How can one see content of stack with GDB?
Solution 1:
info frame
to show the stack frame info
To read the memory at given addresses you should take a look at x
x/x $esp
for hex x/d $esp
for signed x/u $esp
for unsigned etc. x uses the format syntax, you could also take a look at the current instruction via x/i $eip
etc.
Solution 2:
Use:
-
bt
- backtrace: show stack functions and args -
info frame
- show stack start/end/args/locals pointers -
x/100x $sp
- show stack memory
(gdb) bt
#0 zzz () at zzz.c:96
#1 0xf7d39cba in yyy (arg=arg@entry=0x0) at yyy.c:542
#2 0xf7d3a4f6 in yyyinit () at yyy.c:590
#3 0x0804ac0c in gnninit () at gnn.c:374
#4 main (argc=1, argv=0xffffd5e4) at gnn.c:389
(gdb) info frame
Stack level 0, frame at 0xffeac770:
eip = 0x8049047 in main (goo.c:291); saved eip 0xf7f1fea1
source language c.
Arglist at 0xffeac768, args: argc=1, argv=0xffffd5e4
Locals at 0xffeac768, Previous frame's sp is 0xffeac770
Saved registers:
ebx at 0xffeac75c, ebp at 0xffeac768, esi at 0xffeac760, edi at 0xffeac764, eip at 0xffeac76c
(gdb) x/10x $sp
0xffeac63c: 0xf7d39cba 0xf7d3c0d8 0xf7d3c21b 0x00000001
0xffeac64c: 0xf78d133f 0xffeac6f4 0xf7a14450 0xffeac678
0xffeac65c: 0x00000000 0xf7d3790e
Solution 3:
You need to use gdb's memory-display commands. The basic one is x
, for examine. There's an example on the linked-to page that uses
gdb> x/4xw $sp
to print "four words (w
) of memory above the stack pointer (here, $sp
) in hexadecimal (x
)". The quotation is slightly paraphrased.