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Special Forums UNIX Desktop Questions & Answers Knowing the size and location of variables in a C program Post 302833697 by Corona688 on Wednesday 17th of July 2013 04:30:15 PM
Old 07-17-2013
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cambria
So I need some help with this. Pardon me if I'm posting in the wrong forum, after some googling for my answer and finding nothing I found this forum. It seemed appropriate for what I was seeking. I just didnt find a forum that concerned the use of GDB. I'm learning to use the C language and GDB. What I don't understand is how the computer knows how big each piece of a program is in memory, and how I could find my variable's in memory using GDB.
To get nice debugging information like that, you have to build the executable with debugging information(i.e. -ggdb). This embeds lots of offsets and labels inside the program file for gdb's convenience.

This is also why gdb has trouble when it steps into code outside your program, like libc... Libraries are probably not built with debugging information, so details about their insides will be very limited.

Quote:
I mean if all memory is numbered how can anyone including the CPU know where a word or giant or w/e starts and ends?
To put it bluntly -- it doesn't. They all become hardcoded segment offsets, in the end. Without debugging information, you're left with detective work.

Quote:
If I wanted to find my variable in memory after setting a break point in it and accessing the $esp register how would I know where my variables began and ended?
If your executable wasn't built with debugging info, that'd mean detective work.

Last edited by Corona688; 07-17-2013 at 05:38 PM..
 

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BTRACEBACK(1)					     Network backup, recovery and verification					     BTRACEBACK(1)

NAME
btraceback - wrapper script around gdb and bsmtp SYNOPSIS
btraceback /path/to/binary pid DESCRIPTION
btraceback is a wrapper shell script around the gdb debugger (or dbx on Solaris systems) and bsmtp, provided for debugging purposes. USAGE
btraceback is called by the exception handlers of the Bacula daemons during a crash. It can also be called interactively to view the cur- rent state of the threads belonging to a process, but this is not recommended unless you are trying to debug a problem (see below). NOTES
In order to work properly, debugging symbols must be available to the debugger on the system, and gdb, or dbx (on Solaris systems) must be available in the $PATH. If the Director or Storage daemon runs under a non-root uid, you will probably need to be modify the btraceback script to elevate privi- leges for the call to gdb/dbx, to ensure it has the proper permissions to debug when called by the daemon. Although Bacula's use of btraceback within its exception handlers is always safe, manual or interactive use of btraceback is subject to the same risks than live debugging of any program, which means it could cause Bacula to crash under rare and abnormal circumstances. Conse- quently we do not recommend manual use of btraceback in production environments unless it is required for debugging a problem. ENVIRONMENT
btracback relies on $PATH to find the debugger. FILES
/usr/lib/bacula/btraceback The script itself. /usr/sbin/btraceback symbolic link to /usr/lib/bacula/btraceback /etc/bacula/scripts/btraceback.gdb the GDB command batch used to output a stack trace AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Lucas B. Cohen <lbc@members.fsf.org> SEE ALSO
bsmtp(1) Kern Sibbald 6 December 2009 BTRACEBACK(1)
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