This is Info file ./gdb.info, produced by Makeinfo-1.52 from the input file gdb.texinfo. START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY * Gdb:: The GNU debugger. END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY This file documents the GNU debugger GDB. This is Edition 4.09, August 1993, of `Debugging with GDB: the GNU Source-Level Debugger' for GDB Version 4.11. Copyright (C) 1988, '89, '90, '91, '92, '93 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on all copies. Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided also that the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission notice identical to this one. Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions.  File: gdb.info, Node: Top, Next: Summary, Prev: (DIR), Up: (DIR) Debugging with GDB ****************** This file describes GDB, the GNU symbolic debugger. This is Edition 4.09, August 1993, for GDB Version 4.11. * Menu: * Summary:: Summary of GDB * New Features:: New features since GDB version 3.5 * Sample Session:: A sample GDB session * Invocation:: Getting in and out of GDB * Commands:: GDB commands * Running:: Running programs under GDB * Stopping:: Stopping and continuing * Stack:: Examining the stack * Source:: Examining source files * Data:: Examining data * Languages:: Using GDB with different languages * Symbols:: Examining the symbol table * Altering:: Altering execution * GDB Files:: GDB files * Targets:: Specifying a debugging target * Controlling GDB:: Controlling GDB * Sequences:: Canned sequences of commands * Emacs:: Using GDB under GNU Emacs * GDB Bugs:: Reporting bugs in GDB * Command Line Editing:: Facilities of the readline library * Using History Interactively:: * Renamed Commands:: * Formatting Documentation:: How to format and print GDB documentation * Installing GDB:: Installing GDB * Index:: Index  File: gdb.info, Node: Summary, Next: New Features, Prev: Top, Up: Top Summary of GDB ************** The purpose of a debugger such as GDB is to allow you to see what is going on "inside" another program while it executes--or what another program was doing at the moment it crashed. GDB can do four main kinds of things (plus other things in support of these) to help you catch bugs in the act: * Start your program, specifying anything that might affect its behavior. * Make your program stop on specified conditions. * Examine what has happened, when your program has stopped. * Change things in your program, so you can experiment with correcting the effects of one bug and go on to learn about another. You can use GDB to debug programs written in C, C++, and Modula-2. G{No Value For "DBN"} can be used to debug programs written in Fortran, although it does not yet support entering expressions, printing values, etc. using Fortran syntax. It may be necessary to refer to some variables with a trailing underscore. * Menu: * Free Software:: Freely redistributable software * Contributors:: Contributors to GDB  File: gdb.info, Node: Free Software, Next: Contributors, Up: Summary Free software ============= GDB is "free software", protected by the GNU General Public License (GPL). The GPL gives you the freedom to copy or adapt a licensed program--but every person getting a copy also gets with it the freedom to modify that copy (which means that they must get access to the source code), and the freedom to distribute further copies. Typical software companies use copyrights to limit your freedoms; the Free Software Foundation uses the GPL to preserve these freedoms. Fundamentally, the General Public License is a license which says that you have these freedoms and that you cannot take these freedoms away from anyone else.  File: gdb.info, Node: Contributors, Prev: Free Software, Up: Summary Contributors to GDB =================== Richard Stallman was the original author of GDB, and of many other GNU programs. Many others have contributed to its development. This section attempts to credit major contributors. One of the virtues of free software is that everyone is free to contribute to it; with regret, we cannot actually acknowledge everyone here. The file `ChangeLog' in the GDB distribution approximates a blow-by-blow account. Changes much prior to version 2.0 are lost in the mists of time. *Plea:* Additions to this section are particularly welcome. If you or your friends (or enemies, to be evenhanded) have been unfairly omitted from this list, we would like to add your names! So that they may not regard their long labor as thankless, we particularly thank those who shepherded GDB through major releases: Fred Fish (releases 4.11, 4.10, 4.9), Stu Grossman and John Gilmore (releases 4.8, 4.7, 4.6, 4.5, 4.4), John Gilmore (releases 4.3, 4.2, 4.1, 4.0, and 3.9); Jim Kingdon (releases 3.5, 3.4, 3.3); and Randy Smith (releases 3.2, 3.1, 3.0). As major maintainer of GDB for some period, each contributed significantly to the structure, stability, and capabilities of the entire debugger. Richard Stallman, assisted at various times by Peter TerMaat, Chris Hanson, and Richard Mlynarik, handled releases through 2.8. Michael Tiemann is the author of most of the GNU C++ support in GDB, with significant additional contributions from Per Bothner. James Clark wrote the GNU C++ demangler. Early work on C++ was by Peter TerMaat (who also did much general update work leading to release 3.0). GDB 4 uses the BFD subroutine library to examine multiple object-file formats; BFD was a joint project of David V. Henkel-Wallace, Rich Pixley, Steve Chamberlain, and John Gilmore. David Johnson wrote the original COFF support; Pace Willison did the original support for encapsulated COFF. Adam de Boor and Bradley Davis contributed the ISI Optimum V support. Per Bothner, Noboyuki Hikichi, and Alessandro Forin contributed MIPS support. Jean-Daniel Fekete contributed Sun 386i support. Chris Hanson improved the HP9000 support. Noboyuki Hikichi and Tomoyuki Hasei contributed Sony/News OS 3 support. David Johnson contributed Encore Umax support. Jyrki Kuoppala contributed Altos 3068 support. Keith Packard contributed NS32K support. Doug Rabson contributed Acorn Risc Machine support. Chris Smith contributed Convex support (and Fortran debugging). Jonathan Stone contributed Pyramid support. Michael Tiemann contributed SPARC support. Tim Tucker contributed support for the Gould NP1 and Gould Powernode. Pace Willison contributed Intel 386 support. Jay Vosburgh contributed Symmetry support. Rich Schaefer and Peter Schauer helped with support of SunOS shared libraries. Jay Fenlason and Roland McGrath ensured that GDB and GAS agree about several machine instruction sets. Patrick Duval, Ted Goldstein, Vikram Koka and Glenn Engel helped develop remote debugging. Intel Corporation and Wind River Systems contributed remote debugging modules for their products. Brian Fox is the author of the readline libraries providing command-line editing and command history. Andrew Beers of SUNY Buffalo wrote the language-switching code, the Modula-2 support, and contributed the Languages chapter of this manual. Fred Fish wrote most of the support for Unix System Vr4. He also enhanced the command-completion support to cover C++ overloaded symbols. Hitachi America, Ltd. sponsored the support for Hitachi microprocessors.  File: gdb.info, Node: New Features, Next: Sample Session, Prev: Summary, Up: Top New Features since GDB Version 3.5 ********************************** *Targets* Using the new command `target', you can select at runtime whether you are debugging local files, local processes, standalone systems over a serial port, realtime systems over a TCP/IP connection, etc. The command `load' can download programs into a remote system. Serial stubs are available for Motorola 680x0, Intel 80386, and Sparc remote systems; GDB also supports debugging realtime processes running under VxWorks, using SunRPC Remote Procedure Calls over TCP/IP to talk to a debugger stub on the target system. Internally, GDB now uses a function vector to mediate access to different targets; if you need to add your own support for a remote protocol, this makes it much easier. *Watchpoints* GDB now sports watchpoints as well as breakpoints. You can use a watchpoint to stop execution whenever the value of an expression changes, without having to predict a particular place in your program where this may happen. *Wide Output* Commands that issue wide output now insert newlines at places designed to make the output more readable. *Object Code Formats* GDB uses a new library called the Binary File Descriptor (BFD) Library to permit it to switch dynamically, without reconfiguration or recompilation, between different object-file formats. Formats currently supported are COFF, ELF, a.out, Intel 960 b.out, MIPS ECOFF, HPPA SOM (with stabs debugging), and S-records; files may be read as .o files, archive libraries, or core dumps. BFD is available as a subroutine library so that other programs may take advantage of it, and the other GNU binary utilities are being converted to use it. *Configuration and Ports* Compile-time configuration (to select a particular architecture and operating system) is much easier. The script `configure' now allows you to configure GDB as either a native debugger or a cross-debugger. *Note Installing GDB::, for details on how to configure. *Interaction* The user interface to the GDB control variables is simpler, and is consolidated in two commands, `set' and `show'. Output lines are now broken at readable places, rather than overflowing onto the next line. You can suppress output of machine-level addresses, displaying only source language information. *C++* GDB now supports C++ multiple inheritance (if used with a GCC version 2 compiler), and also has limited support for C++ exception handling, with the commands `catch' and `info catch': GDB can break when an exception is raised, before the stack is peeled back to the exception handler's context. *Modula-2* GDB now has preliminary support for the GNU Modula-2 compiler, currently under development at the State University of New York at Buffalo. Coordinated development of both GDB and the GNU Modula-2 compiler will continue. Other Modula-2 compilers are currently not supported, and attempting to debug programs compiled with them will likely result in an error as the symbol table of the executable is read in. *Command Rationalization* Many GDB commands have been renamed to make them easier to remember and use. In particular, the subcommands of `info' and `show'/`set' are grouped to make the former refer to the state of your program, and the latter refer to the state of GDB itself. *Note Renamed Commands::, for details on what commands were renamed. *Shared Libraries* GDB 4 can debug programs and core files that use SunOS, SVR4, or IBM RS/6000 shared libraries. *Reference Card* GDB 4 has a reference card. *Note Formatting the Documentation: Formatting Documentation, for instructions about how to print it.  File: gdb.info, Node: Sample Session, Next: Invocation, Prev: New Features, Up: Top A Sample GDB Session ******************** You can use this manual at your leisure to read all about GDB. However, a handful of commands are enough to get started using the debugger. This chapter illustrates those commands. One of the preliminary versions of GNU `m4' (a generic macro processor) exhibits the following bug: sometimes, when we change its quote strings from the default, the commands used to capture one macro definition within another stop working. In the following short `m4' session, we define a macro `foo' which expands to `0000'; we then use the `m4' built-in `defn' to define `bar' as the same thing. However, when we change the open quote string to `' and the close quote string to `', the same procedure fails to define a new synonym `baz': $ cd gnu/m4 $ ./m4 define(foo,0000) foo 0000 define(bar,defn(`foo')) bar 0000 changequote(,) define(baz,defn(foo)) baz C-d m4: End of input: 0: fatal error: EOF in string Let us use GDB to try to see what is going on. $ gdb m4 GDB is free software and you are welcome to 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. GDB 4.11, Copyright 1993 Free Software Foundation, Inc... (gdb) GDB reads only enough symbol data to know where to find the rest when needed; as a result, the first prompt comes up very quickly. We now tell GDB to use a narrower display width than usual, so that examples will fit in this manual. (gdb) set width 70 We need to see how the `m4' built-in `changequote' works. Having looked at the source, we know the relevant subroutine is `m4_changequote', so we set a breakpoint there with the GDB `break' command. (gdb) break m4_changequote Breakpoint 1 at 0x62f4: file builtin.c, line 879. Using the `run' command, we start `m4' running under GDB control; as long as control does not reach the `m4_changequote' subroutine, the program runs as usual: (gdb) run Starting program: /work/Editorial/gdb/gnu/m4/m4 define(foo,0000) foo 0000 To trigger the breakpoint, we call `changequote'. GDB suspends execution of `m4', displaying information about the context where it stops. changequote(,) Breakpoint 1, m4_changequote (argc=3, argv=0x33c70) at builtin.c:879 879 if (bad_argc(TOKEN_DATA_TEXT(argv[0]),argc,1,3)) Now we use the command `n' (`next') to advance execution to the next line of the current function. (gdb) n 882 set_quotes((argc >= 2) ? TOKEN_DATA_TEXT(argv[1])\ : nil, `set_quotes' looks like a promising subroutine. We can go into it by using the command `s' (`step') instead of `next'. `step' goes to the next line to be executed in *any* subroutine, so it steps into `set_quotes'. (gdb) s set_quotes (lq=0x34c78 "", rq=0x34c88 "") at input.c:530 530 if (lquote != def_lquote) The display that shows the subroutine where `m4' is now suspended (and its arguments) is called a stack frame display. It shows a summary of the stack. We can use the `backtrace' command (which can also be spelled `bt'), to see where we are in the stack as a whole: the `backtrace' command displays a stack frame for each active subroutine. (gdb) bt #0 set_quotes (lq=0x34c78 "", rq=0x34c88 "") at input.c:530 #1 0x6344 in m4_changequote (argc=3, argv=0x33c70) at builtin.c:882 #2 0x8174 in expand_macro (sym=0x33320) at macro.c:242 #3 0x7a88 in expand_token (obs=0x0, t=209696, td=0xf7fffa30) at macro.c:71 #4 0x79dc in expand_input () at macro.c:40 #5 0x2930 in main (argc=0, argv=0xf7fffb20) at m4.c:195 We will step through a few more lines to see what happens. The first two times, we can use `s'; the next two times we use `n' to avoid falling into the `xstrdup' subroutine. (gdb) s 0x3b5c 532 if (rquote != def_rquote) (gdb) s 0x3b80 535 lquote = (lq == nil || *lq == '\0') ? \ def_lquote : xstrdup(lq); (gdb) n 536 rquote = (rq == nil || *rq == '\0') ? def_rquote\ : xstrdup(rq); (gdb) n 538 len_lquote = strlen(rquote); The last line displayed looks a little odd; we can examine the variables `lquote' and `rquote' to see if they are in fact the new left and right quotes we specified. We use the command `p' (`print') to see their values. (gdb) p lquote $1 = 0x35d40 "" (gdb) p rquote $2 = 0x35d50 "" `lquote' and `rquote' are indeed the new left and right quotes. To look at some context, we can display ten lines of source surrounding the current line with the `l' (`list') command. (gdb) l 533 xfree(rquote); 534 535 lquote = (lq == nil || *lq == '\0') ? def_lquote\ : xstrdup (lq); 536 rquote = (rq == nil || *rq == '\0') ? def_rquote\ : xstrdup (rq); 537 538 len_lquote = strlen(rquote); 539 len_rquote = strlen(lquote); 540 } 541 542 void Let us step past the two lines that set `len_lquote' and `len_rquote', and then examine the values of those variables. (gdb) n 539 len_rquote = strlen(lquote); (gdb) n 540 } (gdb) p len_lquote $3 = 9 (gdb) p len_rquote $4 = 7 That certainly looks wrong, assuming `len_lquote' and `len_rquote' are meant to be the lengths of `lquote' and `rquote' respectively. We can set them to better values using the `p' command, since it can print the value of any expression--and that expression can include subroutine calls and assignments. (gdb) p len_lquote=strlen(lquote) $5 = 7 (gdb) p len_rquote=strlen(rquote) $6 = 9 Is that enough to fix the problem of using the new quotes with the `m4' built-in `defn'? We can allow `m4' to continue executing with the `c' (`continue') command, and then try the example that caused trouble initially: (gdb) c Continuing. define(baz,defn(foo)) baz 0000 Success! The new quotes now work just as well as the default ones. The problem seems to have been just the two typos defining the wrong lengths. We allow `m4' exit by giving it an EOF as input: C-d Program exited normally. The message `Program exited normally.' is from GDB; it indicates `m4' has finished executing. We can end our GDB session with the GDB `quit' command. (gdb) quit  File: gdb.info, Node: Invocation, Next: Commands, Prev: Sample Session, Up: Top Getting In and Out of GDB ************************* This chapter discusses how to start GDB, and how to get out of it. (The essentials: type `gdb' to start GDB, and type `quit' or `C-d' to exit.) * Menu: * Invoking GDB:: How to start GDB * Quitting GDB:: How to quit GDB * Shell Commands:: How to use shell commands inside GDB  File: gdb.info, Node: Invoking GDB, Next: Quitting GDB, Up: Invocation Invoking GDB ============ Invoke GDB by running the program `gdb'. Once started, GDB reads commands from the terminal until you tell it to exit. You can also run `gdb' with a variety of arguments and options, to specify more of your debugging environment at the outset. The command-line options described here are designed to cover a variety of situations; in some environments, some of these options may effectively be unavailable. The most usual way to start GDB is with one argument, specifying an executable program: gdb PROGRAM You can also start with both an executable program and a core file specified: gdb PROGRAM CORE You can, instead, specify a process ID as a second argument, if you want to debug a running process: gdb PROGRAM 1234 would attach GDB to process `1234' (unless you also have a file named `1234'; GDB does check for a core file first). Taking advantage of the second command-line argument requires a fairly complete operating system; when you use GDB as a remote debugger attached to a bare board, there may not be any notion of "process", and there is often no way to get a core dump. You can further control how GDB starts up by using command-line options. GDB itself can remind you of the options available. Type gdb -help to display all available options and briefly describe their use (`gdb -h' is a shorter equivalent). All options and command line arguments you give are processed in sequential order. The order makes a difference when the `-x' option is used. * Menu: * File Options:: Choosing files * Mode Options:: Choosing modes  File: gdb.info, Node: File Options, Next: Mode Options, Up: Invoking GDB Choosing files -------------- When GDB starts, it reads any arguments other than options as specifying an executable file and core file (or process ID). This is the same as if the arguments were specified by the `-se' and `-c' options respectively. (GDB reads the first argument that does not have an associated option flag as equivalent to the `-se' option followed by that argument; and the second argument that does not have an associated option flag, if any, as equivalent to the `-c' option followed by that argument.) Many options have both long and short forms; both are shown in the following list. GDB also recognizes the long forms if you truncate them, so long as enough of the option is present to be unambiguous. (If you prefer, you can flag option arguments with `--' rather than `-', though we illustrate the more usual convention.) `-symbols FILE' `-s FILE' Read symbol table from file FILE. `-exec FILE' `-e FILE' Use file FILE as the executable file to execute when appropriate, and for examining pure data in conjunction with a core dump. `-se FILE' Read symbol table from file FILE and use it as the executable file. `-core FILE' `-c FILE' Use file FILE as a core dump to examine. `-c NUMBER' Connect to process ID NUMBER, as with the `attach' command (unless there is a file in core-dump format named NUMBER, in which case `-c' specifies that file as a core dump to read). `-command FILE' `-x FILE' Execute GDB commands from file FILE. *Note Command files: Command Files. `-directory DIRECTORY' `-d DIRECTORY' Add DIRECTORY to the path to search for source files. `-m' `-mapped' *Warning: this option depends on operating system facilities that are not supported on all systems.* If memory-mapped files are available on your system through the `mmap' system call, you can use this option to have GDB write the symbols from your program into a reusable file in the current directory. If the program you are debugging is called `/tmp/fred', the mapped symbol file will be `./fred.syms'. Future GDB debugging sessions will notice the presence of this file, and will quickly map in symbol information from it, rather than reading the symbol table from the executable program. The `.syms' file is specific to the host machine where GDB is run. It holds an exact image of the internal GDB symbol table. It cannot be shared across multiple host platforms. `-r' `-readnow' Read each symbol file's entire symbol table immediately, rather than the default, which is to read it incrementally as it is needed. This makes startup slower, but makes future operations faster. The `-mapped' and `-readnow' options are typically combined in order to build a `.syms' file that contains complete symbol information. (*Note Commands to specify files: Files, for information on `.syms' files.) A simple GDB invocation to do nothing but build a `.syms' file for future use is: gdb -batch -nx -mapped -readnow programname  File: gdb.info, Node: Mode Options, Prev: File Options, Up: Invoking GDB Choosing modes -------------- You can run GDB in various alternative modes--for example, in batch mode or quiet mode. `-nx' `-n' Do not execute commands from any initialization files (normally called `.gdbinit'). Normally, the commands in these files are executed after all the command options and arguments have been processed. *Note Command files: Command Files. `-quiet' `-q' "Quiet". Do not print the introductory and copyright messages. These messages are also suppressed in batch mode. `-batch' Run in batch mode. Exit with status `0' after processing all the command files specified with `-x' (and all commands from initialization files, if not inhibited with `-n'). Exit with nonzero status if an error occurs in executing the GDB commands in the command files. Batch mode may be useful for running GDB as a filter, for example to download and run a program on another computer; in order to make this more useful, the message Program exited normally. (which is ordinarily issued whenever a program running under GDB control terminates) is not issued when running in batch mode. `-cd DIRECTORY' Run GDB using DIRECTORY as its working directory, instead of the current directory. `-fullname' `-f' Emacs sets this option when it runs GDB as a subprocess. It tells GDB to output the full file name and line number in a standard, recognizable fashion each time a stack frame is displayed (which includes each time your program stops). This recognizable format looks like two `\032' characters, followed by the file name, line number and character position separated by colons, and a newline. The Emacs-to-GDB interface program uses the two `\032' characters as a signal to display the source code for the frame. `-b BPS' Set the line speed (baud rate or bits per second) of any serial interface used by GDB for remote debugging. `-tty DEVICE' Run using DEVICE for your program's standard input and output.  File: gdb.info, Node: Quitting GDB, Next: Shell Commands, Prev: Invoking GDB, Up: Invocation Quitting GDB ============ `quit' To exit GDB, use the `quit' command (abbreviated `q'), or type an end-of-file character (usually `C-d'). An interrupt (often `C-c') will not exit from GDB, but rather will terminate the action of any GDB command that is in progress and return to GDB command level. It is safe to type the interrupt character at any time because GDB does not allow it to take effect until a time when it is safe. If you have been using GDB to control an attached process or device, you can release it with the `detach' command (*note Debugging an already-running process: Attach.).  File: gdb.info, Node: Shell Commands, Prev: Quitting GDB, Up: Invocation Shell commands ============== If you need to execute occasional shell commands during your debugging session, there is no need to leave or suspend GDB; you can just use the `shell' command. `shell COMMAND STRING' Invoke a the standard shell to execute COMMAND STRING. If it exists, the environment variable `SHELL' determines which shell to run. Otherwise GDB uses `/bin/sh'. The utility `make' is often needed in development environments. You do not have to use the `shell' command for this purpose in GDB: `make MAKE-ARGS' Execute the `make' program with the specified arguments. This is equivalent to `shell make MAKE-ARGS'.  File: gdb.info, Node: Commands, Next: Running, Prev: Invocation, Up: Top GDB Commands ************ You can abbreviate a GDB command to the first few letters of the command name, if that abbreviation is unambiguous; and you can repeat certain GDB commands by typing just RET. You can also use the TAB key to get GDB to fill out the rest of a word in a command (or to show you the alternatives available, if there is more than one possibility). * Menu: * Command Syntax:: How to give commands to GDB * Completion:: Command completion * Help:: How to ask GDB for help  File: gdb.info, Node: Command Syntax, Next: Completion, Up: Commands Command syntax ============== A GDB command is a single line of input. There is no limit on how long it can be. It starts with a command name, which is followed by arguments whose meaning depends on the command name. For example, the command `step' accepts an argument which is the number of times to step, as in `step 5'. You can also use the `step' command with no arguments. Some command names do not allow any arguments. GDB command names may always be truncated if that abbreviation is unambiguous. Other possible command abbreviations are listed in the documentation for individual commands. In some cases, even ambiguous abbreviations are allowed; for example, `s' is specially defined as equivalent to `step' even though there are other commands whose names start with `s'. You can test abbreviations by using them as arguments to the `help' command. A blank line as input to GDB (typing just RET) means to repeat the previous command. Certain commands (for example, `run') will not repeat this way; these are commands for which unintentional repetition might cause trouble and which you are unlikely to want to repeat. The `list' and `x' commands, when you repeat them with RET, construct new arguments rather than repeating exactly as typed. This permits easy scanning of source or memory. GDB can also use RET in another way: to partition lengthy output, in a way similar to the common utility `more' (*note Screen size: Screen Size.). Since it is easy to press one RET too many in this situation, GDB disables command repetition after any command that generates this sort of display. Any text from a `#' to the end of the line is a comment; it does nothing. This is useful mainly in command files (*note Command files: Command Files.).  File: gdb.info, Node: Completion, Next: Help, Prev: Command Syntax, Up: Commands Command completion ================== GDB can fill in the rest of a word in a command for you, if there is only one possibility; it can also show you what the valid possibilities are for the next word in a command, at any time. This works for GDB commands, GDB subcommands, and the names of symbols in your program. Press the TAB key whenever you want GDB to fill out the rest of a word. If there is only one possibility, GDB will fill in the word, and wait for you to finish the command (or press RET to enter it). For example, if you type (gdb) info bre TAB GDB fills in the rest of the word `breakpoints', since that is the only `info' subcommand beginning with `bre': (gdb) info breakpoints You can either press RET at this point, to run the `info breakpoints' command, or backspace and enter something else, if `breakpoints' does not look like the command you expected. (If you were sure you wanted `info breakpoints' in the first place, you might as well just type RET immediately after `info bre', to exploit command abbreviations rather than command completion). If there is more than one possibility for the next word when you press TAB, GDB will sound a bell. You can either supply more characters and try again, or just press TAB a second time, and GDB will display all the possible completions for that word. For example, you might want to set a breakpoint on a subroutine whose name begins with `make_', but when you type `b make_TAB' GDB just sounds the bell. Typing TAB again will display all the function names in your program that begin with those characters, for example: (gdb) b make_ TAB GDB sounds bell; press TAB again, to see: make_a_section_from_file make_environ make_abs_section make_function_type make_blockvector make_pointer_type make_cleanup make_reference_type make_command make_symbol_completion_list (gdb) b make_ After displaying the available possibilities, GDB copies your partial input (`b make_' in the example) so you can finish the command. If you just want to see the list of alternatives in the first place, you can press `M-?' rather than pressing TAB twice. `M-?' means `META ?'. You can type this either by holding down a key designated as the META shift on your keyboard (if there is one) while typing `?', or as ESC followed by `?'. Sometimes the string you need, while logically a "word", may contain parentheses or other characters that GDB normally excludes from its notion of a word. To permit word completion to work in this situation, you may enclose words in `'' (single quote marks) in GDB commands. The most likely situation where you might need this is in typing the name of a C++ function. This is because C++ allows function overloading (multiple definitions of the same function, distinguished by argument type). For example, when you want to set a breakpoint you may need to distinguish whether you mean the version of `name' that takes an `int' parameter, `name(int)', or the version that takes a `float' parameter, `name(float)'. To use the word-completion facilities in this situation, type a single quote `'' at the beginning of the function name. This alerts GDB that it may need to consider more information than usual when you press TAB or `M-?' to request word completion: (gdb) b 'bubble( M-? bubble(double,double) bubble(int,int) (gdb) b 'bubble( In some cases, GDB can tell that completing a name will require quotes. When this happens, GDB will insert the quote for you (while completing as much as it can) if you do not type the quote in the first place: (gdb) b bub TAB GDB alters your input line to the following, and rings a bell: (gdb) b 'bubble( In general, GDB can tell that a quote is needed (and inserts it) if you have not yet started typing the argument list when you ask for completion on an overloaded symbol.  File: gdb.info, Node: Help, Prev: Completion, Up: Commands Getting help ============ You can always ask GDB itself for information on its commands, using the command `help'. `help' `h' You can use `help' (abbreviated `h') with no arguments to display a short list of named classes of commands: (gdb) help List of classes of commands: running -- Running the program stack -- Examining the stack data -- Examining data breakpoints -- Making program stop at certain points files -- Specifying and examining files status -- Status inquiries support -- Support facilities user-defined -- User-defined commands aliases -- Aliases of other commands obscure -- Obscure features Type "help" followed by a class name for a list of commands in that class. Type "help" followed by command name for full documentation. Command name abbreviations are allowed if unambiguous. (gdb) `help CLASS' Using one of the general help classes as an argument, you can get a list of the individual commands in that class. For example, here is the help display for the class `status': (gdb) help status Status inquiries. List of commands: show -- Generic command for showing things set with "set" info -- Generic command for printing status Type "help" followed by command name for full documentation. Command name abbreviations are allowed if unambiguous. (gdb) `help COMMAND' With a command name as `help' argument, GDB will display a short paragraph on how to use that command. In addition to `help', you can use the GDB commands `info' and `show' to inquire about the state of your program, or the state of GDB itself. Each command supports many topics of inquiry; this manual introduces each of them in the appropriate context. The listings under `info' and under `show' in the Index point to all the sub-commands. *Note Index::. `info' This command (abbreviated `i') is for describing the state of your program. For example, you can list the arguments given to your program with `info args', list the registers currently in use with `info registers', or list the breakpoints you have set with `info breakpoints'. You can get a complete list of the `info' sub-commands with `help info'. `show' In contrast, `show' is for describing the state of GDB itself. You can change most of the things you can `show', by using the related command `set'; for example, you can control what number system is used for displays with `set radix', or simply inquire which is currently in use with `show radix'. To display all the settable parameters and their current values, you can use `show' with no arguments; you may also use `info set'. Both commands produce the same display. Here are three miscellaneous `show' subcommands, all of which are exceptional in lacking corresponding `set' commands: `show version' Show what version of GDB is running. You should include this information in GDB bug-reports. If multiple versions of GDB are in use at your site, you may occasionally want to determine which version of GDB you are running; as GDB evolves, new commands are introduced, and old ones may wither away. The version number is also announced when you start GDB. `show copying' Display information about permission for copying GDB. `show warranty' Display the GNU "NO WARRANTY" statement.  File: gdb.info, Node: Running, Next: Stopping, Prev: Commands, Up: Top Running Programs Under GDB ************************** When you run a program under GDB, you must first generate debugging information when you compile it. You may start it with its arguments, if any, in an environment of your choice. You may redirect your program's input and output, debug an already running process, or kill a child process. * Menu: * Compilation:: Compiling for debugging * Starting:: Starting your program * Arguments:: Your program's arguments * Environment:: Your program's environment * Working Directory:: Your program's working directory * Input/Output:: Your program's input and output * Attach:: Debugging an already-running process * Kill Process:: Killing the child process * Process Information:: Additional process information  File: gdb.info, Node: Compilation, Next: Starting, Up: Running Compiling for debugging ======================= In order to debug a program effectively, you need to generate debugging information when you compile it. This debugging information is stored in the object file; it describes the data type of each variable or function and the correspondence between source line numbers and addresses in the executable code. To request debugging information, specify the `-g' option when you run the compiler. Many C compilers are unable to handle the `-g' and `-O' options together. Using those compilers, you cannot generate optimized executables containing debugging information. GCC, the GNU C compiler, supports `-g' with or without `-O', making it possible to debug optimized code. We recommend that you *always* use `-g' whenever you compile a program. You may think your program is correct, but there is no sense in pushing your luck. When you debug a program compiled with `-g -O', remember that the optimizer is rearranging your code; the debugger will show you what is really there. Do not be too surprised when the execution path does not exactly match your source file! An extreme example: if you define a variable, but never use it, GDB will never see that variable--because the compiler optimizes it out of existence. Some things do not work as well with `-g -O' as with just `-g', particularly on machines with instruction scheduling. If in doubt, recompile with `-g' alone, and if this fixes the problem, please report it as a bug (including a test case!). Older versions of the GNU C compiler permitted a variant option `-gg' for debugging information. GDB no longer supports this format; if your GNU C compiler has this option, do not use it.  File: gdb.info, Node: Starting, Next: Arguments, Prev: Compilation, Up: Running Starting your program ===================== `run' `r' Use the `run' command to start your program under GDB. You must first specify the program name (except on VxWorks) with an argument to GDB (*note Getting In and Out of GDB: Invocation.), or by using the `file' or `exec-file' command (*note Commands to specify files: Files.). If you are running your program in an execution environment that supports processes, `run' creates an inferior process and makes that process run your program. (In environments without processes, `run' jumps to the start of your program.) The execution of a program is affected by certain information it receives from its superior. GDB provides ways to specify this information, which you must do *before* starting your program. (You can change it after starting your program, but such changes will only affect your program the next time you start it.) This information may be divided into four categories: The *arguments.* Specify the arguments to give your program as the arguments of the `run' command. If a shell is available on your target, the shell is used to pass the arguments, so that you may use normal conventions (such as wildcard expansion or variable substitution) in describing the arguments. In Unix systems, you can control which shell is used with the `SHELL' environment variable. *Note Your program's arguments: Arguments. The *environment.* Your program normally inherits its environment from GDB, but you can use the GDB commands `set environment' and `unset environment' to change parts of the environment that will be given to your program. *Note Your program's environment: Environment. The *working directory.* Your program inherits its working directory from GDB. You can set the GDB working directory with the `cd' command in GDB. *Note Your program's working directory: Working Directory. The *standard input and output.* Your program normally uses the same device for standard input and standard output as GDB is using. You can redirect input and output in the `run' command line, or you can use the `tty' command to set a different device for your program. *Note Your program's input and output: Input/Output. *Warning:* While input and output redirection work, you cannot use pipes to pass the output of the program you are debugging to another program; if you attempt this, GDB is likely to wind up debugging the wrong program. When you issue the `run' command, your program begins to execute immediately. *Note Stopping and continuing: Stopping, for discussion of how to arrange for your program to stop. Once your program has stopped, you may call functions in your program, using the `print' or `call' commands. *Note Examining Data: Data. If the modification time of your symbol file has changed since the last time GDB read its symbols, GDB will discard its symbol table and re-read it. When it does this, GDB tries to retain your current breakpoints.  File: gdb.info, Node: Arguments, Next: Environment, Prev: Starting, Up: Running Your program's arguments ======================== The arguments to your program can be specified by the arguments of the `run' command. They are passed to a shell, which expands wildcard characters and performs redirection of I/O, and thence to your program. Your `SHELL' environment variable (if it exists) specifies what shell GDB if you do not define `SHELL', GDB uses `/bin/sh'. `run' with no arguments uses the same arguments used by the previous `run', or those set by the `set args' command. `set args' Specify the arguments to be used the next time your program is run. If `set args' has no arguments, `run' will execute your program with no arguments. Once you have run your program with arguments, using `set args' before the next `run' is the only way to run it again without arguments. `show args' Show the arguments to give your program when it is started.  File: gdb.info, Node: Environment, Next: Working Directory, Prev: Arguments, Up: Running Your program's environment ========================== The "environment" consists of a set of environment variables and their values. Environment variables conventionally record such things as your user name, your home directory, your terminal type, and your search path for programs to run. Usually you set up environment variables with the shell and they are inherited by all the other programs you run. When debugging, it can be useful to try running your program with a modified environment without having to start GDB over again. `path DIRECTORY' Add DIRECTORY to the front of the `PATH' environment variable (the search path for executables), for both GDB and your program. You may specify several directory names, separated by `:' or whitespace. If DIRECTORY is already in the path, it is moved to the front, so it will be searched sooner. You can use the string `$cwd' to refer to whatever is the current working directory at the time GDB searches the path. If you use `.' instead, it refers to the directory where you executed the `path' command. GDB replaces `.' in the DIRECTORY argument (with the current path) before adding DIRECTORY to the search path. `show paths' Display the list of search paths for executables (the `PATH' environment variable). `show environment [VARNAME]' Print the value of environment variable VARNAME to be given to your program when it starts. If you do not supply VARNAME, print the names and values of all environment variables to be given to your program. You can abbreviate `environment' as `env'. `set environment VARNAME [=] VALUE' Set environment variable VARNAME to VALUE. The value changes for your program only, not for GDB itself. VALUE may be any string; the values of environment variables are just strings, and any interpretation is supplied by your program itself. The VALUE parameter is optional; if it is eliminated, the variable is set to a null value. For example, this command: set env USER = foo tells a Unix program, when subsequently run, that its user is named `foo'. (The spaces around `=' are used for clarity here; they are not actually required.) `unset environment VARNAME' Remove variable VARNAME from the environment to be passed to your program. This is different from `set env VARNAME ='; `unset environment' removes the variable from the environment, rather than assigning it an empty value. *Warning:* GDB runs your program using the shell indicated by your `SHELL' environment variable if it exists (or `/bin/sh' if not). If your `SHELL' variable names a shell that runs an initialization file--such as `.cshrc' for C-shell, or `.bashrc' for BASH--any variables you set in that file will affect your program. You may wish to move setting of environment variables to files that are only run when you sign on, such as `.login' or `.profile'.  File: gdb.info, Node: Working Directory, Next: Input/Output, Prev: Environment, Up: Running Your program's working directory ================================ Each time you start your program with `run', it inherits its working directory from the current working directory of GDB. The GDB working directory is initially whatever it inherited from its parent process (typically the shell), but you can specify a new working directory in GDB with the `cd' command. The GDB working directory also serves as a default for the commands that specify files for GDB to operate on. *Note Commands to specify files: Files. `cd DIRECTORY' Set the GDB working directory to DIRECTORY. `pwd' Print the GDB working directory.  File: gdb.info, Node: Input/Output, Next: Attach, Prev: Working Directory, Up: Running Your program's input and output =============================== By default, the program you run under GDB does input and output to the same terminal that GDB uses. GDB switches the terminal to its own terminal modes to interact with you, but it records the terminal modes your program was using and switches back to them when you continue running your program. `info terminal' Displays information recorded by GDB about the terminal modes your program is using. You can redirect your program's input and/or output using shell redirection with the `run' command. For example, run > outfile starts your program, diverting its output to the file `outfile'. Another way to specify where your program should do input and output is with the `tty' command. This command accepts a file name as argument, and causes this file to be the default for future `run' commands. It also resets the controlling terminal for the child process, for future `run' commands. For example, tty /dev/ttyb directs that processes started with subsequent `run' commands default to do input and output on the terminal `/dev/ttyb' and have that as their controlling terminal. An explicit redirection in `run' overrides the `tty' command's effect on the input/output device, but not its effect on the controlling terminal. When you use the `tty' command or redirect input in the `run' command, only the input *for your program* is affected. The input for GDB still comes from your terminal. .