35

Is there a simple command line utility to inspect binaries like executable and dynamic libraries to tell if they are release or debug versions? Is there anything like that on *nix or windows?

4
  • 1
    For which languages? For which debug formats?
    – anon
    Apr 30, 2009 at 17:28
  • 4
    "Debug" and "Release" don't have specific meanings; they are just ways of referring to a bundle of options, which could be different in different projects. Do you mean whether something was build with debugging symbols and left unstripped?
    – smorgan
    Apr 30, 2009 at 17:33
  • 2
    *Do you mean whether something was build with debugging symbols and left unstripped? * Yes.
    – adfjoawesdfi
    Apr 30, 2009 at 19:59
  • Possible duplicate of How can I tell if a library was compiled with -g? Sep 13, 2016 at 12:42

8 Answers 8

31
  • for C++ on Linux, you can do:

        objdump --source yourbin |grep printf
    

    Replace printf with whatever function call you do. If it is debug, it will display all the actual source code call you do. If it is release, it will just display the founded symbol from the symbol table.

  • for C++ on Windows, you can use depends.exe and see if it depends on MSVCRT (release) or MSVCRTD (debug)

4
  • Not sure if this works objdump --source hello32* | grep printf in this gcc -m32 -g -o hello32_dbg hello.c and this case gcc -m32 -o hello32 hello.c returns nothing Apr 22, 2015 at 8:10
  • Just checking, do you call printf in hello.c ? Apr 22, 2015 at 16:52
  • Actally i was using puts Apr 22, 2015 at 23:29
  • 1
    Note that for Windows (MS compilers), the name of the DLL you need to look for depends on the version of the C++ runtime you link against (mostly, that depends on the version of Visual Studio). The DLL names haven't been MSVCRT/MSVCRTD in well over a decade. Nov 22, 2016 at 17:56
19

On linux you can use the "file" command even for dynamic libraries. If it says "stripped" than all debugging symbols are stripped out. If it is saying "not stripped" it is the opposite

4
  • 20
    It is possible to have a non-stripped release or a stripped debug build.
    – leander
    Apr 30, 2009 at 17:36
  • I'm not sure what you mean by release or debug build. I assumed that a programme/library will be build with debug symbols for debugging and will be stripped for shipment. So the debug or release are implicit to the way you use it. You can have every combination because it depends on how you package it. Apr 30, 2009 at 20:37
  • 8
    not true, stripping symbols is independant of debug or release versions Mar 16, 2011 at 18:40
3

For unix: with ELF executables you may be able to use objdump or nm to look at the symbol tables for the executable (note that this will work a lot better if it's not stripped). The presence or absence of certain symbols will tend to indicate a debug or release build. (As to which, that probably depends on what libraries you're using, etc. You'd have to do a bit of digging to find common ones; feel free to suggest things to look for in comments, and I'll update the answer.)

For Windows: the dependencywalker suggestions are good. For command-line equivalents, you can find dumpbin in most Visual Studio installations and it's somewhat equivalent to objdump on *nix. You may also be able to find an nm or objdump in e.g. msys or cygwin that'll work on some windows exe files.

1
  • I am new to Mac OS X which is what I am using. But apparently objdump does not come with Xcode. nm is available but the only difference I can see is that the debug version simply contains a lot more stuff.
    – adfjoawesdfi
    May 1, 2009 at 15:17
3

For Windows, the Dependency Walker has optional cmd-line output listing every dll the exe loads (and their dependencies). Run that through grep and see if the msvcrt-dll popups with a d or not.

This only works if it's dynamically linked. Otherwise it might be trickier.

You could perhaps grep for certain functions that are different in debug/release, if those strings are visible in the executable.

If your apps doesn't use the runtime at all, it'd be pretty tricky.

2
  • @Andre Having debug info is not the same as being built in debug or release. What do you mean?
    – Macke
    Mar 8, 2017 at 7:44
  • 1
    See the comments by leander and smorgan above. It is possible to have a non-stripped release build, but also to strip a debug build. The distinction "Debug" vs "Release" is a bit vague. For some people, e.g. you "Debug" means: built agains the debug runtime. For others, it may mean" built without the NDEBUG define. And for others it may mean: Non-optimized or just: with debug symbols.
    – André
    Mar 30, 2017 at 8:08
2

There's not much to go on. If you open an assembly in Reflector, you can look for the Assembly Attribute:

[assembly: Debuggable(DebuggableAttribute.DebuggingModes.DisableOptimizations | DebuggableAttribute.DebuggingModes.EnableEditAndContinue | DebuggableAttribute.DebuggingModes.IgnoreSymbolStoreSequencePoints | DebuggableAttribute.DebuggingModes.Default)]

But apparently that's added to release mode as well.

If it's your own assembly than the solution is to use some preprocessor directives.

#ifdef DEBUG
[MyAttribute("foo")]
#endif

edit: Sorry, I assumed .NET. There goes my hammer.

1
  • 2
    Glad that you assumed .NET because that's what brought me here and your answer pointed me into the right direction. In VS2010 the attribute is in both Debug and Release builds but the argument "list" is different. Dec 21, 2011 at 18:43
2

Most often debug versions of both executables and libraries are linked against debug version of runtime. On Windows there's a name scheme for debug/release versions that some follow, MS among them. The name of debug version of a library should end with d. You can use tool like Dependency Walker (http://www.dependencywalker.com) to see on what libraries your executable or library depends. If you find debug versions of runtime libraries there there is a big chance your executable or library was built in debug mode.

This however works only if

  • you can tell by looking at a name of runtime which version it is (it follows some naming scheme like the one I described above)
  • your executable/library is linked against dynamic runtime not static one. In the second case the runtime gets pulled into executable/library and it's no longer a dependency
  • you are on Windows :)
0

You can use filever.exe.

filever.exe <my binary file>
--a-- W32i   APP   -         1.0.0.0 shp     25,600 11-03-2013 <my file>

To get filever, you can download the support tools for windows xp.

If you moved to Windows 7 or above (like most windows users), you can download it, open it via winzip.

Then extract filever from support.cab.

It works for Windows 7 just fine.

0

Use depends.exe to find out which version it is. when You open the file through depends walker it will show file which are needed. By seeing the list of system32 files you can it whether it is debug or release

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