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OBJDUMP(1) |
GNU Development Tools |
OBJDUMP(1) |
objdump - display information from object files
objdump [-a|--archive-headers]
[-b bfdname|--target=bfdname]
[-C|--demangle[=style] ]
[-d|--disassemble[=symbol]]
[-D|--disassemble-all]
[-z|--disassemble-zeroes]
[-EB|-EL|--endian={big | little }]
[-f|--file-headers]
[-F|--file-offsets]
[--file-start-context]
[-g|--debugging]
[-e|--debugging-tags]
[-h|--section-headers|--headers]
[-i|--info]
[-j section|--section=section]
[-l|--line-numbers]
[-S|--source]
[--source-comment[=text]]
[-m machine|--architecture=machine]
[-M options|--disassembler-options=options]
[-p|--private-headers]
[-P options|--private=options]
[-r|--reloc]
[-R|--dynamic-reloc]
[-s|--full-contents]
[-Z|--decompress]
[-W[lLiaprmfFsoORtUuTgAck]|
--dwarf[=rawline,=decodedline,=info,=abbrev,=pubnames,=aranges,=macro,=frames,=frames-interp,=str,=str-offsets,=loc,=Ranges,=pubtypes,=trace_info,=trace_abbrev,=trace_aranges,=gdb_index,=addr,=cu_index,=links]]
[-WK|--dwarf=follow-links]
[-WN|--dwarf=no-follow-links]
[-wD|--dwarf=use-debuginfod]
[-wE|--dwarf=do-not-use-debuginfod]
[-L|--process-links]
[--ctf=section]
[--sframe=section]
[-G|--stabs]
[-t|--syms]
[-T|--dynamic-syms]
[-x|--all-headers]
[-w|--wide]
[--start-address=address]
[--stop-address=address]
[--no-addresses]
[--prefix-addresses]
[--[no-]show-raw-insn]
[--adjust-vma=offset]
[--show-all-symbols]
[--dwarf-depth=n]
[--dwarf-start=n]
[--ctf-parent=section]
[--no-recurse-limit|--recurse-limit]
[--special-syms]
[--prefix=prefix]
[--prefix-strip=level]
[--insn-width=width]
[--visualize-jumps[=color|=extended-color|=off]
[--disassembler-color=[off|terminal|on|extended]
[-U method] [--unicode=method]
[-V|--version]
[-H|--help]
objfile...
objdump displays information about one or more object
files. The options control what particular information to display. This
information is mostly useful to programmers who are working on the
compilation tools, as opposed to programmers who just want their program to
compile and work.
objfile... are the object files to be examined. When you
specify archives, objdump shows information on each of the member
object files.
The long and short forms of options, shown here as alternatives,
are equivalent. At least one option from the list
-a,-d,-D,-e,-f,-g,-G,-h,-H,-p,-P,-r,-R,-s,-S,-t,-T,-V,-x must be
given.
- -a
- --archive-header
- If any of the objfile files are archives, display the archive
header information (in a format similar to ls -l). Besides the
information you could list with ar tv, objdump -a shows the
object file format of each archive member.
- --adjust-vma=offset
- When dumping information, first add offset to all the section
addresses. This is useful if the section addresses do not correspond to
the symbol table, which can happen when putting sections at particular
addresses when using a format which can not represent section addresses,
such as a.out.
- -b bfdname
- --target=bfdname
- Specify that the object-code format for the object files is
bfdname. This option may not be necessary; objdump can
automatically recognize many formats.
For example,
objdump -b oasys -m vax -h fu.o
displays summary information from the section headers
(-h) of fu.o, which is explicitly identified (-m)
as a VAX object file in the format produced by Oasys compilers. You can
list the formats available with the -i option.
- -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.
- --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.
- -g
- --debugging
- Display debugging information. This attempts to parse STABS debugging
format information stored in the file and print it out using a C like
syntax. If no STABS debugging was found this option falls back on the
-W option to print any DWARF information in the file.
- -e
- --debugging-tags
- Like -g, but the information is generated in a format compatible
with ctags tool.
- -d
- --disassemble
- --disassemble=symbol
- Display the assembler mnemonics for the machine instructions from the
input file. This option only disassembles those sections which are
expected to contain instructions. If the optional symbol argument
is given, then display the assembler mnemonics starting at symbol.
If symbol is a function name then disassembly will stop at the end
of the function, otherwise it will stop when the next symbol is
encountered. If there are no matches for symbol then nothing will
be displayed.
Note if the --dwarf=follow-links option is enabled then
any symbol tables in linked debug info files will be read in and used
when disassembling.
- -D
- --disassemble-all
- Like -d, but disassemble the contents of all non-empty non-bss
sections, not just those expected to contain instructions. -j may
be used to select specific sections.
This option also has a subtle effect on the disassembly of
instructions in code sections. When option -d is in effect
objdump will assume that any symbols present in a code section occur on
the boundary between instructions and it will refuse to disassemble
across such a boundary. When option -D is in effect however this
assumption is supressed. This means that it is possible for the output
of -d and -D to differ if, for example, data is stored in
code sections.
If the target is an ARM architecture this switch also has the
effect of forcing the disassembler to decode pieces of data found in
code sections as if they were instructions.
Note if the --dwarf=follow-links option is enabled then
any symbol tables in linked debug info files will be read in and used
when disassembling.
- --no-addresses
- When disassembling, don't print addresses on each line or for symbols and
relocation offsets. In combination with --no-show-raw-insn this may
be useful for comparing compiler output.
- --prefix-addresses
- When disassembling, print the complete address on each line. This is the
older disassembly format.
- -EB
- -EL
- --endian={big|little}
- Specify the endianness of the object files. This only affects disassembly.
This can be useful when disassembling a file format which does not
describe endianness information, such as S-records.
- -f
- --file-headers
- Display summary information from the overall header of each of the
objfile files.
- -F
- --file-offsets
- When disassembling sections, whenever a symbol is displayed, also display
the file offset of the region of data that is about to be dumped. If
zeroes are being skipped, then when disassembly resumes, tell the user how
many zeroes were skipped and the file offset of the location from where
the disassembly resumes. When dumping sections, display the file offset of
the location from where the dump starts.
- --file-start-context
- Specify that when displaying interlisted source code/disassembly (assumes
-S) from a file that has not yet been displayed, extend the context
to the start of the file.
- -h
- --section-headers
- Display summary information from the section headers of the object file.
File segments may be relocated to nonstandard addresses, for
example by using the -Ttext, -Tdata, or -Tbss
options to ld. However, some object file formats, such as a.out,
do not store the starting address of the file segments. In those
situations, although ld relocates the sections correctly, using
objdump -h to list the file section headers cannot show
the correct addresses. Instead, it shows the usual addresses, which are
implicit for the target.
Note, in some cases it is possible for a section to have both
the READONLY and the NOREAD attributes set. In such cases the NOREAD
attribute takes precedence, but objdump will report both since
the exact setting of the flag bits might be important.
- -H
- --help
- Print a summary of the options to objdump and exit.
- -i
- --info
- Display a list showing all architectures and object formats available for
specification with -b or -m.
- -j name
- --section=name
- Display information for section name. This option may be specified
multiple times.
- -L
- --process-links
- Display the contents of non-debug sections found in separate debuginfo
files that are linked to the main file. This option automatically implies
the -WK option, and only sections requested by other command line
options will be displayed.
- -l
- --line-numbers
- Label the display (using debugging information) with the filename and
source line numbers corresponding to the object code or relocs shown. Only
useful with -d, -D, or -r.
- -m machine
- --architecture=machine
- Specify the architecture to use when disassembling object files. This can
be useful when disassembling object files which do not describe
architecture information, such as S-records. You can list the available
architectures with the -i option.
For most architectures it is possible to supply an
architecture name and a machine name, separated by a colon. For example
foo:bar would refer to the bar machine type in the
foo architecture. This can be helpful if objdump has been
configured to support multiple architectures.
If the target is an ARM architecture then this switch has an
additional effect. It restricts the disassembly to only those
instructions supported by the architecture specified by machine.
If it is necessary to use this switch because the input file does not
contain any architecture information, but it is also desired to
disassemble all the instructions use -marm.
- -M options
- --disassembler-options=options
- Pass target specific information to the disassembler. Only supported on
some targets. If it is necessary to specify more than one disassembler
option then multiple -M options can be used or can be placed
together into a comma separated list.
For ARC, dsp controls the printing of DSP instructions,
spfp selects the printing of FPX single precision FP
instructions, dpfp selects the printing of FPX double precision
FP instructions, quarkse_em selects the printing of special
QuarkSE-EM instructions, fpuda selects the printing of double
precision assist instructions, fpus selects the printing of FPU
single precision FP instructions, while fpud selects the printing
of FPU double precision FP instructions. Additionally, one can choose to
have all the immediates printed in hexadecimal using hex. By
default, the short immediates are printed using the decimal
representation, while the long immediate values are printed as
hexadecimal.
cpu=... allows one to enforce a particular ISA when
disassembling instructions, overriding the -m value or whatever
is in the ELF file. This might be useful to select ARC EM or HS ISA,
because architecture is same for those and disassembler relies on
private ELF header data to decide if code is for EM or HS. This option
might be specified multiple times - only the latest value will be used.
Valid values are same as for the assembler -mcpu=... option.
If the target is an ARM architecture then this switch can be
used to select which register name set is used during disassembler.
Specifying -M reg-names-std (the default) will select the
register names as used in ARM's instruction set documentation, but with
register 13 called 'sp', register 14 called 'lr' and register 15 called
'pc'. Specifying -M reg-names-apcs will select the name set used
by the ARM Procedure Call Standard, whilst specifying -M
reg-names-raw will just use r followed by the register
number.
There are also two variants on the APCS register naming scheme
enabled by -M reg-names-atpcs and -M
reg-names-special-atpcs which use the ARM/Thumb Procedure Call
Standard naming conventions. (Either with the normal register names or
the special register names).
This option can also be used for ARM architectures to force
the disassembler to interpret all instructions as Thumb instructions by
using the switch --disassembler-options=force-thumb. This can be
useful when attempting to disassemble thumb code produced by other
compilers.
For AArch64 targets this switch can be used to set whether
instructions are disassembled as the most general instruction using the
-M no-aliases option or whether instruction notes should be
generated as comments in the disasssembly using -M notes.
For the x86, some of the options duplicate functions of the
-m switch, but allow finer grained control.
- "x86-64"
- "i386"
- "i8086"
- Select disassembly for the given architecture.
- "intel"
- "att"
- Select between intel syntax mode and AT&T syntax mode.
- "amd64"
- "intel64"
- Select between AMD64 ISA and Intel64 ISA.
- "intel-mnemonic"
- "att-mnemonic"
- Select between intel mnemonic mode and AT&T mnemonic mode. Note:
"intel-mnemonic" implies
"intel" and
"att-mnemonic" implies
"att".
- "addr64"
- "addr32"
- "addr16"
- "data32"
- "data16"
- Specify the default address size and operand size. These five options will
be overridden if "x86-64",
"i386" or
"i8086" appear later in the option
string.
- "suffix"
- When in AT&T mode and also for a limited set of instructions when in
Intel mode, instructs the disassembler to print a mnemonic suffix even
when the suffix could be inferred by the operands or, for certain
instructions, the execution mode's defaults.
For PowerPC, the -M argument raw selects
disasssembly of hardware insns rather than aliases. For example, you will
see "rlwinm" rather than
"clrlwi", and
"addi" rather than
"li". All of the -m arguments for
gas that select a CPU are supported. These are: 403,
405, 440, 464, 476, 601, 603,
604, 620, 7400, 7410, 7450, 7455,
750cl, 821, 850, 860, a2, booke,
booke32, cell, com, e200z2, e200z4,
e300, e500, e500mc, e500mc64, e500x2,
e5500, e6500, efs, power4, power5,
power6, power7, power8, power9, power10,
power11, ppc, ppc32, ppc64, ppc64bridge,
ppcps, pwr, pwr2, pwr4, pwr5,
pwr5x, pwr6, pwr7, pwr8, pwr9,
pwr10, pwr11, pwrx, titan, vle, and
future. 32 and 64 modify the default or a prior CPU
selection, disabling and enabling 64-bit insns respectively. In addition,
altivec, any, lsp, htm, vsx, spe
and spe2 add capabilities to a previous or later CPU
selection. any will disassemble any opcode known to binutils, but in
cases where an opcode has two different meanings or different arguments, you
may not see the disassembly you expect. If you disassemble without giving a
CPU selection, a default will be chosen from information gleaned by BFD from
the object files headers, but the result again may not be as you expect.
For MIPS, this option controls the printing of instruction
mnemonic names and register names in disassembled instructions. Multiple
selections from the following may be specified as a comma separated string,
and invalid options are ignored:
- "no-aliases"
- Print the 'raw' instruction mnemonic instead of some pseudo instruction
mnemonic. I.e., print 'daddu' or 'or' instead of 'move', 'sll' instead of
'nop', etc.
- "msa"
- Disassemble MSA instructions.
- "virt"
- Disassemble the virtualization ASE instructions.
- "xpa"
- Disassemble the eXtended Physical Address (XPA) ASE instructions.
- "gpr-names=ABI"
- Print GPR (general-purpose register) names as appropriate for the
specified ABI. By default, GPR names are selected according to the ABI of
the binary being disassembled.
- "fpr-names=ABI"
- Print FPR (floating-point register) names as appropriate for the specified
ABI. By default, FPR numbers are printed rather than names.
- "cp0-names=ARCH"
- Print CP0 (system control coprocessor; coprocessor 0) register names as
appropriate for the CPU or architecture specified by ARCH. By
default, CP0 register names are selected according to the architecture and
CPU of the binary being disassembled.
- "hwr-names=ARCH"
- Print HWR (hardware register, used by the
"rdhwr" instruction) names as
appropriate for the CPU or architecture specified by ARCH. By
default, HWR names are selected according to the architecture and CPU of
the binary being disassembled.
- "reg-names=ABI"
- Print GPR and FPR names as appropriate for the selected ABI.
- "reg-names=ARCH"
- Print CPU-specific register names (CP0 register and HWR names) as
appropriate for the selected CPU or architecture.
For any of the options listed above, ABI or ARCH may
be specified as numeric to have numbers printed rather than names,
for the selected types of registers. You can list the available values of
ABI and ARCH using the --help option.
For VAX, you can specify function entry addresses with -M
entry:0xf00ba. You can use this multiple times to properly
disassemble VAX binary files that don't contain symbol tables (like ROM
dumps). In these cases, the function entry mask would otherwise be decoded
as VAX instructions, which would probably lead the rest of the function
being wrongly disassembled.
- -p
- --private-headers
- Print information that is specific to the object file format. The exact
information printed depends upon the object file format. For some object
file formats, no additional information is printed.
- -P options
- --private=options
- Print information that is specific to the object file format. The argument
options is a comma separated list that depends on the format (the
lists of options is displayed with the help).
For XCOFF, the available options are:
- "header"
- "aout"
- "sections"
- "syms"
- "relocs"
- "lineno,"
- "loader"
- "except"
- "typchk"
- "traceback"
- "toc"
- "ldinfo"
For PE, the available options are:
- "header"
- "sections"
Not all object formats support this option. In particular the ELF
format does not use it.
- -r
- --reloc
- Print the relocation entries of the file. If used with -d or
-D, the relocations are printed interspersed with the
disassembly.
- -R
- --dynamic-reloc
- Print the dynamic relocation entries of the file. This is only meaningful
for dynamic objects, such as certain types of shared libraries. As for
-r, if used with -d or -D, the relocations are
printed interspersed with the disassembly.
- -s
- --full-contents
- Display the full contents of sections, often used in combination with
-j to request specific sections. By default all non-empty non-bss
sections are displayed. By default any compressed section will be
displayed in its compressed form. In order to see the contents in a
decompressed form add the -Z option to the command line.
- -S
- --source
- Display source code intermixed with disassembly, if possible. Implies
-d.
- --show-all-symbols
- When disassembling, show all the symbols that match a given address, not
just the first one.
- --source-comment[=txt]
- Like the -S option, but all source code lines are displayed with a
prefix of txt. Typically txt will be a comment string which
can be used to distinguish the assembler code from the source code. If
txt is not provided then a default string of "# "
(hash followed by a space), will be used.
- --prefix=prefix
- Specify prefix to add to the absolute paths when used with
-S.
- --prefix-strip=level
- Indicate how many initial directory names to strip off the hardwired
absolute paths. It has no effect without
--prefix=prefix.
- --show-raw-insn
- When disassembling instructions, print the instruction in hex as well as
in symbolic form. This is the default except when
--prefix-addresses is used.
- --no-show-raw-insn
- When disassembling instructions, do not print the instruction bytes. This
is the default when --prefix-addresses is used.
- --insn-width=width
- Display width bytes on a single line when disassembling
instructions.
- --visualize-jumps[=color|=extended-color|=off]
- Visualize jumps that stay inside a function by drawing ASCII art between
the start and target addresses. The optional =color argument adds
color to the output using simple terminal colors. Alternatively the
=extended-color argument will add color using 8bit colors, but
these might not work on all terminals.
If it is necessary to disable the visualize-jumps
option after it has previously been enabled then use
visualize-jumps=off.
- --disassembler-color=off
- --disassembler-color=terminal
- --disassembler-color=on|color|colour
- --disassembler-color=extened|extended-color|extened-colour
- Enables or disables the use of colored syntax highlighting in disassembly
output. The default behaviour is determined via a configure time option.
Note, not all architectures support colored syntax highlighting, and
depending upon the terminal used, colored output may not actually be
legible.
The on argument adds colors using simple terminal
colors.
The terminal argument does the same, but only if the
output device is a terminal.
The extended-color argument is similar to the on
argument, but it uses 8-bit colors. These may not work on all
terminals.
The off argument disables colored disassembly.
- -W[lLiaprmfFsoORtUuTgAckK]
- --dwarf[=rawline,=decodedline,=info,=abbrev,=pubnames,=aranges,=macro,=frames,=frames-interp,=str,=str-offsets,=loc,=Ranges,=pubtypes,=trace_info,=trace_abbrev,=trace_aranges,=gdb_index,=addr,=cu_index,=links,=follow-links]
- Displays the contents of the DWARF debug sections in the file, if any are
present. Compressed debug sections are automatically decompressed
(temporarily) before they are displayed. If one or more of the optional
letters or words follows the switch then only those type(s) of data will
be dumped. The letters and words refer to the following information:
- "a"
- "=abbrev"
- Displays the contents of the .debug_abbrev section.
- "A"
- "=addr"
- Displays the contents of the .debug_addr section.
- "c"
- "=cu_index"
- Displays the contents of the .debug_cu_index and/or
.debug_tu_index sections.
- "f"
- "=frames"
- Display the raw contents of a .debug_frame section.
- "F"
- "=frames-interp"
- Display the interpreted contents of a .debug_frame section.
- "g"
- "=gdb_index"
- Displays the contents of the .gdb_index and/or .debug_names
sections.
- "i"
- "=info"
- Displays the contents of the .debug_info section. Note: the output
from this option can also be restricted by the use of the
--dwarf-depth and --dwarf-start options.
- "k"
- "=links"
- Displays the contents of the .gnu_debuglink,
.gnu_debugaltlink and .debug_sup sections, if any of them
are present. Also displays any links to separate dwarf object files (dwo),
if they are specified by the DW_AT_GNU_dwo_name or DW_AT_dwo_name
attributes in the .debug_info section.
- "K"
- "=follow-links"
- Display the contents of any selected debug sections that are found in
linked, separate debug info file(s). This can result in multiple versions
of the same debug section being displayed if it exists in more than one
file.
In addition, when displaying DWARF attributes, if a form is
found that references the separate debug info file, then the referenced
contents will also be displayed.
Note - in some distributions this option is enabled by
default. It can be disabled via the N debug option. The default
can be chosen when configuring the binutils via the
--enable-follow-debug-links=yes or
--enable-follow-debug-links=no options. If these are not used
then the default is to enable the following of debug links.
Note - if support for the debuginfod protocol was enabled when
the binutils were built then this option will also include an attempt to
contact any debuginfod servers mentioned in the DEBUGINFOD_URLS
environment variable. This could take some time to resolve. This
behaviour can be disabled via the =do-not-use-debuginfod debug
option.
- "N"
- "=no-follow-links"
- Disables the following of links to separate debug info files.
- "D"
- "=use-debuginfod"
- Enables contacting debuginfod servers if there is a need to follow debug
links. This is the default behaviour.
- "E"
- "=do-not-use-debuginfod"
- Disables contacting debuginfod servers when there is a need to follow
debug links.
- "l"
- "=rawline"
- Displays the contents of the .debug_line section in a raw
format.
- "L"
- "=decodedline"
- Displays the interpreted contents of the .debug_line section.
- "m"
- "=macro"
- Displays the contents of the .debug_macro and/or
.debug_macinfo sections.
- "o"
- "=loc"
- Displays the contents of the .debug_loc and/or
.debug_loclists sections.
- "O"
- "=str-offsets"
- Displays the contents of the .debug_str_offsets section.
- "p"
- "=pubnames"
- Displays the contents of the .debug_pubnames and/or
.debug_gnu_pubnames sections.
- "r"
- "=aranges"
- Displays the contents of the .debug_aranges section.
- "R"
- "=Ranges"
- Displays the contents of the .debug_ranges and/or
.debug_rnglists sections.
- "s"
- "=str"
- Displays the contents of the .debug_str, .debug_line_str
and/or .debug_str_offsets sections.
- "t"
- "=pubtype"
- Displays the contents of the .debug_pubtypes and/or
.debug_gnu_pubtypes sections.
- "T"
- "=trace_aranges"
- Displays the contents of the .trace_aranges section.
- "u"
- "=trace_abbrev"
- Displays the contents of the .trace_abbrev section.
- "U"
- "=trace_info"
- Displays the contents of the .trace_info section.
Note: displaying the contents of .debug_static_funcs,
.debug_static_vars and debug_weaknames sections is not
currently supported.
- --dwarf-depth=n
- Limit the dump of the ".debug_info"
section to n children. This is only useful with
--debug-dump=info. The default is to print all DIEs; the special
value 0 for n will also have this effect.
With a non-zero value for n, DIEs at or deeper than
n levels will not be printed. The range for n is
zero-based.
- --dwarf-start=n
- Print only DIEs beginning with the DIE numbered n. This is only
useful with --debug-dump=info.
If specified, this option will suppress printing of any header
information and all DIEs before the DIE numbered n. Only siblings
and children of the specified DIE will be printed.
This can be used in conjunction with --dwarf-depth.
- --dwarf-check
- Enable additional checks for consistency of Dwarf information.
- --ctf[=section]
- Display the contents of the specified CTF section. CTF sections themselves
contain many subsections, all of which are displayed in order.
By default, display the name of the section named .ctf,
which is the name emitted by ld.
- --ctf-parent=member
- If the CTF section contains ambiguously-defined types, it will consist of
an archive of many CTF dictionaries, all inheriting from one dictionary
containing unambiguous types. This member is by default named .ctf,
like the section containing it, but it is possible to change this name
using the
"ctf_link_set_memb_name_changer"
function at link time. When looking at CTF archives that have been created
by a linker that uses the name changer to rename the parent archive
member, --ctf-parent can be used to specify the name used for the
parent.
- --ctf-parent-section=section
- This option lets you pick a completely different section for the CTF
parent dictionary containing unambiguous types than for the child
dictionaries that contain the ambiguous remainder. The linker does not
emit ELF objects structured like this, but some third-party linkers may.
It's also convenient to inspect CTF written out as multiple raw files to
compose them with objcopy, which can put them in different ELF sections
but not in different members of a single CTF dict.
- --sframe[=section]
- Display the contents of the specified SFrame section.
By default, display the name of the section named
.sframe, which is the name emitted by ld.
- -G
- --stabs
- Display the full contents of any sections requested. Display the contents
of the .stab and .stab.index and .stab.excl sections from an ELF file.
This is only useful on systems (such as Solaris 2.0) in which
".stab" debugging symbol-table entries
are carried in an ELF section. In most other file formats, debugging
symbol-table entries are interleaved with linkage symbols, and are visible
in the --syms output.
- --start-address=address
- Start displaying data at the specified address. This affects the output of
the -d, -r and -s options.
- --stop-address=address
- Stop displaying data at the specified address. This affects the output of
the -d, -r and -s options.
- -t
- --syms
- Print the symbol table entries of the file. This is similar to the
information provided by the nm program, although the display format
is different. The format of the output depends upon the format of the file
being dumped, but there are two main types. One looks like this:
[ 4](sec 3)(fl 0x00)(ty 0)(scl 3) (nx 1) 0x00000000 .bss
[ 6](sec 1)(fl 0x00)(ty 0)(scl 2) (nx 0) 0x00000000 fred
where the number inside the square brackets is the number of
the entry in the symbol table, the sec number is the section
number, the fl value are the symbol's flag bits, the ty
number is the symbol's type, the scl number is the symbol's
storage class and the nx value is the number of auxiliary entries
associated with the symbol. The last two fields are the symbol's value
and its name.
The other common output format, usually seen with ELF based
files, looks like this:
00000000 l d .bss 00000000 .bss
00000000 g .text 00000000 fred
Here the first number is the symbol's value (sometimes
referred to as its address). The next field is actually a set of
characters and spaces indicating the flag bits that are set on the
symbol. These characters are described below. Next is the section with
which the symbol is associated or *ABS* if the section is
absolute (ie not connected with any section), or *UND* if the
section is referenced in the file being dumped, but not defined
there.
After the section name comes another field, a number, which
for common symbols is the alignment and for other symbol is the size.
Finally the symbol's name is displayed.
The flag characters are divided into 7 groups as follows:
- "l"
- "g"
- "u"
- "!"
- The symbol is a local (l), global (g), unique global (u), neither global
nor local (a space) or both global and local (!). A symbol can be neither
local or global for a variety of reasons, e.g., because it is used for
debugging, but it is probably an indication of a bug if it is ever both
local and global. Unique global symbols are a GNU extension to the
standard set of ELF symbol bindings. For such a symbol the dynamic linker
will make sure that in the entire process there is just one symbol with
this name and type in use.
- "w"
- The symbol is weak (w) or strong (a space).
- "C"
- The symbol denotes a constructor (C) or an ordinary symbol (a space).
- "W"
- The symbol is a warning (W) or a normal symbol (a space). A warning
symbol's name is a message to be displayed if the symbol following the
warning symbol is ever referenced.
- "I"
- "i"
- The symbol is an indirect reference to another symbol (I), a function to
be evaluated during reloc processing (i) or a normal symbol (a
space).
- "d"
- "D"
- The symbol is a debugging symbol (d) or a dynamic symbol (D) or a normal
symbol (a space).
- "F"
- "f"
- "O"
- The symbol is the name of a function (F) or a file (f) or an object (O) or
just a normal symbol (a space).
- -T
- --dynamic-syms
- Print the dynamic symbol table entries of the file. This is only
meaningful for dynamic objects, such as certain types of shared libraries.
This is similar to the information provided by the nm program when
given the -D (--dynamic) option.
The output format is similar to that produced by the
--syms option, except that an extra field is inserted before the
symbol's name, giving the version information associated with the
symbol. If the version is the default version to be used when resolving
unversioned references to the symbol then it's displayed as is,
otherwise it's put into parentheses.
- --special-syms
- When displaying symbols include those which the target considers to be
special in some way and which would not normally be of interest to the
user.
- -U
[d|i|l|e|x|h]
- --unicode=[default|invalid|locale|escape|hex|highlight]
- Controls the display of UTF-8 encoded multibyte characters in strings. The
default (--unicode=default) is to give them no special treatment.
The --unicode=locale option displays the sequence in the current
locale, which may or may not support them. The options
--unicode=hex and --unicode=invalid display them as hex byte
sequences enclosed by either angle brackets or curly braces.
The --unicode=escape option displays them as escape
sequences (\uxxxx) and the --unicode=highlight option
displays them as escape sequences highlighted in red (if supported by
the output device). The colouring is intended to draw attention to the
presence of unicode sequences where they might not be expected.
- -V
- --version
- Print the version number of objdump and exit.
- -x
- --all-headers
- Display all available header information, including the symbol table and
relocation entries. Using -x is equivalent to specifying all of
-a -f -h -p -r -t.
- -w
- --wide
- Format some lines for output devices that have more than 80 columns. Also
do not truncate symbol names when they are displayed.
- -z
- --disassemble-zeroes
- Normally the disassembly output will skip blocks of zeroes. This option
directs the disassembler to disassemble those blocks, just like any other
data.
- -Z
- --decompress
- The -Z option is meant to be used in conunction with the -s
option. It instructs objdump to decompress any compressed sections
before displaying their contents.
- @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.
nm(1), readelf(1), and the Info entries for
binutils.
Copyright (c) 1991-2025 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this
document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3
or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover Texts, and with no Back-Cover Texts.
A copy of the license is included in the section entitled "GNU Free
Documentation License".
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