Table of Contents

Introduction to GDB

Overview

Google defines a debugger as:

There is an important concept we must acknowledge here- a debugger is a program, just like the programs we've been writing.

But as a program, it works with other programs. It is a program for programs. See the depth there?

GDB, the GNU Debugger, is certainly not the only debugger in existence, but it is most likely among the most available general purpose debuggers we can get our hands on.

Learning one debugger, like GDB, well will introduce you to many important concepts that all debuggers share (some just may enable certain actions better than others, or be more specialized for certain tasks– but they all, as debuggers, share a common underlying functionality).

The prime value we are looking to get out of our debugger use is to aid us in finding (and therefore fixing) runtime and logical errors in programs we write. It is also a phenomenal investigative tool, allowing us to see what a particular piece of code is ACTUALLY doing, as far down as the assembly instructions, but in our case the line-by-line execution of our programs in C.

Debugger Features

Common fundamental features a debugger may provide:

There are many, many more features, but we're just getting started, and these are by far the most useful for us in our endeavors.