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We are currently using a single command line tool to build our product on both Windows and Linux.

Si far its works nicely, allowing us to build out of source and with finer dependencies than what any of our previous build system allowed. This buys us great incremental and parallel build capabilities.

To describe shortly the build process, we get the usual:

.cpp -- cl.exe --> .obj and .pdb
multiple .obj and .pdb -- cl.exe --> single .dll .lib .pdb
multiple .obj and .pdb -- cl.exe --> single .exe .pdb

The msvc C/C++ compiler supports it adequately.

Recently the need to build a few static libraries emerged. From what we gathered, the process to build a static library is:

multiple .cpp -- cl.exe --> multiple .obj and a single .pdb
multiple .obj -- lib.exe --> a single .lib

The single .pdb means that cl.exe should only be executed once for all the .cpp sources. This single execution means that we can't parallelize the build for this static library. This is really unfortunate.

We investigated a bit further and according to the documentation (and the available command line options):

  • cl.exe does not know how to build static libraries
  • lib.exe does not know how to build .pdb files

Does anybody know a way to merge multiple PDB files ? Are we doomed to have slow builds for static libraries ? How do tools like Incredibuild work around this issue ?

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You could always put your code on a solid state drive. Builds will be lightning fast. – Jonathan Parker Mar 26 at 2:50

2 Answers

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I've not done C++ for a long time but from this article, it appears that this is a performance trick to stop the recreation of symbols for common headers.

You could try /Z7 to embed info in each obj, and not create a PDB and then link and recreate it with a rebase as in this article.

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No need to merge PDB files.

Compile source files with /Z7 to avoid creating a PDB during the CL.EXE steps.

Use LIB.EXE to create static libaries with embedded debugging information. Use LINK.EXE instead of CL.EXE to link, use /PDB to specify where the debugging information goes.

If you are debugging a process with an EXE and one or more DLLs, feed your debugger a PDB for each image (EXE or DLL).

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