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I ran into some problem that I want to solve efficiently and maybe some of you will learn from this too. I made a mistake, because I debbuged my application using printf( or in my case probably std::cout) debbuging. It went well and I removed my bug and got to other problems. Now I am at a stage where I want my debugging output to vanish but I can not find it anymore. Searching the text did not bring it up and is hopeless because of many non-debug prints. Further I did not print more than a variables value so I don't know it's name nor can I search for this specific value as it is not in the source code.

I remember of some neat linux command that logs all syscalls in the application it wraps. Is it possible to use this tool to find the lines where the debugging print takes place? (I would use this because 90% of my output is this debugging print so i think i should find it quickly)

Of course if you know about a better way to solve this you are welcome to post your solution.

Thanks

EDIT To not comment on each one who advices me to use version control: I already use SVN. Unfortunately I do not know when I entered the debugging message. Worst case could be that my initial commit already contains it.

The grep guys: That is not much better than the text search as it will give me each line containing a print/std::cout and that without context, so I cant even decide if it is a debugging line between all these others.

To all of you who tell me/think I am stupid doing these things: Well that one I noticed just as I typed in this post ;)

But let me state that I all this comes down to my laziness in former times so let this be an example for all of you how laziness leads to even more work later on. I just needed one single debug print there so I decided to code it in the dirty way. If it had been more I probably would have used a better one.

Solved

Finally I found it, with some luck. It was a std::cout that had hidden somewhere deeper in code(one of the base classes that had only few includes that all were system-libraries). I tried the grep method with one -F1 to see any comments and had luck with the line in question being on the screen when grep was through.

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    Avoid the problem in the future by using version control?
    – Chris A.
    Jun 27, 2011 at 20:05
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    Maybe you can look back through the logs on your version control system to find out where the debugging happened and do a diff around that time ?
    – Paul R
    Jun 27, 2011 at 20:05
  • grep "std::cout" * -r | grep text Jun 27, 2011 at 20:06
  • Are you sure that your make clean erases all object files and rebuilds them, and that you are not running an old executable? Jun 27, 2011 at 20:08
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    If you would know how to use grep, less and more, you would not tell us, grep is not the best way to do that: grep -P '/std\:\:cout\b[^"]*std\:\:endl/' -B5 -A5 | less. grep tells you which file the string was found and shows you 5 lines before and after the match. In less you could search again if needed, scroll through the code. And to detect the change in svn: use svn-bisect Jun 27, 2011 at 20:19

6 Answers 6

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If it's a printf - do a macro that will call printf adding to it the file name and line number (these are __FILE__ and __LINE__). Just name the macro printf and call ::printf for the original function.

If it's cout - a bit trickier, but you can try to put breakpoint there and see where it's called from, you'll find it in the end.

For the next time - always use dedicated debug printing functions or wrapper macros that could be easily separated from the rest of the code by a single compiler switch.

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  • Ok I will give this one a shot and hope its a printf ;) Jun 27, 2011 at 20:16
  • @Nobody - make sure you include this macro in all your code base, I hope you have one single .H file included everywhere for that:-)
    – littleadv
    Jun 27, 2011 at 20:20
  • Thats my problem for now. But I am through with most so chances are that it's a std::cout. Jun 27, 2011 at 20:27
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You don't need no fancy version control system! All you need is the self-discipline to mark all (yes, all) debugging output with a /* REMOVE ME */ comment.

It only took me 30 years to learn this.

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  • +1: It is always the problem with programmers that they hate doing the extra work. Jun 27, 2011 at 20:20
  • To help with discipline: #define REMOVE_ME, so you can write REMOVE_ME printf("%d",x);. If it's not a comment, you can change it to somethign the compiler will reject.
    – MSalters
    Jun 28, 2011 at 9:46
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This page: http://sclogger.sourceforge.net/ has a program enabling you to log syscalls. Maybe that's what you're looking for.

In the future, you can do something like the following.

#ifdef DEBUG
std::cout << "Debugging message" << std::endl;
#endif

You can control whether the symbol DEBUG is defined at compilation time.

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    The web page includes the information "The module works only on 2.4.x Linux kernels". That's of limited value these days. Jun 27, 2011 at 20:10
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You wanted a better way:

Use version control! Then diff your working copy against your base revision; assuming you haven't made zillions of changes, it should be easy to find your printf.

UPDATE

If you don't know what revision you added this behaviour, then simply do a binary search. Run your app at revision 1000 (for example), then 500, then 750, then 625, etc. etc. It's really the same approach as locating the point in time where a bug was introduced.

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If you are in linux, you could use grep to parse the whole codetree at ones and let you show every hit for "std::cout". If you let print only one value, you should see the relevant line really fast.

Or you may look for a regular expression, if you know that there was no " in your debug line: s/std\:\:cout\b[^"]*std\:\:endl/.

To detect the change in svn: use svn-bisect

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As a rule of thumb, I always have something like this:

#ifdef DEBUG
int dbg_printf(char * format, ...) {

    va_list ap;
    va_start(ap, format);

    vsnprintf(my_printf_buf, my_printf_bufsize, format, ap);
    uart3_putstr(my_printf_buf); // debug connector

    va_end(ap);

    return 0;
}
#else
#define dbg_printf(format, ...)
#endif 

Good thing is that when you are not debugging, all those dbg_printf() you have on your code are eaten by the pre-processor and don't bloat your code.

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