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 shows 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 never sees 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 to us 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.
Packaging copyright © 1988-2000 OAR Corporation
Context copyright by each document's author. See Free Software Foundation for information.