Does GDB support Stepping into a Specific function, say either f
or g
, on lines containing expressions of nested function calls such as
f(g());
similar to what Visual Studio 2010 support. Maybe a GDB script is the solution?
Does GDB support Stepping into a Specific function, say either f
or g
, on lines containing expressions of nested function calls such as
f(g());
similar to what Visual Studio 2010 support. Maybe a GDB script is the solution?
The command advance
from the answer https://stackoverflow.com/a/1133403/2708138 is useful. You can combine that command with print f
to get the type of f
in the current context beforehand.
Furthermore, I have already mentioned in the comment to your question that you can skip
the function g
if you never want to step through it.
See the gdb-help for the keywords advance
, print
and skip
.
At least the skip
-feature is quite new. So maybe, it was not available at the time when Employed Russian gave his answer.
skip
is designed to solve the exact problem that the question describes. step
and finish
alternative gets tedious and tiring very soon! I'll add a bounty for this answer so that it gets more attention and saves people some time.
Commented
Jun 20, 2019 at 18:35
Does GDB support Stepping into a Specific function
No. If you want to step into g
, a simple step
should do it. If you want to step into f
, do step
, finish
, step
.
You are welcome to file a feature request in GDB bugzilla, though I doubt Step into Specific
can be reasonably implemented in a CLI debugger.
skip g()
gdb will executeg()
without stepping into it and step intof
.