- GNU Debugger
infobox software
developer =GNU Project
released = 1986
latest_release_version = 6.8
latest_release_date =March 27 ,2008
operating_system =
genre =Debugger
license = GPL
website = [http://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/ gnu.org/software/gdb/]The GNU Debugger, usually called just GDB, is the standard
debugger for theGNU software system. It is a portable debugger that runs on manyUnix-like systems and works for manyprogramming language s, including Ada, C,C++ ,FreeBASIC , and Fortran.History
GDB was first written by
Richard Stallman in 1986 as part of hisGNU system, after hisGNU Emacs was "reasonably stable". [cite web
title = Richard Stallman lecture at the Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden (1986-10-30)
url = http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/stallman-kth.html
accessdate = 2006-09-21
quote = Then after GNU Emacs was reasonably stable, which took all in all about a year and a half, I started getting back to other parts of the system. I developed a debugger which I called GDB which is a symbolic debugger for C code, which recently entered distribution. Now this debugger is to a large extent in the spirit of DBX, which is a debugger that comes with Berkeley Unix.] GDB isfree software released under theGNU General Public License (GPL). It was modeled after theDbx debugger , which came with Berkeley Unix distributions.From 1990 to 1993 it was maintained by John Gilmore while he worked for
Cygnus Solutions . Now it is maintained by GDB Steering Committee which is appointed byFree Software Foundation . [cite web
title=GDB Steering Committee
url=http://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/committee/
accessdate = 2008-05-11]Technical details
Features
GDB offers extensive facilities for tracing and altering the execution of
computer program s. The user can monitor and modify the values of programs' internalvariable s, and even call functions independently of the program's normal behavior.GDB target processors (as of 2003) include:
Alpha, ARM, AVR, H8/300,System/370 ,System 390 ,X86 andX86-64 , IA-64 "Itanium",Motorola 68000 , MIPS,PA-RISC ,PowerPC ,SuperH ,SPARC , andVAX .Lesser-known target processors supported in the standard release have included
A29K , ARC,CRIS ,D10V ,D30V ,FR-30 ,FR-V ,Intel i960 ,M32R , 68HC11,Motorola 88000 ,MCORE ,MN10200 ,MN10300 , NS32K,Stormy16 ,V850 , and Z8000. (Newer releases will likely not support some of these.)GDB has compiled-in simulators for target processors even for lesser-known target processors such like M32R or V850.
GDB is still actively developed. As of early 2007, the focus is on adding "reversible debugging" support [cite web
title = GDB and Reversible Debugging
url = http://sourceware.org/gdb/news/reversible.html
accessdate = 2007-03-01
quote = Reversible debugging (the ability to "step backwards" through a program) is an obviously powerful tool. GDB does not support it today, but the foundations have been laid, and the GDB maintainers are looking for contributors interested in expanding those foundations. ] — allowing a debugging session to step backwards, much like rewinding a crashed program to see what happened. Adding reversible debugging is one of theHigh Priority Free Software Projects .Remote debugging
GDB offers a 'remote' mode often used when debugging embedded systems. Remote operation is when GDB runs on one machine and the program being debugged runs on another. GDB can communicate to the remote 'stub' which understands GDB protocol via Serial or TCP/IP.
The same mode is also used by KGDB for debugging a running
Linux kernel on the source level with gdb. With kgdb, kernel developers can debug a kernel in much the same way as they debug application programs. It makes it possible to place breakpoints in kernel code, step through the code and observe variables. On architectures where hardware debugging registers are available, watchpoints can be set which trigger breakpoints when specified memory addresses are executed or accessed. kgdb requires an additional machine which is connected to the machine to be debugged using aserial cable orethernet . OnFreeBSD , it is also possible to debug usingFirewire DMA.Limitations
The debugger does not contain its own
graphical user interface , and defaults to acommand-line interface . Several front-ends have been built for it, such as DDD, Eclipse CDT,KDbg ,Xcode debugger, GDBtk/ [http://sources.redhat.com/insight/ Insight] and the "GUD mode" inGNU Emacs . These offer facilities similar to debuggers found inintegrated development environment s.Some other debugging tools have been designed to work with GDB, such as
memory leak detectors.Examples of commands
An example session
This is an example GDB session on the example program in
Stack trace :GNU gdb Red Hat Linux (6.3.0.0-1.21rh)Copyright 2004 Free Software Foundation, Inc.GDB is free software, covered by the GNU General Public License, and you arewelcome to change it and/or distribute copies of it under certain conditions.Type "show copying" to see the conditions.There is absolutely no warranty for GDB. Type "show warranty" for details.This GDB was configured as "i386-redhat-linux-gnu"...Using host libthread_db library "/lib/libthread_db.so.1".(gdb) runStarting program: /home/sam/programming/crashReading symbols from shared object read from target memory...done.Loaded system supplied DSO at 0xc11000This program will demonstrate gdb
Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.0x08048428 in function_2 (x=24) at crash.c:2222 return *y;(gdb) edit(gdb) shell gcc crash.c -o crash -gstabs+(gdb) runThe program being debugged has been started already.Start it from the beginning? (y or n) ywarning: cannot close "shared object read from target memory": File in wrong format`/home/sam/programming/crash' has changed; re-reading symbols.Starting program: /home/sam/programming/crashReading symbols from shared object read from target memory...done.Loaded system supplied DSO at 0xa3e000This program will demonstrate gdb24Program exited normally.(gdb) quit
The program is being run. After the cause of the segmentation fault is found, the program is edited to use the correct behavior. The corrected program is recompiled with GCC and then run.
See also
*
Binary File Descriptor library (libbfd)
*dbx debugger References
External links
* [http://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/ GDB homepage]
* [http://kgdb.linsyssoft.com kgdb, the gdb backend for debugging the Linux kernel]Documentation
* Richard M. Stallman,
Roland Pesch ,Stan Shebs , et al., [http://sourceware.org/gdb/current/onlinedocs/gdb.html "Debugging with GDB"] (Free Software Foundation , 2002) ISBN 1-882114-88-4
* [http://sourceware.org/gdb/current/onlinedocs/gdbint.html GDB Internals]Tutorials
* [http://www.dirac.org/linux/gdb/ Peter Jay Salzman's GDB guide] : "Using GNU's GDB Debugger"
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