source: appendixa/binutils-desc.xml@ 2ea93a3

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Last change on this file since 2ea93a3 was 087e584, checked in by Alex Gronenwoud <alex@…>, 21 years ago

Small retouches of the text. Wrapping 'last checked' in parentheses.

git-svn-id: http://svn.linuxfromscratch.org/LFS/trunk/BOOK@2706 4aa44e1e-78dd-0310-a6d2-fbcd4c07a689

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1<sect2><title>&nbsp;</title><para>&nbsp;</para></sect2>
2
3<sect2><title>Descriptions</title>
4
5<para>(Last checked against version &binutils-contversion;.)</para>
6
7<sect3><title>Program file descriptions</title>
8
9<sect4><title>addr2line</title>
10<para>addr2line translates program addresses into file names and line numbers.
11Given an address and an executable, it uses the debugging information in
12the executable to figure out which file name and line number are associated
13with a given address.</para></sect4>
14
15<sect4><title>ar</title>
16<para>The ar program creates, modifies, and extracts from archives. An archive
17is a single file holding a collection of other files in a structure that makes
18it possible to retrieve the original individual files (called members of
19the archive).</para></sect4>
20
21<sect4><title>as</title>
22<para>as is primarily intended to assemble the output of the GNU C compiler,
23 gcc, for use by the linker ld.</para></sect4>
24
25<sect4><title>gprof</title>
26<para>gprof displays call graph profile data.</para></sect4>
27
28<sect4><title>ld</title>
29<para>ld combines a number of object and archive files, relocates their data
30and ties up symbol references. Often the last step in building a new compiled
31program to run is a call to ld.</para></sect4>
32
33<sect4><title>nm</title>
34<para>nm lists the symbols from object files.</para></sect4>
35
36<sect4><title>objcopy</title>
37<para>objcopy utility copies the contents of an object file to another. objcopy
38uses the GNU BFD Library to read and write the object files. It can write
39the destination object file in a format different from that of the source
40object file.</para></sect4>
41
42<sect4><title>objdump</title>
43<para>objdump displays information about one or more object files. The options
44control what particular information to display. This information is mostly
45useful to programmers who are working on the compilation tools, as opposed to
46programmers who just want their program to compile and work.</para></sect4>
47
48<sect4><title>ranlib</title>
49<para>ranlib generates an index to the contents of an archive, and stores it in
50the archive. The index lists each symbol defined by an archive member
51that is a relocatable object file.</para></sect4>
52
53<sect4><title>readelf</title>
54<para>readelf displays information about elf type binaries.</para></sect4>
55
56<sect4><title>size</title>
57<para>size lists the section sizes --and the total size-- for each of the
58object files in its argument list. By default, one line of output is
59generated for each object file or each module in an archive.</para></sect4>
60
61<sect4><title>strings</title>
62<para>For each file given, strings prints the printable character sequences
63that are at least 4 characters long (or the number specified with an
64option to the program) and are followed by an unprintable character. By
65default, it only prints the strings from the initialized and loaded
66sections of object files. For other types of files, it prints the strings
67from the whole file.</para>
68
69<para>strings is mainly useful for determining the contents of non-text files.</para></sect4>
70
71<sect4><title>strip</title>
72<para>strip discards all or specific symbols from object files. The list of
73object files may include archives. At least one object file must be
74given. strip modifies the files named in its argument, rather than writing
75modified copies under different names.</para></sect4>
76
77</sect3>
78
79<sect3><title>Library file descriptions</title>
80
81<sect4><title>libbfd</title>
82<para>libbfd is the Binary File Descriptor library.</para></sect4>
83
84<sect4><title>libopcodes</title>
85<para>libopcodes is a native library for dealing with opcodes and is
86used in the course of building utilities such as objdump. Opcodes are
87actually "readable text" versions of instructions for the
88processor.</para></sect4>
89
90</sect3>
91
92</sect2>
93
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