The first step is to compile your program with -g
to include debugging information within the executable:
g++ -g -o myprog.exe mycode.cpp
Then the program can be loaded into gdb
:
gdb myprog.exe
A few commands to get you started:
break main
will cause the debugger to break whenmain
is called. You can also break on lines of code withbreak FILENAME:LINENO
. For example,break mycode.cpp:4
breaks execution whenever the program reaches line 4 ofmycode.cpp
.start
starts the program. In your case, you need to set breakpoints before starting the program because it exits quickly.
At a breakpoint:
print VARNAME
. That’s how you print values of variables, whether local, static, or global. For example, at thefor
loop, you can typeprint temp
to print out the value of thetemp
variable.step
This is equivalent to “step into”.next
oradv +1
Advance to the next line (like “step over”). You can also advance to a specific line of a specific file with, for example,adv mycode.cpp:8
.bt
Print a backtrace. This is a stack trace, essentially.continue
Exactly like a “continue” operation of a visual debugger. It causes the program execution to continue until the next break point or the program exits.
The best thing to read is the GDB users’ manual.