llvm-symbolizer - convert addresses into source code locations
llvm-symbolizer [options] [addresses...]
LLVM-SYMBOLIZER(1) LLVM LLVM-SYMBOLIZER(1)
NAME
llvm-symbolizer - convert addresses into source code locations
SYNOPSIS
llvm-symbolizer [options] [addresses...]
DESCRIPTION
llvm-symbolizer reads object file names and addresses from the com-
mand-line and prints corresponding source code locations to standard
output.
If no address is specified on the command-line, it reads the addresses
from standard input. If no object file is specified on the com-
mand-line, but addresses are, or if at any time an input value is not
recognized, the input is simply echoed to the output.
A positional argument or standard input value can be preceded by "DATA"
or "CODE" to indicate that the address should be symbolized as data or
executable code respectively. If neither is specified, "CODE" is
assumed. DATA is symbolized as address and symbol size rather than line
number.
Object files can be specified together with the addresses either on
standard input or as positional arguments on the command-line, follow-
ing any "DATA" or "CODE" prefix.
llvm-symbolizer parses options from the environment variable LLVM_SYM-
BOLIZER_OPTS after parsing options from the command line. LLVM_SYMBOL-
IZER_OPTS is primarily useful for supplementing the command-line
options when llvm-symbolizer is invoked by another program or runtime.
EXAMPLES
All of the following examples use the following two source files as
input. They use a mixture of C-style and C++-style linkage to illus-
trate how these names are printed differently (see --demangle).
// test.h
extern "C" inline int foz() {
return 1234;
}
// test.cpp
#include "test.h"
int bar=42;
int foo() {
return bar;
}
int baz() {
volatile int k = 42;
return foz() + k;
}
int main() {
return foo() + baz();
}
These files are built as follows:
$ clang -g test.cpp -o test.elf
$ clang -g -O2 test.cpp -o inlined.elf
Example 1 - addresses and object on command-line:
$ llvm-symbolizer --obj=test.elf 0x4004d0 0x400490
foz
/tmp/test.h:1:0
baz()
/tmp/test.cpp:11:0
Example 2 - addresses on standard input:
$ cat addr.txt
0x4004a0
0x400490
0x4004d0
$ llvm-symbolizer --obj=test.elf < addr.txt
main
/tmp/test.cpp:15:0
baz()
/tmp/test.cpp:11:0
foz
/tmp/./test.h:1:0
Example 3 - object specified with address:
$ llvm-symbolizer "test.elf 0x400490" "inlined.elf 0x400480"
baz()
/tmp/test.cpp:11:0
foo()
/tmp/test.cpp:8:10
$ cat addr2.txt
test.elf 0x4004a0
inlined.elf 0x400480
$ llvm-symbolizer < addr2.txt
main
/tmp/test.cpp:15:0
foo()
/tmp/test.cpp:8:10
Example 4 - CODE and DATA prefixes:
$ llvm-symbolizer --obj=test.elf "CODE 0x400490" "DATA 0x601028"
baz()
/tmp/test.cpp:11:0
bar
6295592 4
$ cat addr3.txt
CODE test.elf 0x4004a0
DATA inlined.elf 0x601028
$ llvm-symbolizer < addr3.txt
main
/tmp/test.cpp:15:0
bar
6295592 4
Example 5 - path-style options:
This example uses the same source file as above, but the source file's
full path is /tmp/foo/test.cpp and is compiled as follows. The first
case shows the default absolute path, the second --basenames, and the
third shows --relativenames.
$ pwd
/tmp
$ clang -g foo/test.cpp -o test.elf
$ llvm-symbolizer --obj=test.elf 0x4004a0
main
/tmp/foo/test.cpp:15:0
$ llvm-symbolizer --obj=test.elf 0x4004a0 --basenames
main
test.cpp:15:0
$ llvm-symbolizer --obj=test.elf 0x4004a0 --relativenames
main
foo/test.cpp:15:0
OPTIONS
--adjust-vma <offset>
Add the specified offset to object file addresses when perform-
ing lookups. This can be used to perform lookups as if the
object were relocated by the offset.
--basenames, -s
Print just the file's name without any directories, instead of
the absolute path.
--relativenames
Print the file's path relative to the compilation directory,
instead of the absolute path. If the command-line to the com-
piler included the full path, this will be the same as the
default.
--demangle, -C
Print demangled function names, if the names are mangled (e.g.
the mangled name _Z3bazv becomes baz(), whilst the non-mangled
name foz is printed as is). Defaults to true.
--dwp <path>
Use the specified DWP file at <path> for any CUs that have split
DWARF debug data.
--fallback-debug-path <path>
When a separate file contains debug data, and is referenced by a
GNU debug link section, use the specified path as a basis for
locating the debug data if it cannot be found relative to the
object.
--functions [=<none|short|linkage>], -f
Specify the way function names are printed (omit function name,
print short function name, or print full linkage name, respec-
tively). Defaults to linkage.
--help, -h
Show help and usage for this command.
--help-list
Show help and usage for this command without grouping the
options into categories.
--inlining, --inlines, -i
If a source code location is in an inlined function, prints all
the inlined frames. Defaults to true.
--no-demangle
Don't print demangled function names.
--obj <path>, --exe, -e
Path to object file to be symbolized. If - is specified, read
the object directly from the standard input stream.
--output-style <LLVM|GNU>
Specify the preferred output style. Defaults to LLVM. When the
output style is set to GNU, the tool follows the style of GNU's
addr2line. The differences from the LLVM style are:
o Does not print the column of a source code location.
o Does not add an empty line after the report for an address.
o Does not replace the name of an inlined function with the name
of the topmost caller when inlined frames are not shown and
--use-symbol-table is on.
o Prints an address's debug-data discriminator when it is
non-zero. One way to produce discriminators is to compile with
clang's -fdebug-info-for-profiling.
$ llvm-symbolizer --obj=inlined.elf 0x4004be 0x400486 -p
baz() at /tmp/test.cpp:11:18
(inlined by) main at /tmp/test.cpp:15:0
foo() at /tmp/test.cpp:6:3
$ llvm-symbolizer --output-style=LLVM --obj=inlined.elf 0x4004be 0x400486 -p -i=0
main at /tmp/test.cpp:11:18
foo() at /tmp/test.cpp:6:3
$ llvm-symbolizer --output-style=GNU --obj=inlined.elf 0x4004be 0x400486 -p -i=0
baz() at /tmp/test.cpp:11
foo() at /tmp/test.cpp:6
$ clang -g -fdebug-info-for-profiling test.cpp -o profiling.elf
$ llvm-symbolizer --output-style=GNU --obj=profiling.elf 0x401167 -p -i=0
main at /tmp/test.cpp:15 (discriminator 2)
--pretty-print, -p
Print human readable output. If --inlining is specified, the
enclosing scope is prefixed by (inlined by).
$ llvm-symbolizer --obj=inlined.elf 0x4004be --inlining --pretty-print
baz() at /tmp/test.cpp:11:18
(inlined by) main at /tmp/test.cpp:15:0
--print-address, --addresses, -a
Print address before the source code location. Defaults to
false.
$ llvm-symbolizer --obj=inlined.elf --print-address 0x4004be
0x4004be
baz()
/tmp/test.cpp:11:18
main
/tmp/test.cpp:15:0
$ llvm-symbolizer --obj=inlined.elf 0x4004be --pretty-print --print-address
0x4004be: baz() at /tmp/test.cpp:11:18
(inlined by) main at /tmp/test.cpp:15:0
--print-source-context-lines <N>
Print N lines of source context for each symbolized address.
$ llvm-symbolizer --obj=test.elf 0x400490 --print-source-context-lines=2
baz()
/tmp/test.cpp:11:0
10 : volatile int k = 42;
11 >: return foz() + k;
12 : }
--use-symbol-table
Prefer function names stored in symbol table to function names
in debug info sections. Defaults to true.
--verbose
Print verbose line and column information.
$ llvm-symbolizer --obj=inlined.elf --verbose 0x4004be
baz()
Filename: /tmp/test.cpp
Function start line: 9
Line: 11
Column: 18
main
Filename: /tmp/test.cpp
Function start line: 14
Line: 15
Column: 0
--version
Print version information for the tool.
@<FILE>
Read command-line options from response file <FILE>.
MACH-O SPECIFIC OPTIONS
--default-arch <arch>
If a binary contains object files for multiple architectures
(e.g. it is a Mach-O universal binary), symbolize the object
file for a given architecture. You can also specify the archi-
tecture by writing binary_name:arch_name in the input (see exam-
ple below). If the architecture is not specified in either way,
the address will not be symbolized. Defaults to empty string.
$ cat addr.txt
/tmp/mach_universal_binary:i386 0x1f84
/tmp/mach_universal_binary:x86_64 0x100000f24
$ llvm-symbolizer < addr.txt
_main
/tmp/source_i386.cc:8
_main
/tmp/source_x86_64.cc:8
--dsym-hint <path/to/file.dSYM>
If the debug info for a binary isn't present in the default
location, look for the debug info at the .dSYM path provided via
this option. This flag can be used multiple times.
EXIT STATUS
llvm-symbolizer returns 0. Other exit codes imply an internal program
error.
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(7) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+---------------+---------------------+
|ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+---------------+---------------------+
|Availability | developer/llvm/llvm |
+---------------+---------------------+
|Stability | Uncommitted |
+---------------+---------------------+
SEE ALSO
llvm-addr2line(1)
AUTHOR
Maintained by the LLVM Team (https://llvm.org/).
COPYRIGHT
2003-2022, LLVM Project
NOTES
Source code for open source software components in Oracle Solaris can
be found at https://www.oracle.com/downloads/opensource/solaris-source-
code-downloads.html.
This software was built from source available at
https://github.com/oracle/solaris-userland. The original community
source was downloaded from https://github.com/llvm/llvm-
project/releases/download/llvmorg-11.0.0/llvm-11.0.0.src.tar.xz.
Further information about this software can be found on the open source
community website at https://llvm.org/.
11 2022-06-28 LLVM-SYMBOLIZER(1)