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gdb-add-index [-dwarf-5] filename
When GDB finds a symbol file, it scans the symbols in the file in order to construct an internal symbol table. This lets most GDB operations work quickly–at the cost of a delay early on. For large programs, this delay can be quite lengthy, so GDB provides a way to build an index, which speeds up startup.
To determine whether a file contains such an index, use the command
readelf -S filename: the index is stored in a section named
.gdb_index
(pre-DWARF 5) or .debug_names
and
.debug_str
(DWARF 5). Indexes can only be produced on systems
which use ELF binaries and DWARF debug information (i.e., sections
named .debug_*
).
By default gdb-add-index
will add a pre-DWARF 5
.gdb_index
section to filename. With -dwarf-5
DWARF 5 sections are added instead.
filename must be writable.
gdb-add-index
uses GDB, objcopy
, and
readelf
found in the PATH
environment variable. If
you want to use different versions of these programs, you can specify
them through the appropriate environment variables (see below).
gdb-add-index
exits with status 0 if it succeeds in creating
the index for filename or greater than 0 if an error occurs.
See more in Index Files.
-dwarf-5
Add DWARF 5 sections instead of previous .debug_index
section.
GDB
Full file name of the gdb
program to use for index generation.
If not set, the PATH
will be searched for a gdb
program.
OBJCOPY
Full file name of the objcopy
program to use to copy section
information into the given file. If not set, the PATH
will be searched
for a objcopy
program.
READELF
Full file name of the readelf
program to use to inspect
properties of the given file. If not set, the PATH
will be searched
for a readelf
program.
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