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Jonathan Mourtada
Jonathan Mourtada

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Debug x86 assembly with GDB

This is the sixth post about x86 assembly. In this post I will show how to debug your x86 assembly code with the GNU Project debugger(GDB). GDB can be used with a lot of languages for example assembly, C, C++ and Rust.

Generating debug symbols

First of all you need to tell nasm to generate debug information. This is done with -g and -F dwarf. The -g option tells nasm to generate debug information and the -F dwarf sets the debugging format to the standardized debugging format DWARF.

Start GDB

Start gdb with gdb <your_assemlby_program> to enter its interactive shell. You can set breakpoints by writing break <function_name or line number>. By default gdb uses AT&T flavor to change to intel flavor type set dissambly-flavor intel. To start debugging the program type run.

Debugging the program

The program will run until a crash happens or to any breakpoint you set and pause. If you want to look at the values currently in the registers type info registers or if you want to see the next instructions at the same time as the value of the registers type layout regs.

To execute the next instruction type next. If you want to step into a function call type step. If the program crashes gdb will tell you which line that was the last one executing. You can type backtrace to see the full stack trace

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