This may be compiler specific, in which case I am using the IAR EWARM 5.50 compiler (firmware development for the STM32 chip).
Our project consists of a bunch of C-code libraries that we compile first, and then the main application which compiles its C-code and then links in those libraries (pretty standard stuff).
However, if I use a hex editor and open up any of the library object files produced or the final application binary, I find a whole bunch of plain text references inside the output binary to the file paths of the C files that were compiled. (eg. I see "C:\Development\trunk\Common\Encryption\SHA_1.c")
Two issues with this:
- we don't really want the file paths being easily readable as that indicates our design some what
- the size of the binary grows if you have your C-files located in a long subdirectory (the binary contains the full path, not just the name)...this is especially important when we're dealing with firmware that has a limited amount of code space (256KB).
Any thoughts on this? I've tried all the switches in the compiler I can think of to "remove debug information", etc., but those paths are still in there.
__FILE__
.)