This is the mail archive of the
gdb@sources.redhat.com
mailing list for the GDB project.
GDB as a program analyzer - some thoughts
- From: Alexandre Courbot <Alexandre dot Courbot at lifl dot fr>
- To: gdb at sources dot redhat dot com
- Date: Tue, 18 May 2004 16:55:57 +0200
- Subject: GDB as a program analyzer - some thoughts
This post deals about using GDB for non-debugging purposes, I hope it's
not offtopic. I'm also hoping to find some people interested in the same
matters than I to discuss about how GDB could be improved for analysis
purposes.
My few posts here have been basically about it. GDB is great to extract
datas out of a program and output them to a file. It's very different to
gprof - for instance, it's useful to graphically measure the efficiency
of one memory manager against another, by placing breakpoints at memory
allocation functions and recording the amount of memory used there. The
recorded datas can then proove that, with some strategy, we saved a few
garbage collections and therefore gained speed.
This is of course nothing you can't do with printfs enclosed inside
#ifdef DEBUGs, but the advantage is that GDB allows you to do it in a
non-intrusive and much more flexible way. I'm surprised that I haven't
found a solutions dedicated to that - and so far, gdb is by far the best
solution I've found. Writing a gdb script + the corresponding gnuplot
script results in easy to get graphes of whatever you want in your program.
If people are interested in it, I can post some of the scripts I'm using
with their result. I can also write a tutorial page on that topic.
I have some non-elegant bits in my scripts however. They mainly concern
breakpoints. Since the breakpoints are set into gdb scripts, it's better
if they reference symbols like function names instead of
file:line_number pairs. The line of the breakpoint might move in future
code modifications, and the gdb script won't be updated accordingly.
Unfortunately, breaking at the very beginning of the function you are
interested doesn't give you the data that has been computed inside.
So, I wonder if some breakpoint settings would be implementable with gdb
(or if they can already be expressed and I missed them):
- Setting a breakpoint at the returning of a function
- Setting a breakpoint at some fixed point of a function (for instance,
a C label)
- Any other breakpoint setting that is not line-number based and would
support source modification
Would these features be desirable? Would they not?
Alex.
--
Alexandre Courbot - PhD student
RD2P/LIFL
http://www.lifl.fr/~courbot