How to make a DBG package
Introduction
Application developers should provide debug packages corresponding to their application packages. This document shows how to do that.
Debian debug packages contain debug symbol files that
debuggers (like gdb
) will automatically load when
the application is debugged.
On ARM environment the debugger can not do backtracing nor show correct function names without debugging symbols making it thus impossible to debug optimized binaries or libraries. All libraries in the device are optimized.
In X86 target debugging can be done without debug symbols.
If the package maintainer provides no debug package then the other developers in the community need to spend extra time and effort to recompile the application (or the library) with the debugging symbols. This extra (time consuming) step can be simply eliminated by the package maintainer by providing a ready compiled debug package.
As of now (May 2007) debian.org
does not seem to
provide official documentation how to create debian dbg
packages. This document tries to cover this subject
especially from the maemo/Scratchbox point of view.
It is the package maintainers role and decision to create and
provide a debug package for her application or library. This
means that you as the package owner are responsible to modify
the debian package configurations so that
the dpkg-buildpackage
tool will produce the
additional dbg-package.
If you are a maintainer of a library or binary package it is strongly recommended to create a corresponding debug package. This is needed by anybody wanting to either debug or profile your software or something using it.
Creating DBG packages
Steps to create a debian DBG package are:
- 1. Clean up any previous dbg configurations from your package
If your package already provides the debugging symbols the "hard, old way" then you should clean these configurations first.
If you use
dh_strip --dbg-package
option indebian/rules
file then it's not necessary to build or copy anything to the-dbg
package build directory anymore. Check your packagesdebian/rules
file and remove all lines that have statements to create dbg packages.If you have any files named
debian/*-dbg.*
then just remove these files. These were required with the old way to usedh_strip
.The following steps are the only ones needed to create the debug packages with newer versions of
dh_strip
.After you have cleaned up any previous dbg configurations from your debian files move to step 2.
- 2. Define DBG package(s)
For every package listed in your
debian/control
file which contains libraries or binaries you need to add corresponding<package>-dbg
entry. If you havedebian/control.in
then modify that instead.Make the debug package(s) to depend from the corresponding binary/library package. Here is an example:
. . other package definitions above . Package: libgtk2.0-0-dbg Section: libdevel Architecture: any Depends: libgtk2.0-0 (= ${Source-Version}) Description: Debug symbols for the Gtk library
If the package contains binaries instead of libraries, the section should be 'devel'.
Note that the new -dbg package may have a different name from the old style debug package (for example libgtk2.0-0-dbg, not libgtk2.0-dbg). If there are earlier (old style) debug packages in the repositories the new debug package should replace/conflict with the old one.
- 3. Add option
-g
toCFLAGS
Make sure you have set option
-g
inCFLAGS
in thedebian/rules
file and that this option is effective and always enabled. Otherwise the debug package doesn't contain the required debug symbols.For example use a line like this for
CFLAGS
CFLAGS = -Wall -g
- 4. Use
dh_strip
You can either provide all debugging information for your package or just a minimal debugging information required to debug something else using your library.
You want to select the latter option only if you want to reveal as little of your code as possible (for example) for contract reasons.
4.1 Providing all debug information in your dbg package.
Add the
dh_strip
command tobinary-arch
target in thedebian/rules
file like this:dh_strip --dbg-package=<package1> [--dbg-package=<package2> ...]
For example:
dh_strip --dbg-package=libgtk2.0-0
This separates debug symbols from <packageN> and puts them into <package>-dbg.
If you're using
cdbs
instead ofdebhelper
(dh_*
commands) in yourdebian/rules
file, use this instead:DEB_DH_STRIP_ARGS := --dbg-package=<package1> ...
dh_strip
has a different syntax for--dbg-package
at compatibility level 5, with that you need to postfix the package name given to--dbg-package
with-dbg
i.e. use-dbg-package=<package>-dbg
. However, with lower compatibility levels (default is 1) it SHOULD not be added!In addition, note that compat levels 2 and below are deprecated.
Level 5 is not supported by the
debhelper
version provided by Scratchbox debian-devkit version 1.0.7 or earlier.- 4.2 Providing just minimal debug information
In case you don't want to reveal all information about your binary (e.g. for contract reasons), you can provide debug symbol file just with the
.debug_frame
section (which is minimal information needed byGdb
to show working backtraces in ARM environment). In addition to information provided by the binary file, it will reveal only static function names and the number of function arguments.To do this, replace the above
dh_strip
line indebian/rules
filebinary-arch
target with:chmod +x $(shell pwd)/debian/wrapper export PATH=$(shell pwd)/debian/wrapper:$$PATH; \ dh_strip --dbg-package=<package1> [--dbg-package=<package2> ...]
Note that the wrapper script is set executable because the
dpkg-source
does not preserve the exec permissions.Store the following wrapper script as
debian/wrapper/objcopy
:#!/bin/sh # case " $* " in *" --only-keep-debug "*) exec /usr/bin/objcopy -R .debug_info -R .debug_aranges \ -R .debug_pubnames -R .debug_abbrev -R .debug_line \ -R .debug_str -R .debug_ranges -R .comment -R .note "$@" ;; esac exec /usr/bin/objcopy "$@"
With this
dh_strip
will useobjcopy
through this wrapper (i.e. remove the other debug sections).
- 5. Verify the package(s)
Update the Debian changelog with
dch -i
and build the package withdpkg-buildpackage -rfakeroot
. This will create new Debian source package (dsc + diff) and binary package(s) which you can install on the target for additional testing.
See also dh_strip (1)
and debhelper (7)
manual pages for details
about the helper scripts.
If the package has any function(s) that have the noreturn
GCC
attribute, you need to make sure that the object(s) containing
those are compiled with -fno-omit-frame-pointer
(or remove the
noreturn attribute). This is needed for backtraces containing them
to be debuggable when the binaries are optimized, the debug
symbols are not enough for them. By default GCC omits frame pointer when code is optimized.
Using and installling DBG packages
The debug packages are easy to use, just apt-get
install
them and on target gdb
will load the new
style debug symbol files (installed to subdirectories under
/usr/lib/debug/
) automatically.
Inside Scratchbox, debuggers and profilers will search for the debug symbol files under scratchbox target directory under /usr/lib/debug, so a target directory needs to be linked under it.
mkdir /usr/lib/debug cd /usr/lib/debug mkdir targets ln -s /usr/lib/debug targets/$(sh -c '. /targets/links/scratchbox.config;echo $SBOX_TARGET_NAME')
The reason for this is that realpath
on libraries and
binaries inside Scratchbox
returns /scratchbox/targets/.../usr/lib/...
instead of just normal /usr/lib/...
.
Installing the maemo-debug-scripts
package
does this link automatically.
And for thread debugging to work, you need to
install libc6-dbg
package and gdb
package,
the Scratchbox
provided host gdb
doesn't work
with threads (or ARM core dumps). To use the native gdb
in
Scratchbox
, you need to start gdb
the following way:
SBOX_REDIRECT_IGNORE=/usr/bin/gdb /usr/bin/gdb /usr/bin/my-binary
maemo-debug-scripts
package provides native-gdb
script for this.
For gdb
to find old style debug symbol files
(installed directly into
/usr/lib/debug/
) you need to use LD_LIBRARY_PATH
or load them
manually in gdb
.
Files in these old style debug symbol files contain both the binary and debug symbol
sections, so they are also larger than the new style debug symbols
which dh_strip
instructions above will create.
For further reading
-
Debian New Maintainers' Guide:
http://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/maint-guide/index.en.html -
Debian Developer's Reference, Chapter 6 - Best Packaging Practices:
http://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/developers-reference/ch-best-pkging-practices.en.html$
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