35

I'm trying to print an object's vtable using gdb; I found the

show print vt bl on

setting, but I still don't actually know how to print the vtable - p *object still doesn't print it out.

How do I print the vtable?

2
  • Looking at the assembly, wo virtual function calls to the same function are going through different offsets to the vtable, causing a segfault. I'm trying to debug this issue. May 31, 2011 at 18:41
  • Can you post some ambient code? Perhaps it's a bug that we can spot without going through the assembly.
    – Kerrek SB
    Jul 29, 2011 at 17:11

5 Answers 5

52

A more compact solution:

p /a (*(void ***)obj)[0]@10
1
  • 5
    Or even more compact: x/10a *(void**)obj, although it'll also print addresses of the method pointers (i.e. &ptr).
    – Ruslan
    Jan 1, 2016 at 16:55
50

If you have a sufficiently new version of gdb, you may want to look at the "info vtbl" command.

I only noticed the feature when googling for an answer to this question and I noticed posts to the gdb mailing list circa 2012, notably this one from March 2012:

http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.comp.gdb.patches/73957

0
11
  (gdb) set $i = 0
  (gdb) while $i < 10
     >print $i
     >p /a (*(void ***)obj)[$i]
     >set $i = $i + 1
     >end

Where "obj" is the object whose vtable you'd like to print, and 10 is the number of methods.

11

In the actual gdb 7.5.1 the command is not info vtable!

Use info vtbl

6

For the example at http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/virtual

Without using 'info vtbl'

(gdb) p b
$1 = {_vptr.Base = 0x400a60 <vtable for Base+16>}

(gdb) x/16x 0x400a60
0x400a60 <_ZTV4Base+16>:    0x0040094c  0x00000000  0x72654437  0x64657669

(gdb) x/16x 0x0040094c
0x40094c <Base::f()>:   0xe5894855  0x10ec8348  0xf87d8948  0x400a15be
0x40095c <Base::f()+16>:    0x10c0bf00  0xf9e80060  0xc9fffffd  0x485590c3
0x40096c <Derived::f()+2>:  0x8348e589  0x894810ec  0x1bbef87d  0xbf00400a
0x40097c <Derived::f()+18>: 0x006010c0  0xfffddbe8  0x66c3c9ff  0x00841f0f

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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