Visible to Intel only — GUID: GUID-DC1D48F9-540D-4517-AEFC-BC7B38DDB0EE
Visible to Intel only — GUID: GUID-DC1D48F9-540D-4517-AEFC-BC7B38DDB0EE
debug (Linux*)
Enables or disables generation of debugging information.
Syntax
Linux: |
-debug[=keyword] |
Windows: |
None |
Arguments
keyword |
Is the type of debugging information to be generated. Possible values are:
|
For information on the non-default settings for these keywords, see the Description section.
Default
varies |
Normally, the default is -debug none and no debugging information is generated. However, on Linux*, the -debug inline-debug-info option will be enabled by default if you compile with optimizations (option -O2 or higher) and debugging is enabled (option -g). |
Description
This option enables or disables generation of debugging information.
By default, enabling debugging, will disable optimization. To enable both debugging and optimization use the -debug option together with one of the optimization level options (-O3, -O2 or -O3).
Keywords semantic-stepping, inline-debug-info, variable-locations, and extended can be used in combination with each other. If conflicting keywords are used in combination, the last one specified on the command line has precedence.
Option |
Description |
---|---|
-debug none |
Disables generation of debugging information. |
-debug full or -debug all |
Generates complete debugging information. It is the same as specifying -debug with no keyword. |
-debug minimal |
Generates line number information for debugging. |
-debug emit-column |
Generates column number information for debugging. |
-debug inline-debug-info |
Generates enhanced debug information for inlined code. On inlined functions, symbols are (by default) associated with the caller. This option causes symbols for inlined functions to be associated with the source of the called function. |
-debug pubnames (ifort only) |
The compiler generates a DWARF debug_pubnames section. This provides a means to list the names of global objects and functions in a compilation unit. |
-debug semantic-stepping (ifort only) |
Generates enhanced debug information useful for breakpoints and stepping. It tells the debugger to stop only at machine instructions that achieve the final effect of a source statement. For example, in the case of an assignment statement, this might be a store instruction that assigns a value to a program variable; for a function call, it might be the machine instruction that executes the call. Other instructions generated for those source statements are not displayed during stepping. This option has no impact unless optimizations have also been enabled. |
-debug variable-locations |
Generates enhanced debug information useful in finding scalar local variables. It uses a feature of the Dwarf object module known as "location lists". This feature allows the runtime locations of local scalar variables to be specified more accurately; that is, whether, at a given position in the code, a variable value is found in memory or a machine register. |
-debug extended |
Sets keyword values semantic-stepping(ifort only) and variable-locations. It also tells the compiler to include column numbers in the line information. Generates complete debugging information. This is a more powerful setting than -debug full or -debug all. |
-debug parallel |
Generates parallel debug code instrumentations needed for the thread data sharing and reentrant call detection. For this setting to be effective, option -qopenmp must be set. |
On Linux* systems, debuggers read debug information from executable images. As a result, information is written to object files and then added to the executable by the linker.
IDE Equivalent
Alternate Options
For -debug full, -debug all, or -debug |
Linux: -g Windows: /debug:full, /debug:all, or /debug |
For -debug variable-locations |
Linux: -fvar-tracking Windows: None |
For -debug semantic-stepping |
Linux: -fvar-tracking-assignments Windows: None |