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LLVM-PDBUTIL(1) |
LLVM |
LLVM-PDBUTIL(1) |
llvm-pdbutil - PDB File forensics and diagnostics
- Synopsis
- Description
- Subcommands
- •
- pretty
- Filtering and Sorting Options
- Symbol Type Options
- Other Options
- •
- dump
- MSF Container Options
- Module & File Options
- Symbol Options
- Type Record Options
- Miscellaneous Options
- •
- bytes
- MSF File Options
- PDB Stream Options
- DBI Stream Options
- Module Options
- Type Record Options
- •
- pdb2yaml
- •
- yaml2pdb
- •
- merge
llvm-pdbutil [subcommand] [options]
Display types, symbols, CodeView records, and other information from a PDB file,
as well as manipulate and create PDB files. llvm-pdbutil is normally
used by FileCheck-based tests to test LLVM's PDB reading and writing
functionality, but can also be used for general PDB file investigation and
forensics, or as a replacement for cvdump.
llvm-pdbutil is separated into several subcommands each tailored to a
different purpose. A brief summary of each command follows, with more detail
in the sections that follow.
- pretty - Dump symbol and type information in a format that tries to
look as much like the original source code as possible.
- dump - Dump low level types and structures from the PDB file,
including CodeView records, hash tables, PDB streams, etc.
- bytes - Dump data from the PDB file's streams, records, types,
symbols, etc as raw bytes.
- yaml2pdb - Given a yaml description of a PDB file, produce a valid
PDB file that matches that description.
- pdb2yaml - For a given PDB file, produce a YAML description of some
or all of the file in a way that the PDB can be reconstructed.
- merge - Given two PDBs, produce a third PDB that is the result of
merging the two input PDBs.
IMPORTANT:
The pretty subcommand is built on the Windows DIA
SDK, and as such is not supported on non-Windows platforms.
USAGE: llvm-pdbutil pretty [options] <input PDB
file>
The pretty subcommand displays a very high level representation of your
program's debug info. Since it is built on the Windows DIA SDK which is the
standard API that Windows tools and debuggers query debug information, it
presents a more authoritative view of how a debugger is going to interpret
your debug information than a mode which displays low-level CodeView records.
NOTE:
exclude filters take priority over include
filters. So if a filter matches both an include and an exclude rule, then it
is excluded.
- -exclude-compilands=<string>
- When dumping compilands, compiland source-file contributions, or
per-compiland symbols, this option instructs llvm-pdbutil to omit
any compilands that match the specified regular expression.
- -exclude-symbols=<string>
- When dumping global, public, or per-compiland symbols, this option
instructs llvm-pdbutil to omit any symbols that match the specified
regular expression.
- -exclude-types=<string>
- When dumping types, this option instructs llvm-pdbutil to omit any
types that match the specified regular expression.
- -include-compilands=<string>
- When dumping compilands, compiland source-file contributions, or
per-compiland symbols, limit the initial search to only those compilands
that match the specified regular expression.
- -include-symbols=<string>
- When dumping global, public, or per-compiland symbols, limit the initial
search to only those symbols that match the specified regular
expression.
- -include-types=<string>
- When dumping types, limit the initial search to only those types that
match the specified regular expression.
- -min-class-padding=<uint>
- Only display types that have at least the specified amount of alignment
padding, accounting for padding in base classes and aggregate field
members.
- -min-class-padding-imm=<uint>
- Only display types that have at least the specified amount of alignment
padding, ignoring padding in base classes and aggregate field
members.
- -min-type-size=<uint>
- Only display types T where sizeof(T) is greater than or equal to the
specified amount.
- -no-compiler-generated
- Don't show compiler generated types and symbols
- -no-enum-definitions
- When dumping an enum, don't show the full enum (e.g. the individual
enumerator values).
- -no-system-libs
- Don't show symbols from system libraries
- -all
- Implies all other options in this category.
- -class-definitions=<format>
- Displays class definitions in the specified format.
=all - Display all class members including data, constants, typedefs, functions, etc (default)
=layout - Only display members that contribute to class size.
=none - Don't display class definitions (e.g. only display the name and base list)
- -class-order
- Displays classes in the specified order.
=none - Undefined / no particular sort order (default)
=name - Sort classes by name
=size - Sort classes by size
=padding - Sort classes by amount of padding
=padding-pct - Sort classes by percentage of space consumed by padding
=padding-imm - Sort classes by amount of immediate padding
=padding-pct-imm - Sort classes by percentage of space consumed by immediate padding
- -class-recurse-depth=<uint>
- When dumping class definitions, stop after recursing the specified number
of times. The default is 0, which is no limit.
- -compilands
- Display compilands (e.g. object files)
- -externals
- Dump external (e.g. exported) symbols
- -globals
- Dump global symbols
- -lines
- Dump the mappings between source lines and code addresses.
- -module-syms
- Display symbols (variables, functions, etc) for each compiland
- -sym-types=<types>
- Type of symbols to dump when -globals, -externals, or -module-syms is
specified. (default all)
=thunks - Display thunk symbols
=data - Display data symbols
=funcs - Display function symbols
=all - Display all symbols (default)
- -symbol-order=<order>
- For symbols dumped via the -module-syms, -globals, or -externals options,
sort the results in specified order.
=none - Undefined / no particular sort order
=name - Sort symbols by name
=size - Sort symbols by size
- -typedefs
- Display typedef types
- -types
- Display all types (implies -classes, -enums, -typedefs)
- -color-output
- Force color output on or off. By default, color if used if outputting to a
terminal.
- -load-address=<uint>
- When displaying relative virtual addresses, assume the process is loaded
at the given address and display what would be the absolute address.
USAGE: llvm-pdbutil dump [options] <input PDB file>
The dump subcommand displays low level information about the structure of
a PDB file. It is used heavily by LLVM's testing infrastructure, but can also
be used for PDB forensics. It serves a role similar to that of Microsoft's
cvdump tool.
NOTE:
The dump subcommand exposes internal details of
the file format. As such, the reader should be familiar with /PDB/index before
using this command.
- -streams
- dump a summary of all of the streams in the PDB file.
- -stream-blocks
- In conjunction with -streams, add information to the output about
what blocks the specified stream occupies.
- -summary
- Dump MSF and PDB header information.
- -modi=<uint>
- For all options that dump information from each module/compiland, limit to
the specified module.
- -files
- Dump the source files that contribute to each displayed module.
- -il
- Dump inlinee line information (DEBUG_S_INLINEELINES CodeView
subsection)
- -l
- Dump line information (DEBUG_S_LINES CodeView subsection)
- -modules
- Dump compiland information
- -xme
- Dump cross module exports (DEBUG_S_CROSSSCOPEEXPORTS CodeView
subsection)
- -xmi
- Dump cross module imports (DEBUG_S_CROSSSCOPEIMPORTS CodeView
subsection)
- -globals
- dump global symbol records
- -global-extras
- dump additional information about the globals, such as hash buckets and
hash values.
- -publics
- dump public symbol records
- -public-extras
- dump additional information about the publics, such as hash buckets and
hash values.
- -symbols
- dump symbols (functions, variables, etc) for each module dumped.
- -sym-data
- For each symbol record dumped as a result of the -symbols option,
display the full bytes of the record in binary as well.
- -types
- Dump CodeView type records from TPI stream
- -type-extras
- Dump additional information from the TPI stream, such as hashes and the
type index offsets array.
- -type-data
- For each type record dumped, display the full bytes of the record in
binary as well.
- -type-index=<uint>
- Only dump types with the specified type index.
- -ids
- Dump CodeView type records from IPI stream.
- -id-extras
- Dump additional information from the IPI stream, such as hashes and the
type index offsets array.
- -id-data
- For each ID record dumped, display the full bytes of the record in binary
as well.
- -id-index=<uint>
- only dump ID records with the specified hexadecimal type index.
- -dependents
- When used in conjunction with -type-index or -id-index,
dumps the entire dependency graph for the specified index instead of just
the single record with the specified index. For example, if type index
0x4000 is a function whose return type has index 0x3000, and you specify
-dependents=0x4000, then this would dump both records (as well as
any other dependents in the tree).
- -all
- Implies most other options.
- -section-contribs
- Dump section contributions.
- -section-headers
- Dump image section headers.
- -section-map
- Dump section map.
- -string-table
- Dump PDB string table.
USAGE: llvm-pdbutil bytes [options] <input PDB file>
Like the dump subcommand, the bytes subcommand displays low level
information about the structure of a PDB file, but it is used for even deeper
forensics. The bytes subcommand finds various structures in a PDB file
based on the command line options specified, and dumps them in hex. Someone
working on support for emitting PDBs would use this heavily, for example, to
compare one PDB against another PDB to ensure byte-for-byte compatibility. It
is not enough to simply compare the bytes of an entire file, or an entire
stream because it's perfectly fine for the same structure to exist at
different locations in two different PDBs, and "finding" the
structure is half the battle.
- -block-range=<start[-end]>
- Dump binary data from specified range of MSF file blocks.
- -byte-range=<start[-end]>
- Dump binary data from specified range of bytes in the file.
- -fpm
- Dump the MSF free page map.
- -stream-data=<string>
- Dump binary data from the specified streams. Format is SN[:Start][@Size].
For example, -stream-data=7:3@12 dumps 12 bytes from stream 7,
starting at offset 3 in the stream.
- -name-map
- Dump bytes of PDB Name Map
- -ec
- Dump the edit and continue map substream of the DBI stream.
- -files
- Dump the file info substream of the DBI stream.
- -modi
- Dump the modi substream of the DBI stream.
- -sc
- Dump section contributions substream of the DBI stream.
- -sm
- Dump the section map from the DBI stream.
- -type-server
- Dump the type server map from the DBI stream.
- -mod=<uint>
- Limit all options in this category to the specified module index. By
default, options in this category will dump bytes from all modules.
- -chunks
- Dump the bytes of each module's C13 debug subsection.
- -split-chunks
- When specified with -chunks, split the C13 debug subsection into a
separate chunk for each subsection type, and dump them separately.
- -syms
- Dump the symbol record substream from each module.
- -id=<uint>
- Dump the record from the IPI stream with the given type index.
- -type=<uint>
- Dump the record from the TPI stream with the given type index.
USAGE: llvm-pdbutil pdb2yaml [options] <input PDB file>
USAGE: llvm-pdbutil yaml2pdb [options] <input YAML file>
Generate a PDB file from a YAML description. The YAML syntax is not described
here. Instead, use llvm-pdbutil pdb2yaml and examine the output for an
example starting point.
Write the resulting PDB to the specified file.
USAGE: llvm-pdbutil merge [options] <input PDB file 1>
<input PDB file 2>
Merge two PDB files into a single file.
Write the resulting PDB to the specified file.
Maintained by the LLVM Team (https://llvm.org/).
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