1 <section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook" version="5.0"
2 xml:id="manual.intro.using.debug" xreflabel="Debugging Support">
3 <?dbhtml filename="debug.html"?>
5 <info><title>Debugging Support</title>
8 <keyword>debug</keyword>
15 There are numerous things that can be done to improve the ease with
16 which C++ binaries are debugged when using the GNU tool chain. Here
20 <section xml:id="debug.compiler"><info><title>Using <command>g++</command></title></info>
23 Compiler flags determine how debug information is transmitted
24 between compilation and debug or analysis tools.
28 The default optimizations and debug flags for a libstdc++ build
29 are <code>-g -O2</code>. However, both debug and optimization
30 flags can be varied to change debugging characteristics. For
31 instance, turning off all optimization via the <code>-g -O0
32 -fno-inline</code> flags will disable inlining and optimizations,
33 and add debugging information, so that stepping through all functions,
34 (including inlined constructors and destructors) is possible. In
35 addition, <code>-fno-eliminate-unused-debug-types</code> can be
36 used when additional debug information, such as nested class info,
41 Or, the debug format that the compiler and debugger use to
42 communicate information about source constructs can be changed via
43 <code>-gdwarf-2</code> or <code>-gstabs</code> flags: some debugging
44 formats permit more expressive type and scope information to be
45 shown in GDB. Expressiveness can be enhanced by flags like
46 <code>-g3</code>. The default debug information for a particular
47 platform can be identified via the value set by the
48 PREFERRED_DEBUGGING_TYPE macro in the GCC sources.
52 Many other options are available: please see <link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Debugging-Options.html#Debugging%20Options">"Options
53 for Debugging Your Program"</link> in Using the GNU Compiler
54 Collection (GCC) for a complete list.
58 <section xml:id="debug.req"><info><title>Debug Versions of Library Binary Files</title></info>
62 If you would like debug symbols in libstdc++, there are two ways to
63 build libstdc++ with debug flags. The first is to create a separate
64 debug build by running make from the top-level of a tree
65 freshly-configured with
68 --enable-libstdcxx-debug
70 <para>and perhaps</para>
72 --enable-libstdcxx-debug-flags='...'
75 Both the normal build and the debug build will persist, without
76 having to specify <code>CXXFLAGS</code>, and the debug library will
77 be installed in a separate directory tree, in <code>(prefix)/lib/debug</code>.
78 For more information, look at the
79 <link linkend="manual.intro.setup.configure">configuration</link> section.
83 A second approach is to use the configuration flags
86 make CXXFLAGS='-g3 -fno-inline -O0' all
90 This quick and dirty approach is often sufficient for quick
91 debugging tasks, when you cannot or don't want to recompile your
92 application to use the <link linkend="manual.ext.debug_mode">debug mode</link>.</para>
95 <section xml:id="debug.memory"><info><title>Memory Leak Hunting</title></info>
99 There are various third party memory tracing and debug utilities
100 that can be used to provide detailed memory allocation information
101 about C++ code. An exhaustive list of tools is not going to be
102 attempted, but includes <code>mtrace</code>, <code>valgrind</code>,
103 <code>mudflap</code>, and the non-free commercial product
104 <code>purify</code>. In addition, <code>libcwd</code> has a
105 replacement for the global new and delete operators that can track
106 memory allocation and deallocation and provide useful memory
111 Regardless of the memory debugging tool being used, there is one
112 thing of great importance to keep in mind when debugging C++ code
113 that uses <code>new</code> and <code>delete</code>: there are
114 different kinds of allocation schemes that can be used by <code>
115 std::allocator</code>. For implementation details, see the <link linkend="manual.ext.allocator.mt">mt allocator</link> documentation and
116 look specifically for <code>GLIBCXX_FORCE_NEW</code>.
120 In a nutshell, the optional <classname>mt_allocator</classname>
121 is a high-performance pool allocator, and can
122 give the mistaken impression that in a suspect executable, memory is
123 being leaked, when in reality the memory "leak" is a pool being used
124 by the library's allocator and is reclaimed after program
129 For valgrind, there are some specific items to keep in mind. First
130 of all, use a version of valgrind that will work with current GNU
131 C++ tools: the first that can do this is valgrind 1.0.4, but later
132 versions should work at least as well. Second of all, use a
133 completely unoptimized build to avoid confusing valgrind. Third, use
134 GLIBCXX_FORCE_NEW to keep extraneous pool allocation noise from
135 cluttering debug information.
139 Fourth, it may be necessary to force deallocation in other libraries
140 as well, namely the "C" library. On linux, this can be accomplished
141 with the appropriate use of the <code>__cxa_atexit</code> or
142 <code>atexit</code> functions.
146 #include <cstdlib>
148 extern "C" void __libc_freeres(void);
150 void do_something() { }
154 atexit(__libc_freeres);
161 <para>or, using <code>__cxa_atexit</code>:</para>
164 extern "C" void __libc_freeres(void);
165 extern "C" int __cxa_atexit(void (*func) (void *), void *arg, void *d);
167 void do_something() { }
171 extern void* __dso_handle __attribute__ ((__weak__));
172 __cxa_atexit((void (*) (void *)) __libc_freeres, NULL,
173 &__dso_handle ? __dso_handle : NULL);
180 Suggested valgrind flags, given the suggestions above about setting
181 up the runtime environment, library, and test file, might be:
184 valgrind -v --num-callers=20 --leak-check=yes --leak-resolution=high --show-reachable=yes a.out
189 <section xml:id="debug.races"><info><title>Data Race Hunting</title></info>
191 All synchronization primitives used in the library internals need to be
192 understood by race detectors so that they do not produce false reports.
196 Two annotation macros are used to explain low-level synchronization
198 <code>_GLIBCXX_SYNCHRONIZATION_HAPPENS_BEFORE()</code> and
199 <code> _GLIBCXX_SYNCHRONIZATION_HAPPENS_AFTER()</code>.
200 By default, these macros are defined empty -- anyone who wants
201 to use a race detector needs to redefine them to call an
203 Since these macros are empty by default when the library is built,
204 redefining them will only affect inline functions and template
205 instantiations which are compiled in user code. This allows annotation
206 of templates such as <code>shared_ptr</code>, but not code which is
207 only instantiated in the library. Code which is only instantiated in
208 the library needs to be recompiled with the annotation macros defined.
209 That can be done by rebuilding the entire
210 <filename class="libraryfile">libstdc++.so</filename> file but a simpler
211 alternative exists for ELF platforms such as GNU/Linux, because ELF
212 symbol interposition allows symbols defined in the shared library to be
213 overridden by symbols with the same name that appear earlier in the
214 runtime search path. This means you only need to recompile the functions
215 that are affected by the annotation macros, which can be done by
216 recompiling individual files.
217 Annotating <code>std::string</code> and <code>std::wstring</code>
218 reference counting can be done by disabling extern templates (by defining
219 <code>_GLIBCXX_EXTERN_TEMPLATE=-1</code>) or by rebuilding the
220 <filename>src/string-inst.cc</filename> file.
221 Annotating the remaining atomic operations (at the time of writing these
222 are in <code>ios_base::Init::~Init</code>, <code>locale::_Impl</code>,
223 <code>locale::facet</code> and <code>thread::_M_start_thread</code>)
224 requires rebuilding the relevant source files.
228 The approach described above is known to work with the following race
230 <link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
231 xlink:href="http://valgrind.org/docs/manual/drd-manual.html">
233 <link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
234 xlink:href="http://valgrind.org/docs/manual/hg-manual.html">
236 <link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
237 xlink:href="https://github.com/google/sanitizers">
238 ThreadSanitizer</link> (this refers to ThreadSanitizer v1, not the
239 new "tsan" feature built-in to GCC itself).
243 With DRD, Helgrind and ThreadSanitizer you will need to define
244 the macros like this:
246 #define _GLIBCXX_SYNCHRONIZATION_HAPPENS_BEFORE(A) ANNOTATE_HAPPENS_BEFORE(A)
247 #define _GLIBCXX_SYNCHRONIZATION_HAPPENS_AFTER(A) ANNOTATE_HAPPENS_AFTER(A)
249 Refer to the documentation of each particular tool for details.
254 <section xml:id="debug.gdb"><info><title>Using <command>gdb</command></title></info>
260 Many options are available for GDB itself: please see <link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="http://sourceware.org/gdb/current/onlinedocs/gdb/">
261 "GDB features for C++" </link> in the GDB documentation. Also
262 recommended: the other parts of this manual.
266 These settings can either be switched on in at the GDB command line,
267 or put into a <filename>.gdbinit</filename> file to establish default
268 debugging characteristics, like so:
274 set print static-members on
276 set print demangle on
277 set demangle-style gnu-v3
281 Starting with version 7.0, GDB includes support for writing
282 pretty-printers in Python. Pretty printers for containers and other
283 classes are distributed with GCC from version 4.5.0 and should be installed
284 alongside the libstdc++ shared library files and found automatically by
289 Depending where libstdc++ is installed, GDB might refuse to auto-load
290 the python printers and print a warning instead.
291 If this happens the python printers can be enabled by following the
292 instructions GDB gives for setting your <code>auto-load safe-path</code>
293 in your <filename>.gdbinit</filename> configuration file.
297 Once loaded, standard library classes that the printers support
298 should print in a more human-readable format. To print the classes
299 in the old style, use the <userinput>/r</userinput> (raw) switch in the
300 print command (i.e., <userinput>print /r foo</userinput>). This will
301 print the classes as if the Python pretty-printers were not loaded.
305 For additional information on STL support and GDB please visit:
306 <link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="http://sourceware.org/gdb/wiki/STLSupport"> "GDB Support
307 for STL" </link> in the GDB wiki. Additionally, in-depth
308 documentation and discussion of the pretty printing feature can be
309 found in "Pretty Printing" node in the GDB manual. You can find
310 on-line versions of the GDB user manual in GDB's homepage, at
311 <link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="http://sourceware.org/gdb/"> "GDB: The GNU Project
317 <section xml:id="debug.exceptions"><info><title>Tracking uncaught exceptions</title></info>
320 The <link linkend="support.termination.verbose">verbose
321 termination handler</link> gives information about uncaught
322 exceptions which kill the program.
326 <section xml:id="debug.debug_mode"><info><title>Debug Mode</title></info>
328 <para> The <link linkend="manual.ext.debug_mode">Debug Mode</link>
329 has compile and run-time checks for many containers.
333 <section xml:id="debug.compile_time_checks"><info><title>Compile Time Checking</title></info>
335 <para> The <link linkend="manual.ext.compile_checks">Compile-Time
336 Checks</link> extension has compile-time checks for many algorithms.
340 <section xml:id="debug.profile_mode" xreflabel="debug.profile_mode"><info><title>Profile-based Performance Analysis</title></info>
342 <para> The <link linkend="manual.ext.profile_mode">Profile-based
343 Performance Analysis</link> extension has performance checks for many