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Shortly, I want to know if gcc (or g++. I need it in C, but also am curious about c++) defines any special symbols if -g is enabled. Does it? If so, what symbols?

In the search process I found out that:

  • _DEBUG is defined manually (by manually I mean -D_DEBUG) and is a habit taken from Visual C programmers (because VC defines _DEBUG when compiling in debug mode)
  • NDEBUG is defined if NOT in debug mode. Although I found a few places saying this, I tried with my gcc and g++ in .c and .cpp files and in none of them with or without -g no such symbol was defined!

Edit: Let me demonstrate why I don't want to use a non-standard symbol:

Imagine a kernel module that does something and also provides header files to be included in other kernel modules so that they can connect to this one.

Now as a facility, in one of the header files I have:

#ifdef DEBUG <-- This is what I need
#define LOG(x, ...) printk("Some extra info"x, ##__VA_ARGS__);
#else
#define LOG(x, ...) printk("Without extra info"x, ##__VA_ARGS__);
#endif

Note that the name is not really LOG, that's an example.

Now, I can use any symbol for DEBUG myself, but then if someone includes my header, they may not define that symbol. Of course I can tell them "by the way, to get the headers in debug mode, define this other symbol", but that just doesn't sound right to me.

I could define the symbol in a header and include it in all header files. This way, if they include one of my headers, they get the debug symbol too. The problem now is that, if they don't want to compile in debug mode, my headers still think they are in debug mode.

So what I thought would be best was to use a symbol that is defined when -g is used, if there are any!

Update

So far I came to the conclusion that I could do something like this:

how_to_build.h

#if !defined(NDEBUG)
#define MY_DEBUG
#endif

Usage:

#include "how_to_build.h"

#ifdef MY_DEBUG
// rest of the story

This way, the common option of NDEBUG removes my definition also. It still requires me to tell them to define it if they don't want to get the headers in debug mode.

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The best practise is to always use -g because it doesn't affect optimized code or make it any slower. Also, on Unix it is standard to pass NDEBUG define to the compiler for release builds and define nothing for debug. Hence you should consider using NDEBUG define for telling a debug from release build. – Maxim Yegorushkin Nov 3 '11 at 16:40
@MaximYegorushkin, is it standard or just a convention? If it is standard, how come gcc doesn't do it automatically? – Shahbaz Nov 3 '11 at 16:42
It is a standard convention. C/C++ language doesn't require defining these symbols. – Maxim Yegorushkin Nov 3 '11 at 16:45
1  
It's standard in the sense that NDEBUG makes assert.h behave differently. – janneb Nov 3 '11 at 17:23
"by the way, to get the headers in debug mode, define this other symbol" is the standard way of doing it, IMO. – Per Johansson Nov 3 '11 at 17:46

2 Answers

up vote 9 down vote accepted

You can see the list of all macros gcc/g++ defines for any combination of flags like that:

$ g++ -E -dD -xc++ /dev/null

For example:

[max@truth ~]$ g++ -E -dD -xc++ /dev/null > a
[max@truth ~]$ g++ -E -dD -xc++ -g -O3 /dev/null > b
[max@truth ~]$ diff a b
1a2
> # 1 "/home/max//"
173c174
< #define __NO_INLINE__ 1
---
> #define __OPTIMIZE__ 1

Let's see whether -g defines anything:

[max@truth ~]$ g++ -E -dD -xc++ -g /dev/null > c
[max@truth ~]$ diff a c
1a2
> # 1 "/home/max//"

Extra preprocessor directive, but no extra defines for -g flag.

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Running
g++ -E -dD -xc++ /dev/null
vs.
g++ -E -dD -g -xc++ /dev/null
shows me no extra defined symbols.

That, combined with the lack of any documentation stating that symbols get defined, should be enough to safely say that nothing gets defined.

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