81

I've been looking for this for a while: I'm currently converting a medium-size program to autotools, coming from an Eclipse-based method (with makefiles)

I'm always used to having a "debug" build, with all debug symbols and no optimizations, and a "release" build, without debug symbols and best optimizations.

Now I'm trying to replicate this in some way with autotools, so I can (perhaps) do something like:

./configure
make debug

Which would have all debug symbols and no optimizations, and where:

./configure
make

Would result in the "release" version (default)

PS: I've read about the --enable-debug flag/feature, but in my current (simple) setup, using that is unrecognized by configure

1
  • 5
    Please change the accepted answer from ismall's to William Pursell's. The accepted answer is incorrect. Dec 8, 2014 at 21:13

4 Answers 4

177

ismail's solution is a common approach, but it suffers from some serious problems. If the user tries to get a debug build by doing './configure --enable-debug', the configure script will set CFLAGS to '-g -O2' and the Makefile will use '-g3 -O0 ... -g -O2' when building any executables. In that case, gcc will use -O2, and some compilers will abort because of the conflicting -O options. Either scenario is not the expected behavior.

Building with debug symbols or not is NOT something the project maintainer should worry about at all. This is an issue for the user. If you are building a project and you want to make a debug build or a release build, you should use different options at configure time. For example,

$ mkdir debug
$ mkdir release
$ cd debug && /path/to/configure --prefix=/dbg \
   CPPFLAGS=-DDEBUG CFLAGS="-g -O0" && make && make install
$ cd ../release && /path/to/configure CPPFLAGS=-DNDEBUG && make && make install

This will install a build with `-DDEBUG' and '-g -O0' (a "debug build") in /dbg/bin and a 'release' install in /usr/local/bin

You can reduce the tedium of the necessary typing by using a CONFIG_SITE file. For example, you can do:

echo 'CPPFLAGS=-DDEBUG CFLAGS="-g -O0"' >> /dbg/share/config.site

and then all future invocations of 'configure --prefix=/dbg' will automatically inherit the settings to CPPFLAGS and CFLAGS without needing to be specified on the command line.

If, as the package maintainer, you want to provide the user with an easy way to build a "debug release", it is perfectly acceptable to include a script in the distribution that invokes the configure script with the appropriate arguments and invokes make && make install, but there is absolutely no need to litter your autotool metafiles with such cruft. It simply does not belong there. And be warned, many packages have made attempts to add --enable-debug which are simply wrong. If the user invokes configure CFLAGS="-g -O0" but gets a build that applies unexpected flags then you have a bug and your package is broken. This is an all too common experience, and if you maintain a package (currently thinking about tmux and curl) in which the user does not get what any reasonable person would call a "debug build" after invoking configure CFLAGS="-g -O0", then your package is broken.

An important point that must always be remembered when maintaining a package with the autotools is that the user may be using a completely different tool chain than you are. It is entirely possible that the user's tool chain will require -DMAKE_IT_A_DEBUG or -DUSE_DEBUG or -I/non/standard/path/to/headers. Perhaps it will need -O145 or -Q passed to the compiler or -debug passed to the linker, or ... anything. As the maintainer, you simply do not have the information necessary to even make the phrase "debug build" meaningful for all users. So don't try, because you might make the software unbuildable for a certain set of users.

8
  • 1
    @Honza More details are necessary to debug your issue. If $prefix/share/config.site exists and CONFIG_SITE is not set in the environment of the process running the configure script (and if the configure script is generated by autoconf), it should be read. Search for config.site in the configure script. Jun 24, 2013 at 12:12
  • I tried CPPFLAGS=-DDEBUG CXXFLAGS="-g -O0" && make && make install but it seemed to ignore the flags. I had to do make CPPFLAGS=-DDEBUG CXXFLAGS="-g -O0" instead. Nov 21, 2013 at 0:42
  • 1
    @Craig You didn't run configure. You need: CPPFLAGS=-DDEBUG ./configure && make ... Nov 21, 2013 at 0:47
  • 1
    If possible, use -ggdb for maximum debugging.
    – kevinarpe
    Sep 21, 2014 at 18:32
  • 3
    Ismail's solution is completely broken. In that scenario, configure --enable-debug invokes the compiler with -O0 ... -O2, which is broken even in the most common case. Mar 8, 2018 at 15:53
17

Add a clause to your configure.in or configure.ac file;

AC_ARG_ENABLE(debug,
AS_HELP_STRING([--enable-debug],
               [enable debugging, default: no]),
[case "${enableval}" in
             yes) debug=true ;;
             no)  debug=false ;;
             *)   AC_MSG_ERROR([bad value ${enableval} for --enable-debug]) ;;
esac],
[debug=false])

AM_CONDITIONAL(DEBUG, test x"$debug" = x"true")

Now in your Makefile.inor Makefile.am;

if DEBUG
AM_CFLAGS = -g3 -O0
AM_CXXFLAGS = -g3 -O0
else
AM_CFLAGS = -O2
AM_CXXFLAGS = -O2
endif

So when debugis enabled you can modify your {C/CXX}FLAGSto enable debug information.

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  • 30
    -1 This is a horrible solution, totally in opposition to the philosophy of the autotools. More description in answer given below. Jan 13, 2011 at 13:27
  • 8
    Let me clarify more why this is a bad solution. What happens when the user runs 'configure CFLAGS=-O1 && make'? The compiler will be invoked with "-O1 -O2". Which level of optimization will be set? The user explicitly asked for -O1, but you'll have to check the documentation to figure out what the compiler actually did. Jan 13, 2011 at 13:38
  • 7
    @Ismail my point is that your solution will cause both flags to be passed to the compiler. Your claim that gcc will use -O1 if both -O1 and -O2 are passed is totally irrelevant if the user is using a different compiler. What is wrong with your solution is that you are making assumptions about the user's environment instead of letting the user drive the build, and that is totally in conflict with the philosophy of the autotools. Jan 14, 2011 at 12:19
  • 7
    @Ismail how can you make a claim about the behavior of all compilers? Do all compilers recognize '-g3'? There are a lot of compilers out there. However, that is not the point. The point is that the package maintainer should not make such assumptions about the user's environment. Those decisions should be left to the user. Jan 14, 2011 at 12:29
  • 7
    @ismail -- I just found a compiler on my machine that aborts if both -O1 and -O2 are passed on the command line. If you can modify your solution so that the user has a method to ensure that none of the flags you are specifying in AM_CFLAGS are passed to the compiler (without modifying Makefile.am or a Makefile), I will gladly remove my downvote. But this is NOT a non-issue. This is a core issue which plagues the autotools. Packages are built that ignore the philosophy of the tool chain and the results are packages that don't build as expected. Jan 14, 2011 at 12:37
7

The default Makefile created with autotools produces binaries with debug symbos. Use make install-strip to produce a release target.

1
  • 1
    Even if a binary contains debug symbols, it usually is built with the -O2 as well.
    – Sundae
    Aug 23, 2012 at 7:29
3

Another example to configure CFLAGS/CXXFLAGS without editing Makefile.in or Makefile.am. Add this code to your configure.in or configure.ac file:

test -z "$SED" && SED=sed

AC_ARG_ENABLE([debug],
  [AS_HELP_STRING([--enable-debug],
                  [whether to include debug symbols (default is no)])],
  [enable_debug=$enableval],
  [enable_debug=no]
)

if test "x$enable_debug" = xyes; then
  dnl Remove all optimization flags from CFLAGS
  changequote({,})
  CFLAGS=`echo "$CFLAGS" | $SED -e 's/-O[0-9s]*//g'`
  CXXFLAGS=`echo "$CXXFLAGS" | $SED -e 's/-O[0-9s]*//g'`

  CFLAGS=`echo "$CFLAGS" | $SED -e 's/-g[0-9]*//g'`
  CXXFLAGS=`echo "$CXXFLAGS" | $SED -e 's/-g[0-9]*//g'`
  changequote([,])

  CFLAGS="$CFLAGS -g -O0"
  CXXFLAGS="$CXXFLAGS -g -O0"
fi

echo "CFLAGS=$CFLAGS"

Test it:

$ ./configure --enable-debug | grep CFLAGS

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