vote up 7 vote down star
6

I'm looking for the perfect Linux C++ debugger. I don't expect success, but the search should be informative.

I am a quite capable gdb user but STL and Boost easily crush my debugging skills. It not that I can't get into the internals of a data structure, it's that it takes so long I usually find another way( "when in doubt, print it out" ).

The macro language for gdb is weird and not very adaptive. Just look at the code for the stanford gdb utils to print out stl structures.

In short I'm unhappy with what I've got.

I recently stumbled upon Zero Bugs. It looks like a silver bullet. What do the current Zero Bugs users think of it?

Has anyone found other good solutions to the Linux C++ Debugger problem?

flag

related: stackoverflow.com/questions/79023/… – Liran Orevi Sep 1 at 22:10

6 Answers

vote up 8 vote down check

A development branch of gdb (part of gdb's Project Archer) adds Python support to gdb (to replace gdb's macros). There's a series of blog postings starting here that extensively covers getting started with Python-enabled gdb and offers several tutorials on using Python for defining new gdb commands and pretty printing of C++ data structures.

link|flag
does the python interface support reflection? That would make inspection scripts much more robust/powerful? – Caspin Jan 12 '09 at 18:55
I'm pretty inexperienced at Python, and I haven't yet tried out python-gdb, but if I understand the blog articles correctly, yes, the interface supports reflection. – Josh Kelley Jan 12 '09 at 19:29
vote up 0 vote down

ddd (data display debugger)is quite good.....it is basically a visual gdb....

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

You can try NetBeans IDE 6.5 with gdb 6.8, it is quite powerful! http://www.netbeans.org/downloads/index.html

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

You can use Eclipse to step through C and C++ code if you are looking for an IDE type of debugger instead of a command-line debugger. It isn't perfect, but I've found it to work well for people already familiar with IDE debugging tools.

I am also partial to Valgrind for detecting memory errors.

link|flag
His question is on on inspecting STL containers. – Nikhil Aug 1 at 16:05
vote up 0 vote down

Try ddd.

link|flag
I used to use DDD. The UI is awful, but it's still very useful as I can drop down to straight GDB when DDD is lacking. How does DDD improve on the C++ problem? I seems less useful for inspecting STL than GDB with the stanford scripts. – Caspin Jan 12 '09 at 18:58
vote up 0 vote down

I haven't done C++ development in Linux for a while now but when I did I had good luck when KDevelop's debugger. Nothing revolutionary but it let you quickly explore object properties like you are looking for.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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