When running a program on GDB, usually, the arguments for the program are given at the run command. Is there a way to run the program using GDB and as well as give arguments within a shell script?
I saw an answer in a related question, mentioning that we can attach GDB to the program after the script starts executing. But then I will have to 'wait' the program.
Is there another way to do this?
19 Answers
You can run gdb with --args parameter:
gdb --args executablename arg1 arg2 arg3If you are doing this often (e.g. when running GDB from a script), you might want to consider the following arguments to automate things further. First, you can place your GDB commands (such as 'run') in a text file and provide the filename to the -x argument. Second, you can have GDB exit after running your commands by providing the --batch argument. A full example:
gdb -x commands.txt --batch --args executablename arg1 arg2 arg3 6 gdb -ex=r --args myprogram arg1 arg2-ex=r is short for -ex=run and tells gdb to run your program immediately, rather than wait for you to type "run" at the prompt. Then --args says that everything that follows is the command and arguments, just as you'd normally type them at the commandline prompt.
Another way to do this, which I personally find slightly more convenient and intuitive (without having to remember the --args parameter), is to compile normally, and use r arg1 arg2 arg3 directly from within gdb, like so:
$ gcc -g *.c *.h
$ gdb ./a.out
(gdb) r arg1 arg2 arg3 3 You could create a file with context:
run arg1 arg2 arg3 etc
program inputAnd call gdb like
gdb prog < file Much too late, but here is a method that works during gdb session.
gdb <executable>
then
(gdb) apropos argument
This will return lots of matches, the useful one is set args.
set args -- Set argument list to give program being debugged when it is started.
set args arg1 arg2 ...
then
r
This will run the program, passing to main(argc, argv) the arguments and the argument count.
If the --args parameter is not working on your machine (i.e. on Solaris 8), you may start gdb like
gdb -ex "set args <arg 1> <arg 2> ... <arg n>"And you can combine this with inputting a file to stdin and "running immediatelly":
gdb -ex "set args <arg 1> <arg 2> ... <arg n> < <input file>" -ex "r" In addition to the answer of Hugo Ideler.
When using arguments having themself prefix like -- or -, I was not sure to conflict with gdb one.
It seems gdb takes all after args option as arguments for the program.
At first I wanted to be sure, I ran gdb with quotes around your args, it is removed at launch.
This works too, but optional:
gdb --args executablename "--arg1" "--arg2" "--arg3"This doesn't work :
gdb --args executablename "--arg1" "--arg2" "--arg3" -tuiIn that case, -tui is used as my program parameter not as gdb one.
gdb has --init-command <somefile> where somefile has a list of gdb commands to run, I use this to have //GDB comments in my code, then `
echo "file ./a.out" > run
grep -nrIH "//GDB"| sed "s/\(^[^:]\+:[^:]\+\):.*$/\1/g" | awk '{print "b" " " $1}'| grep -v $(echo $0|sed "s/.*\///g") >> run
gdb --init-command ./run -ex=ras a script, which puts the command to load the debug symbols, and then generates a list of break commands to put a break point for each //GDB comment, and starts it running
If you want to pass arguments from file,
e.g. scanf from a file as input
try this
(gdb) run < the_file_contains_data