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gdb-add-index man

gdb-add-index

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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