4

I was stepping through some simple Objective-C code with gdb (inside of Xcode) and noticed something strange. Here is the relevant snippet:

NSString *s = nil;
int x = (s == nil);

As I'd expect, the value of x after these two lines is 1. Strangely, if I try something similar in gdb, it doesn't work the same:

(gdb) print ret
$1 = (NSString *) 0x0
(gdb) print (int)(ret==nil)
$2 = 0
(gdb) print nil
$3 = {<text variable, no debug info>} 0x167d18 <nil>

It seems like gdb has some definition for nil other than what objective-C uses (0x0). Can someone explain what's going on here?

2 Answers 2

9

When your code is being compiled, nil is a preprocessor constant defined to be either __null (a special GCC variable that serves as NULL), 0L, or 0:

<objc/objc.h>
#ifndef nil
#define nil __DARWIN_NULL /* id of Nil instance */
#endif

<sys/_types.h>
#ifdef __cplusplus
#ifdef __GNUG__
#define __DARWIN_NULL __null
#else /* ! __GNUG__ */
#ifdef __LP64__
#define __DARWIN_NULL (0L)
#else /* !__LP64__ */
#define __DARWIN_NULL 0
#endif /* __LP64__ */
#endif /* __GNUG__ */
#else /* ! __cplusplus */
#define __DARWIN_NULL ((void *)0)
#endif /* __cplusplus */

So, where does the nil that gdb picks up at runtime come from? You can tell from the message gdb gives that nil is the name of a variable located at that address:

(gdb) p nil
$1 = {<text variable, no debug info>} 0x20c49ba5da6428 <nil>
(gdb) i addr nil
Symbol "nil" is at 0x20c49ba5da6428 in a file compiled without debugging.

Its value, unsurprisingly, turns out to be 0:

(gdb) p *(long *)nil
$2 = 0
(gdb) x/xg nil
0x20c49ba5da6428 <nil>: 0x0000000000000000

Where does this variable come from? GDB can tell us:

(gdb) i shared nil
  3 Foundation        F -                 init Y Y /System/Library/Frameworks/Foundation.framework/Versions/C/Foundation at 0x20c49ba5bb2000 (offset 0x20c49ba5bb2000)

Indeed, when we check the symbols defined in Foundation, we find nil:

$ nm -m /System/Library/Frameworks/Foundation.framework/Foundation | grep nil$
00000000001f4428 (__TEXT,__const) external _nil
0
1

It's pointing to the address in memory, not the variable contents.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.