winedbg

Langue: en

Version: October 2005 (fedora - 01/12/10)

Section: 1 (Commandes utilisateur)

NAME

winedbg - Wine's debugger

SYNOPSIS

winedbg [ options ] [ program name [ program arguments ] | pid ]

winedbg --gdb [ options ] [ program name [ program arguments ] | pid ]

winedbg --auto pid

winedbg --minidump [ file.mdmp ] pid

winedbg file.mdmp

DESCRIPTION

winedbg is a debugger for Wine. It allows:
 + debugging native Win32 applications
 + debugging Winelib applications.
 + being a drop-in replacement for Dr Watson
 

MODES

winedbg can be used in five modes. The first argument to the program determines the mode winedbg will run in.
default
Without any explicit mode, this is standard winedbg operating mode. winedbg will act as the front end for the user.
--gdb
winedbg will be used as a proxy for gdb. gdb will be the front end for command handling, and winedbg will proxy all debugging requests from gdb to the Win32 APIs.
--auto
This mode is used when winedbg is set up in AeDebug registry entry as the default debugger. winedbg will then display basic information about a crash. This is useful for users who don't want to debug a crash, but rather gather relevant information about the crash to be sent to developers.
--minidump
This mode is similar to the --auto one, except that instead of printing the information on the screen (as --auto does), it's saved into a minidump file. The name of the file is either passed on the command line, or generated by WineDbg when none is given. This file could later on be reloaded into winedbg for further examination.
file.mdmp
This mode allows to reload into winedbg the state of a debuggee which has been saved into a minidump file. See either the minidump command below, or the --minidump mode.

OPTIONS

When in default mode, the following options are available:
--command <string>
winedbg will execute the command <string> as if it was keyed on winedbg's command line, and then will exit. This can be handy for getting the pid of running processes (winedbg --command "info proc").
--file <filename>
winedbg will execute the list of commands contained in file <filename> as if they were keyed on winedbg's command line, and then will exit.

When in gdb proxy mode, the following options are available:

--no-start
gdb will not be automatically started. Relevant information for starting gdb are printed on screen. This is somehow useful when not directly using gdb but some graphical front-ends, like ddd or kgbd.
--with-xterm
This will run gdb in its own xterm instead of using the current Unix console for textual display.

In all modes, the rest of the command line, when passed, is used to identify which programs, if any, has to debugged:

program name
This is the name of an executable to start for a debugging session. winedbg will actually create a process with this executable. If programs arguments are also given, they will be used as arguments for creating the process to be debugged.
pid
winedbg will attach to the process which pid is pid (pids refer to Win32 pids, not Unix pids). Use the info proc winedbg command to list running processes and their Win32 pids.
default
If nothing is specified, you will enter the debugger without any run nor attached process. You'll have to do the job yourself.

COMMANDS

Default mode, and while reloading a minidump file:

Most of commands used in winedbg are similar to the ones from gdb. Please refer to the gdb documentations for some more details. See the gdb differences section later on to get a list of variations from gdb commands.

Misc. commands

abort
Aborts the debugger.
quit
Exits the debugger.
attach N
Attach to a Wine-process (N is its ID, numeric or hexadecimal). IDs can be obtained using the info process command. Note the info process command returns hexadecimal values
detach
Detach from a Wine-process.

Help commands

help
Prints some help on the commands.
help info
Prints some help on info commands

Flow control commands

cont
Continue execution until next breakpoint or exception.
pass
Pass the exception event up to the filter chain.
step
Continue execution until next C line of code (enters function call)
next
Continue execution until next C line of code (doesn't enter function call)
stepi
Execute next assembly instruction (enters function call)
nexti
Execute next assembly instruction (doesn't enter function call)
finish
Execute until return of current function is reached.

cont, step, next, stepi, nexti can be postfixed by a number (N), meaning that the command must be executed N times before control is returned to the user.

Breakpoints, watchpoints

enable N
Enables (break|watch)-point #N
disable
Disables (break|watch)-point #N
delete
Deletes (break|watch)-point #N
cond N
Removes any existing condition to (break|watch)-point N
cond N <expr>
Adds condition <expr> to (break|watch)-point #N. <expr> will be evaluated each time the (break|watch)-point is hit. If the result is a zero value, the breakpoint isn't triggered.
break * N
Adds a breakpoint at address N
break <id>
Adds a breakpoint at the address of symbol <id>
break <id> N
Adds a breakpoint at the line N inside symbol <id>.
break N
Adds a breakpoint at line N of current source file.
break
Adds a breakpoint at current PC address.
watch * N
Adds a watch command (on write) at address N (on 4 bytes).
watch <id>
Adds a watch command (on write) at the address of symbol <id>. Size depends on size of <id>.
info break
Lists all (break|watch)-points (with their state).

You can use the symbol EntryPoint to stand for the entry point of the Dll.

When setting a (break|watch)-point by <id>, if the symbol cannot be found (for example, the symbol is contained in a not yet loaded module), winedbg will recall the name of the symbol and will try to set the breakpoint each time a new module is loaded (until it succeeds).

Stack manipulation

bt
Print calling stack of current thread.
bt N
Print calling stack of thread of ID N. Note: this doesn't change the position of the current frame as manipulated by the up & dn commands).
up
Goes up one frame in current thread's stack
up N
Goes up N frames in current thread's stack
dn
Goes down one frame in current thread's stack
dn N
Goes down N frames in current thread's stack
frame N
Sets N as the current frame for current thread's stack.
info locals
Prints information on local variables for current function frame.

Directory & source file manipulation

show dir
Prints the list of dir:s where source files are looked for.
dir <pathname>
Adds <pathname> to the list of dir:s where to look for source files
dir
Deletes the list of dir:s where to look for source files
symbolfile <pathname>
Loads external symbol definition symbolfile <pathname>
symbolfile <pathname> N
Loads external symbol definition symbolfile <pathname> (applying an offset of N to addresses)
list
Lists 10 source lines forwards from current position.
list -
Lists 10 source lines backwards from current position
list N
Lists 10 source lines from line #N in current file
list <pathname>:N
Lists 10 source lines from line #N in file <pathname>
list <id>
Lists 10 source lines of function <id>
list * N
Lists 10 source lines from address N

You can specify the end target (to change the 10 lines value) using the ',' separator. For example:

list 123, 234
lists source lines from line 123 up to line 234 in current file
list foo.c:1,56
lists source lines from line 1 up to 56 in file foo.c

Displaying

A display is an expression that's evaluated and printed after the execution of any winedbg's command.

display
info display
Lists the active displays
display <expr>
Adds a display for expression expr>
display /fmt <expr>
Adds a display for expression <expr>. Printing evaluated <expr> is done using the given format (see print command for more on formats)
del display N
undisplay N
Deletes display #N

Disassembly

disas
Disassemble from current position
disas <expr>
Disassemble from address <expr>
disas <expr>,<expr>
Disassembles code between addresses specified by the two <expr>:s

Memory (reading, writing, typing)

x <expr>
Examines memory at <expr> address
x /fmt <expr>
Examines memory at <expr> address using format /fmt
print <expr>
Prints the value of <expr> (possibly using its type)
print /fmt <expr>
Prints the value of <expr> (possibly using its type)
set <var> = <expr>
Writes the value of <expr> in <var> variable.
whatis <expr>
Prints the C type of expression <expr>
/fmt
is either /<letter> or /<count><letter>. <letter> can be:
s
an ASCII string
u
a UTF16 Unicode string
i
instructions (disassemble)
x
32 bit unsigned hexadecimal integer
d
32 bit signed decimal integer
w
16 bit unsigned hexadecimal integer
c
character (only printable 0x20-0x7f are actually printed)
b
8 bit unsigned hexadecimal integer
g
Win32 GUID

Expressions

Expressions in Wine Debugger are mostly written in a C form. However, there are a few discrepancies:

Identifiers can take a '!' in their names. This allows mainly to specify a module where to look the module from: USER32!CreateWindowExA.
In cast operation, when specifying a structure or an union, you must use the struct or union key word (even if your program uses a typedef).

When specifying an identifier <id>, if several symbols with this name exist, the debugger will prompt for the symbol you want to use. Pick up the one you want from its number.

Misc.

minidump file.mdmp
saves the debugging context of the debuggee into a minidump file called file.mdmp

Information on Wine's internals

info class
Lists all Windows' class registered in Wine
info class <id>
Prints information on Windows's class <id>
info share
Lists all the dynamic libraries loaded in the debugged program (including .so files, NE and PE DLLs)
info share N
Prints information on module at address N
info regs
Prints the value of the CPU registers
info all-regs
Prints the value of the CPU and Floating Point registers
info segment
Lists all allocated segments (i386 only)
info segment N
Prints information on segment N (i386 only)
info stack
Prints the values on top of the stack
info map
Lists all virtual mappings used by the debugged program
info map N
Lists all virtual mappings used by the program of pid N
info wnd
Displays the window hierarchy starting from the desktop window
info wnd N
Prints information of Window of handle N
info process
Lists all w-processes in Wine session
info thread
Lists all w-threads in Wine session
info exception
Lists the exception frames (starting from current stack frame)

Debug messages can be turned on and off as you are debugging using the set command, but only for channels initialized with the WINEDEBUG environment variable.

set warn + win
Turns on warn on 'win' channel
set + win
Turns on warn/fixme/err/trace on 'win' channel
set - win
Turns off warn/fixme/err/trace on 'win' channel
set fixme - all
Turns off the 'fixme' class on all channels

Gdb mode:

See the gdb documentation for all the gdb commands.

However, a few Wine's extension are available, through the monitor command:

monitor wnd
Lists all window in the Wine session
monitor proc
Lists all processes in the Wine session
monitor mem
Displays memory mapping of debugged process

Auto and minidump modes:

Since no user input is possible, no commands are available.

ENVIRONMENT

WINE_GDB
When used in gdb proxy mode, WINE_GDB specifies the name (and the path) of the executable to be used for gdb. "gdb" is used by default.

FILES

No specific files are used (yet).

BUGS

A lot.

AUTHORS

The first version was written by Eric Youngdale.

See Wine developer's list for the rest of contributors.

SEE ALSO

winedbg's README file
 The Winelib User Guide
 The Wine Developers Guide