Dbx (debugger)

Source-level debugger From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

dbx is a source-level debugger found primarily on Solaris, AIX, IRIX, Tru64 UNIX, Linux and BSD operating systems. It provides symbolic debugging for programs written in C, C++, Fortran, Pascal and Java. Useful features include stepping through programs one source line or machine instruction at a time. In addition to simply viewing operation of the program, variables can be manipulated and a wide range of expressions can be evaluated and displayed.

Original authorMark Linton
Initial release1981; 45 years ago (1981)
Quick facts Original author, Developer ...
dbx
Original authorMark Linton
DeveloperOracle Corporation
Initial release1981; 45 years ago (1981)
Operating systemUnix and Unix-like
TypeDebugger
LicenseFree for download and use as described in the Sun Studio product license.
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History

dbx was originally developed at University of California, Berkeley, by Mark Linton during the years 1981–1984[1] and subsequently made its way to various vendors who had licensed BSD.

Availability

dbx is provided with AIX,[2] and was also provided with IRIX[3] and Tru64 UNIX.[4]

It is included as part of the Oracle Solaris Studio product from Oracle Corporation,[5] and is supported on both Solaris and Linux. It supports programs compiled with the Oracle Solaris Studio compilers and GCC.

It is also available on IBM z/OS systems, in the UNIX System Services component.[6] dbx for z/OS can debug programs written in C and C++, and can also perform machine level debugging. As of z/OS V1R5, dbx is able to debug programs using the DWARF debug format. z/OS V1R6 added support for debugging 64-bit programs.

GCC removed support for stabs debugging symbols in release 13, so that dbx is not supported as a debugger for GCC-compiled code.[7]

See also

References

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