The following qualifiers affect what output is displayed when a
breakpoint is reached:
/[NO]SILENT
/[NO]SOURCE
The following qualifiers affect the timing and duration of
breakpoints:
/AFTER:n
/TEMPORARY
Use the /MODIFY qualifier to monitor changes at program locations
(typically changes in the values of variables).
If you set a breakpoint at a location currently used as
a tracepoint, the tracepoint is canceled in favor of the
breakpoint, and vice versa.
On OpenVMS Alpha and Integrity servers, the SET BREAK/UNALIGNED_
DATA command calls the $START_ALIGN_FAULT_REPORT system service
routine. Do not issue this command if the program you are
debugging includes a call to the same $START_ALIGN_FAULT_REPORT
routine. If you issue the command before the program call, the
program call fails. If the program call occurs before you issue
the command, unaligned breaks are not set.
Breakpoints can be user defined or predefined. User-defined
breakpoints are set explicitly with the SET BREAK command.
Predefined breakpoints, which depend on the type of program you
are debugging (for example, Ada or multiprocess), are established
automatically when you start the debugger. Use the SHOW BREAK
command to identify all breakpoints that are currently set. Any
predefined breakpoints are identified as such.
User-defined and predefined breakpoints are set and canceled
independently. For example, a location or event can have both
a user-defined and a predefined breakpoint. Canceling the user-
defined breakpoint does not affect the predefined breakpoint, and
conversely.
Related commands:
(ACTIVATE,DEACTIVATE,SHOW,CANCEL) BREAK
CANCEL ALL
GO
(SET,SHOW) EVENT_FACILITY
SET STEP [NO]SOURCE
SET TRACE
SET WATCH
STEP