Specification                            Conditional Commands


                            CHAPTER 10


                       Conditional Commands


      Conditional commands are used in breakpoints to control  the
 execution  of  breakpoint  commands.   One  or more conditions in
 sequence form a condition list.  If a condition list is satisfied
 (evaluates  to  TRUE),  the  breakpoint  command list immediately
 following it is  executed.   (See  Breakpoints  and  Watchpoints,
 above,  for a discussion of the logic flow in conditional/command
 lists.) Conditional commands perform tests  on  local  breakpoint
 variables,  and  other  locations.   Each  condition evaluates to
 either  TRUE  or  FALSE.   Figure  65  contains  a   summary   of
 conditional commands:


  Command                       Description
 -----------------------------+------------------------------------
 CHANGED <loc>                  Determine if a location has changed
 COMPARE <loc1> <mask> <loc2>   Compare two locations, using a mask
 COUNT_[EQ | GT | LT] <value>   Compare the counter to a value
 TEST  <loc> <mask> <value>     Compare a location to a value


                    Conditional Command Summary
                             Figure 65


 The rules for forming and evaluating condition lists are:


 o   consecutive conditions have an implicit logical  AND  between
     them.  A sequence of such conditions is called an 'and_list'.
     and_lists are delimited by an OR command and by  the  end  of
     the condition list.
 o   the breakpoint OR command may be inserted between any pair of
     conditions
 o   AND takes precedence over OR
 o   nested condition lists are not supported.  A  condition  list
     is simply one or more and_lists, separated by ORs.


                                                           Page 99


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


 o   the condition list is evaluated in sequence  until  either  a
     TRUE  and_list  is found (condition list <- TRUE), or the end
     of the condition list is reached (condition list  <-  FALSE).
     An and_list is TRUE if all its conditions are TRUE.
 The distillation of these rules into BNF is:
     <condition_list> :== <and_list>  [OR <and_list>]*
     <and_list>       :== <condition> [AND <condition>]*
     <condition>      :== CHANGED | COMPARE | COUNT | TEST
     where:  OR  is a breakpoint command
             AND is implicit for any pair of consecutive conditions
 For example, the following condition list, with one  command  per
 line,
     COUNT_EQ 1
     OR
     COUNT_GT 10
     COUNT_LT 20
 evaluates to:
     (COUNT = 1) OR (COUNT > 10  AND COUNT < 20)
 and will cause the command list that follows it to be executed if
 the counter is equal to one, or is between 10 and 20.



 10.1  Condition Command Format
      Condition  commands  start  with  the  standard   four-octet
 command  header.   The high-order bit of the command type byte is
 used as a negate flag:  if this bit is set, the boolean value  of
 the  condition  is  negated.   This flag applies to one condition
 only, and not to other conditions in the condition list.






 Page 100


 LDP Specification                            Conditional Commands



              0             0 0   1         1
              0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
             +---------------+---------------+
           0 |        Command Length         |
             +---------------+---------------+
           1 | CONDITION     |N|    Type     |
             +---------------+---------------+


                     Condition Command Header
                             Figure 66




 10.2  COUNT Conditions
      The COUNT conditions (COUNT_EQ, COUNT_GT and  COUNT_LT)  are
 used to compare the breakpoint counter to a specified value.  The
 counter is set to zero when the breakpoint  is  STARTed,  and  is
 incremented  by  the INC_COUNT breakpoint command.  The format is
 the same for the COUNT_EQ, COUNT_GT and COUNT_LT conditions.


              0             0 0   1         1
              0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
             +---------------+---------------+
           0 |               8               |
             +---------------+---------------+
           1 | CONDITION     |N|  Type       |
             +---------------+---------------+
           2 |                               |
             +--          Value            --+
           3 |                               |
             +---------------+---------------+


                      COUNT Condition Format
                             Figure 67


 COUNT_* Condition FIELDS:



                                                          Page 101


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


 Type
      One of COUNT_EQ, COUNT_LT and COUNT_GT.   The  condition  is
      TRUE  if  the  breakpoint  counter  is  [EQ  |  LT | GT] the
      specified value.
 Value
      A 32-bit value to be compared to the counter.



 10.3  CHANGED Condition
      The CHANGED  condition  is  TRUE  if  the  contents  of  the
 specified   location  have  changed  since  the  last  time  this
 breakpoint occurred.  Only one location may be specified  as  the
 object   of  CHANGED  conditions  per  breakpoint.   The  CHANGED
 condition is always FALSE the first time the breakpoint occurs.


              0             0 0   1         1
              0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
             +---------------+---------------+
           0 |              14               |
             +---------------+---------------+
           1 | CONDITION     |N|  CHANGED    |
             +---------------+---------------+
           2 |                               |
             +--                           --+
           3 |            Address            |
             +--                           --+
           4 |                               |
             +--                           --+
           5 |                               |
             +--                           --+
           6 |                               |
             +---------------+---------------+


                         CHANGED Condition
                             Figure 68




 Page 102


 LDP Specification                            Conditional Commands


 CHANGED FIELDS:
 Address
      The full 5-word address of the location to be tested by  the
      CHANGED command.



 10.4  COMPARE Condition
      The COMPARE condition compares two locations using  a  mask.
 The condition is TRUE if (<loc1> & <mask>) = (<loc2> & <mask>).



















                                                          Page 103


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



              0             0 0   1         1
              0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
             +---------------+---------------+
           0 |              28               |
             +---------------+---------------+
           1 | CONDITION     |N|  COMPARE    |
             +---------------+---------------+
           2 |                               |
             +--                           --+
           3 |            Address 1          |
             +--                           --+
           4 |                               |
             +--                           --+
           5 |                               |
             +--                           --+
           6 |                               |
             +---------------+---------------+
           7 |                               |
             +--          Mask             --+
           8 |                               |
             +-------------------------------+
           9 |                               |
             +--                           --+
           10|            Address 2          |
             +--                           --+
           11|                               |
             +--                           --+
           12|                               |
             +--                           --+
           13|                               |
             +-------------------------------+
                         COMPARE Condition
                             Figure 69








 Page 104


 LDP Specification                            Conditional Commands


 COMPARE FIELDS:
 Address 1
 Address 2
      The 5-word addresses of the locations to be compared.
 Mask
      A 32-bit mask specifying which bits in the locations  should
      be compared.




 10.5  TEST Condition
      The TEST condition is used to compare a location to a value,
 using  a  mask.   The  condition  is  TRUE  if (<loc> & <mask>) =
 <value>.















                                                          Page 105


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



              0             0 0   1         1
              0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
             +---------------+---------------+
           0 |              22               |
             +---------------+---------------+
           1 | CONDITION     |N|  TEST       |
             +---------------+---------------+
           2 |                               |
             +--                           --+
           3 |            Address            |
             +--                           --+
           4 |                               |
             +--                           --+
           5 |                               |
             +--                           --+
           6 |                               |
             +---------------+---------------+
           7 |                               |
             +--          Mask             --+
           8 |                               |
             +-------------------------------+
           9 |                               |
             +--          Value            --+
           10|                               |
             +-------------------------------+
                          TEST Condition
                             Figure 70


 TEST FIELDS:
 Address
      The 5-word address of the location to  be  compared  to  the
      value.
 Mask
      A 32-bit mask specifying which bits in the  location  should
      be compared.
 Value
      A 32-bit value to compare to the masked location.


 Page 106


 LDP Specification                            Conditional Commands



























                                                          Page 107


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



























 Page 108


 LDP Specification                             Breakpoint Commands


                            CHAPTER 11


                        Breakpoint Commands


      Breakpoint commands are used to set the value of  breakpoint
 variables.   These commands are only valid within breakpoints and
 watchpoints.  They are sent from the host to the target  as  data
 in  BREAKPOINT_DATA  commands.   Figure  71 contains a summary of
 breakpoint commands:


  Command                  Description
 ------------------------+-------------------------------------
 INCREMENT <location>      Increment the specified location
 INC_COUNT                 Increment the breakpoint counter
 OR                        OR two breakpoint condition lists
 SET_PTR <n> <location>    Set pointer <n> to the contents of
                           <location>
 SET_STATE <n>             Set the breakpoint state variable
                           to <n>


                    Breakpoint Command Summary
                             Figure 71




 11.1  INCREMENT Command
      The INCREMENT command increments the contents of a specified
 location.  The location may be in any address space writable from
 LDP.






                                                          Page 109


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



              0             0 0   1         1
              0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
             +---------------+---------------+
           0 |               14              |
             +---------------+---------------+
           1 | BREAKPOINT    |  INCREMENT    |
             +---------------+---------------+
           2 |                               |
             +--                           --+
           3 |            Address            |
             +--                           --+
           4 |                               |
             +--                           --+
           5 |                               |
             +--                           --+
           6 |                               |
             +---------------+---------------+


                     INCREMENT Command Format
                             Figure 72


 INCREMENT FIELDS:
 Address
      The full address of the location whose contents  are  to  be
      incremented.



 11.2  INC_COUNT Command
      The INC_COUNT command  increments  the  breakpoint  counter.
 There  is  one  counter  variable  for  each   breakpoint.  It is
 initialized to zero when the breakpoint is created,  when  it  is
 armed  with  the START command, and whenever the breakpoint state
 changes.  The counter is tested by the COUNT_* conditions.





 Page 110


 LDP Specification                             Breakpoint Commands



              0             0 0   1         1
              0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
             +---------------+---------------+
           0 |               4               |
             +---------------+---------------+
           1 | BREAKPOINT    |  INC_COUNT    |
             +---------------+---------------+


                     INC_COUNT Command Format
                             Figure 73




 11.3  OR Command
      The OR command delineates  two  and_lists  in  a  breakpoint
 condition  list.   A  condition  list  is  TRUE  if any of the OR
 separated and_lists in it are TRUE.  A breakpoint condition  list
 may  contain  zero,  one  or,  many  OR commands.  See 'Condition
 Commands' for an explanation of condition lists.


              0             0 0   1         1
              0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
             +---------------+---------------+
           0 |               4               |
             +---------------+---------------+
           1 | BREAKPOINT    |      OR       |
             +---------------+---------------+


                         OR Command Format
                             Figure 74






                                                          Page 111


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


 11.4  SET_PTR Command
      The SET_PTR command loads the specified  breakpoint  pointer
 with  the  contents of a location.  The pointer variables and the
 SET_PTR command are intended to provide a primitive but unlimited
 indirect    addressing   capability.    Two   addressing   modes,
 BPT_PTR_OFFSET and BPT_PTR_INDIRECT, are used for referencing the
 breakpoint  pointers.   For example, to follow a linked list, use
 SET_PTR to load a pointer with the start of the  list,  then  use
 successive  SET_PTR  commands with addressing mode BPT_PTR_OFFSET
 to get successive elements.


              0             0 0   1         1
              0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
             +---------------+---------------+
           0 |               16              |
             +---------------+---------------+
           1 | BREAKPOINT    |  SET_PTR      |
             +---------------+---------------+
           2 |            Pointer            |
             +---------------+---------------+
           3 |                               |
             +--                           --+
           4 |            Address            |
             +--                           --+
           5 |                               |
             +--                           --+
           6 |                               |
             +--                           --+
           7 |                               |
             +---------------+---------------+


                      SET_PTR Command Format
                             Figure 75


 SET_PTR FIELDS:
 Pointer
      The pointer to be changed.  Allowable values are 0 and 1.
 Address



 Page 112


 LDP Specification                             Breakpoint Commands


      The full address of the location whose contents  are  to  be
      loaded into the given pointer variable.



 11.5  SET_STATE Command
      The SET_STATE command sets the breakpoint state variable  to
 the  specified  value.   This  is  the  only method of changing a
 breakpoint's state from within  a  breakpoint.  The  breakpoint's
 state  may  be  also be changed by a START command from the host.
 The state variable is initialized to zero when the breakpoint  is
 created.


              0             0 0   1         1
              0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
             +---------------+---------------+
           0 |               6               |
             +---------------+---------------+
           1 | BREAKPOINT    |  SET_STATE    |
             +---------------+---------------+
           2 |         State Value           |
             +-------------------------------+


                     SET_STATE Command Format
                             Figure 76


 SET_STATE FIELDS:
 State Value
      The new value for the breakpoint state variable.   Must  not
      be  greater  than  the  maximum state value specified in the
      CREATE BREAKPOINT command that created this breakpoint.






                                                          Page 113


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



























 Page 114


 LDP Specification                             Diagram Conventions


                            APPENDIX A


                        Diagram Conventions


      Command and message diagrams are used in  this  document  to
 illustrate  the  format  of these entities.   Words are listed in
 order of transmission down the page.   The  first  word  is  word
 zero.   Bits within a word run left to right, most significant to
 least.   However,   following  a  convention  observed  in  other
 protocol  documents,  bits are numbered in order of transmission;
 the most significant bit in a word is transmitted first.  The bit
 labelled '0' is the most significant bit.


                   0             0 0   1         1
                   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                  +---------------+---------------+
                0 |M|                           |L|
                  +---------------+---------------+
                1 | Most Sig Octet| Least S. Octet|
                  +---------------+---------------+
                  M = most significant bit in word zero,
                      transmitted first
                  L = least significant bit in word zero,
                      transmitted last


                          Sample Diagram
                             Figure 77









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 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



























 Page 116


 LDP Specification                                 Command Summary


                            APPENDIX B


                          Command Summary


      The following table lists all non-breakpoint LDP commands in
 alphabetical order, with a brief description of each.





















                                                          Page 117


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



                        Sender
 Command            | Host Target | Function
 -------------------+-------------+---------------------------
 ABORT                 X            Abort outstanding commands
 ABORT_DONE                  X      Acknowledge ABORT
 ADDRESS_LIST                X      Return valid address ranges
 BREAKPOINT_DATA       X            Send breakpoint commands
 BREAKPOINT_LIST             X      Return list of breakpoints
 CONTINUE              X            Resume execution
 CREATE                X            Create target object
 CREATE_DONE                 X      Acknowledge CREATE
 DELETE                X            Delete target object
 DELETE_DONE                 X      Acknowledge DELETE
 EXCEPTION                   X      Report target exception
 ERROR                       X      Report error with a host command
 ERRACK                X            Acknowledge ERROR
 GET_OBJECT            X            Get object descriptor from name
 GET_PHYS_ADDRESS      X            Get address in physical form
 GOT_OBJECT                  X      Return object descriptor
 GOT_PHYS_ADDRESS            X      Return physical address
 HELLO                 X            Initiate LDP session
 HELLO_REPLY                 X      Return LDP parameters
 LIST_ADDRESSES        X            Request valid address ranges
 LIST_BREAKPOINTS      X            Request breakpoint list
 LIST_NAMES            X            Request name list
 LIST_PROCESSES        X            Request process list
 MOVE                  X            Read data from target
 MOVE_DONE                   X      Acknowledge MOVE completion
 MOVE_DATA                   X      Send data request by MOVE
 NAME_LIST                   X      Return name list
 PROCESS_LIST                X      Return process list
 READ                  X            Read data from target
 READ_DATA                   X      Return data requested by READ
 READ_DONE                   X      Acknowledge READ completion
 REPEAT_DATA           X            Write copies of data
 REPORT                X            Request status of object
 START                 X            Start target object
 STATUS                      X      Return status of object
 STEP                  X            Step execution of target object
 STOP                  X            Stop target object
 SYNCH                 X            Check sequence number
 SYNCH_REPLY                 X      Confirm sequence number
 WRITE                 X            Write data
 WRITE_MASK            X            Write data with mask


 Page 118


 LDP Specification                                 Command Summary


                          Command Summary
                             Figure 78

























                                                          Page 119


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984



























 Page 120


 LDP Specification                 Commands, Responses and Replies


                            APPENDIX C


                  Commands, Responses and Replies


      The following table shows the relationship between commands,
 responses  and  replies.   Commands are sent from the host to the
 target.  Some commands elicit responses and/or replies  from  the
 target.   Responses  and  replies are sent from the target to the
 host.  The distinction between them is that the target sends only
 one  reply  to  a  command,  but  may  send  multiple  responses.
 Responses always contain data, whereas replies may or may not.



















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 RFC-909                                                 July 1984




      Command            | Response     | Reply
      -------------------+--------------+------------------
      ABORT                               ABORT_DONE
      BREAKPOINT_DATA
      CONTINUE
      CREATE                              CREATE_DONE
      DELETE                              DELETE_DONE
      GET_OBJECT                          GOT_OBJECT
      GET_PHYS_ADDRESS                    GOT_PHYS_ADDRESS
      HELLO                               HELLO_REPLY
      LIST_ADDRESSES                      ADDRESS_LIST
      LIST_BREAKPOINTS                    BREAKPOINT_LIST
      LIST_NAMES                          NAME_LIST
      LIST_PROCESSES                      PROCESS_LIST
      MOVE               MOVE_DATA        MOVE_DONE
      READ               READ_DATA        READ_DONE
      REPEAT_DATA
      REPORT                              STATUS
      START
      STEP
      STOP
      SYNCH                               SYNCH_REPLY
      WRITE
      WRITE_MASK


                  Commands, Responses and Replies
                             Figure 79










 Page 122


 LDP Specification                                        Glossary


                            APPENDIX D


                             Glossary



 FSM
      Finite  state  machine.   Commands  of  each  breakpoint  or
      watchpoint   are  implemented  as  part  of  a  finite state
      machine.  A list of breakpoint commands is  associated  with
      each state.  There are several breakpoint commands to change
      from one state to another.
 host
      The 'host' in an LDP session is the  timesharing  system  on
      which the user process runs.


 long
      A long is a 32-bit quantity.
 octet
      An octet is an eight-bit quantity.
 RDP
      The  Reliable  Data  Protocol  (RDP) is  a  transport  layer
      protocol designed as a low-overhead alternative to TCP.  RDP
      is a connection oriented protocol  that  provides  reliable,
      sequenced message delivery.
 server process
      The LDP server process is the passive participant in an  LDP
      session.   The  server  process  usually resides on a target
      machine such as a PAD, PSN or gateway.  The  server  process
      waits for a user process to initiate a session, and responds
      to commands from the user  process.   In  response  to  user
      commands, the server may perform services on the target like
      reading and writing memory locations or setting breakpoints.
      'Server'  is  sometimes  employed as a shorthand for 'server
      process'.


                                                          Page 123


 RFC-909                                                 July 1984


 target
      The 'target' in an LDP session is the PSN,  PAD  or  gateway
      that  is  being  loaded,  dumped  or  debugged  by the host.
      Normally, LDP will be implemented in the target as a  server
      process.     However,   in   some   targets   with   strange
      requirements, notably the Butterfly, the target LDP may be a
      user process.


 user process
      The LDP user process is the active  participant  in  an  LDP
      session.   The  user  process  initiates  and terminates the
      session and sends commands  to  the  server  process   which
      control  the session.  The user process usually resides on a
      timesharing host and is  driven  by  a  higher-level  entity
      (e.g., an application program like an interactive debugger).
      'User' is  sometimes  employed  as  a  shorthand  for  'user
      process'.


 word
      A word is a sixteen-bit quantity.













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                               INDEX



 ABORT command............................................ 35
 ABORT_DONE reply......................................... 36
 address.............................................. 60, 66
 address descriptor....................................... 20
 address format................................... 19, 25, 31
 address ID............................................... 22
 address mode......................................... 20, 22
 address mode argument.................................... 21
 address offset........................................... 20
 addressing............................................... 19
 ADDRESS_LIST reply................................... 76, 77
 BASIC_DEBUGGER....................................... 12, 32
 breakpoint... 9, 13, 57, 60, 71, 79, 92, 93, 95, 96, 99, 107
 breakpoint commands.......................... 9, 94, 95, 107
 breakpoint counter........................ 94, 100, 101, 110
 breakpoint data...................................... 97, 99
 breakpoint state variable........................... 94, 107
 breakpoint variables..................................... 94
 BREAKPOINT_DATA command..................... 73, 94, 95, 107
 BREAKPOINT_LIST reply................................ 79, 80
 CHANGED condition....................................... 102
 command class............................................ 16
 command length field..................................... 16
 COMPARE Condition....................................... 103
 condition command header................................ 101
 conditional commands................................. 94, 99
 CONTINUE command......................................... 62
 control commands...................................... 9, 57
 COUNT condition.................................... 110, 111
 COUNT_EQ condition...................................... 101
 COUNT_GT condition...................................... 101
 COUNT_LT condition...................................... 101
 CREATE command............................... 69, 70, 73, 75
 create types............................................. 70
 CREATE_DONE reply.................................... 73, 75
 data octets...................................... 43, 47, 52
 data packing............................................. 10
 data transfer commands................................ 9, 41
 data transmission........................................ 10
 datagrams................................................. 5
 debugging.............................................. 1, 3


                                                          Page 125




 default breakpoint................................... 71, 92
 DELETE command....................................... 73, 75
 DELETE_DONE reply........................................ 75
 descriptor........... 20, 57, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 73, 75, 93
 dumping................................................... 3
 ERRACK............................................... 10, 39
 ERROR codes.............................................. 38
 ERROR reply.......................................... 37, 67
 EXCEPTION trap........................................... 66
 finite state machine................................. 60, 93
 FSM breakpoint................................... 71, 92, 94
 FULL-DEBUGGER............................................ 12
 FULL_DEBUGGER............................................ 32
 gateway................................................ 3, 9
 GET_OBJECT command................................... 89, 91
 GET_PHYS_ADDR command................................ 87, 88
 GOT_OBJECT reply..................................... 89, 91
 GOT_PHYS_ADDR reply.................................. 87, 88
 HELLO command......................................... 9, 29
 HELLO_REPLY....................................... 9, 19, 30
 host descriptor.......................................... 41
 implementation....................................... 12, 31
 INC_COUNT command......................... 94, 107, 110, 111
 INCREMENT command....................................... 109
 internet.................................................. 5
 internet protocols........................................ 4
 IP........................................................ 5
 LDP command formats...................................... 15
 LDP header........................................... 15, 16
 LDP Version.............................................. 30
 LIST commands............................................ 73
 LIST_ADDRESSES command............................... 76, 77
 LIST_BREAKPOINTS command............................. 79, 80
 LIST_NAMES command................................... 84, 85
 LIST_PROCESSES command................................... 82
 LOADER_DUMPER........................................ 12, 32
 loading................................................ 1, 3
 long address format...................................... 20
 management commands...................................... 67
 memory object............................................ 73
 MOVE command................................. 22, 41, 47, 49
 MOVE sequence number..................................... 52
 MOVE_DATA response................................... 22, 51
 MOVE_DONE reply.......................................... 52
 NAME_LIST reply...................................... 84, 85
 offset............................................... 20, 22
 OR command.............................................. 111


 Page 126




 PAD.................................................... 3, 9
 pattern.................................................. 54
 PHYS_ADDRESS............................................. 57
 PHYS_MACRO............................................... 60
 PROCESS.................................................. 57
 PROCESS_CODE............................................. 60
 PROCESS_LIST reply....................................... 82
 protocol commands......................................... 9
 PSN.................................................... 3, 9
 RDP................................................... 5, 15
 READ command..................................... 41, 43, 44
 READ sequence number..................................... 47
 READ_DATA response................................... 45, 46
 READ_DONE reply.......................................... 47
 repeat count............................................. 54
 REPEAT_DATA command.................................. 41, 53
 REPORT command................................... 63, 64, 94
 sequence number...................................... 10, 39
 session................................................... 9
 SET_PTR command................................ 94, 111, 112
 SET_STATE command.............................. 94, 107, 113
 short address format..................................... 25
 START command........................................ 59, 60
 STATUS reply..................................... 64, 65, 94
 STEP command......................................... 62, 63
 STOP command......................................... 60, 61
 SYNCH.................................................... 10
 SYNCH command............................................ 33
 SYNCH_REPLY.............................................. 34
 system type.............................................. 30
 target start address......................... 43, 44, 46, 54
 transport................................................. 9
 watchpoint.......... 13, 57, 60, 71, 92, 93, 95, 96, 99, 107
 WRITE command........................................ 41, 42
 WRITE_MASK command....................................... 56








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