addr2line - convert addresses or symbol+offset into file names and
line numbers
addr2line [-a|--addresses]
[-b bfdname|--target=bfdname]
[-C|--demangle[=style]]
[-r|--no-recurse-limit]
[-R|--recurse-limit]
[-e filename|--exe=filename]
[-f|--functions] [-s|--basename]
[-i|--inlines]
[-p|--pretty-print]
[-j|--section=name]
[-H|--help] [-V|--version]
[addr addr ...]
addr2line translates addresses or symbol+offset into file
names and line numbers. Given an address or symbol+offset in an executable
or an offset in a section of a relocatable object, it uses the debugging
information to figure out which file name and line number are associated
with it.
The executable or relocatable object to use is specified with the
-e option. The default is the file a.out. The section in the
relocatable object to use is specified with the -j option.
addr2line has two modes of operation.
In the first, hexadecimal addresses or symbol+offset are specified
on the command line, and addr2line displays the file name and line
number for each address.
In the second, addr2line reads hexadecimal addresses or
symbol+offset from standard input, and prints the file name and line number
for each address on standard output. In this mode, addr2line may be
used in a pipe to convert dynamically chosen addresses.
The format of the output is FILENAME:LINENO. By default
each input address generates one line of output.
Two options can generate additional lines before each
FILENAME:LINENO line (in that order).
If the -a option is used then a line with the input address
is displayed.
If the -f option is used, then a line with the
FUNCTIONNAME is displayed. This is the name of the function
containing the address.
One option can generate additional lines after the
FILENAME:LINENO line.
If the -i option is used and the code at the given address
is present there because of inlining by the compiler then additional lines
are displayed afterwards. One or two extra lines (if the -f option is
used) are displayed for each inlined function.
Alternatively if the -p option is used then each input
address generates a single, long, output line containing the address, the
function name, the file name and the line number. If the -i option
has also been used then any inlined functions will be displayed in the same
manner, but on separate lines, and prefixed by the text (inlined
by).
If the file name or function name can not be determined,
addr2line will print two question marks in their place. If the line
number can not be determined, addr2line will print 0.
When symbol+offset is used, +offset is optional, except when the
symbol is ambigious with a hex number. The resolved symbols can be mangled
or unmangled, except unmangled symbols with + are not allowed.
The long and short forms of options, shown here as alternatives,
are equivalent.
- -a
- --addresses
- Display the address before the function name, file and line number
information. The address is printed with a 0x prefix to easily
identify it.
- -b bfdname
- --target=bfdname
- Specify that the object-code format for the object files is
bfdname.
- -C
- --demangle[=style]
- Decode (demangle) low-level symbol names into user-level names.
Besides removing any initial underscore prepended by the system, this
makes C++ function names readable. Different compilers have different
mangling styles. The optional demangling style argument can be used to
choose an appropriate demangling style for your compiler.
- -e filename
- --exe=filename
- Specify the name of the executable for which addresses should be
translated. The default file is a.out.
- -f
- --functions
- Display function names as well as file and line number information.
- -s
- --basenames
- Display only the base of each file name.
- -i
- --inlines
- If the address belongs to a function that was inlined, the source
information for all enclosing scopes back to the first non-inlined
function will also be printed. For example, if
"main" inlines
"callee1" which inlines
"callee2", and address is from
"callee2", the source information for
"callee1" and
"main" will also be printed.
- -j
- --section
- Read offsets relative to the specified section instead of absolute
addresses.
- -p
- --pretty-print
- Make the output more human friendly: each location are printed on one
line. If option -i is specified, lines for all enclosing scopes are
prefixed with (inlined by).
- -r
- -R
- --recurse-limit
- --no-recurse-limit
- --recursion-limit
- --no-recursion-limit
- Enables or disables a limit on the amount of recursion performed whilst
demangling strings. Since the name mangling formats allow for an infinite
level of recursion it is possible to create strings whose decoding will
exhaust the amount of stack space available on the host machine,
triggering a memory fault. The limit tries to prevent this from happening
by restricting recursion to 2048 levels of nesting.
The default is for this limit to be enabled, but disabling it
may be necessary in order to demangle truly complicated names. Note
however that if the recursion limit is disabled then stack exhaustion is
possible and any bug reports about such an event will be rejected.
The -r option is a synonym for the
--no-recurse-limit option. The -R option is a synonym for
the --recurse-limit option.
Note this option is only effective if the -C or
--demangle option has been enabled.
- @file
- Read command-line options from file. The options read are inserted
in place of the original @file option. If file does not
exist, or cannot be read, then the option will be treated literally, and
not removed.
Options in file are separated by whitespace. A
whitespace character may be included in an option by surrounding the
entire option in either single or double quotes. Any character
(including a backslash) may be included by prefixing the character to be
included with a backslash. The file may itself contain additional
@file options; any such options will be processed
recursively.
Info entries for binutils.
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