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Home/ Questions/Q 935133
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T21:06:36+00:00 2026-05-15T21:06:36+00:00

GNU libc’s backtrace and In-circuit emulators/debuggers are not always available when porting code to

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GNU libc’s backtrace and In-circuit emulators/debuggers are not always available when porting code to a new platform, especially when the target is a micro C compiler such as for the Z80. (Typically a program bug would “just hang” somewhere, or crash the gadget.)

Is there an alternative to the classic “wolf fencing” method of manually inserting printf? Something simple and portable (using no C extensions) that a coder can do while developing a program that includes tracing and backtracing into a C program?

BTW: Here are a couple of other question on stackoverflow that are related, but these both use GNU GLIBC’s backtrace and backtrace is often compiler/implementation specific:

  • Is there a function to invoke a stack dump in C?
  • How to generate a stacktrace when my gcc C++ app crashes
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T21:06:37+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 9:06 pm

    There is an implementation at RosettaCode.org which uses the same basic idea as @jsl4tv’s suggestion.

    Example, given the following classic C code with built in “hang“:

    #include <stdio.h>
    #include <stdlib.h>
    
    void inner(int k)
    {
       for(;;){} /* hang */
    }
    
    void middle(int x, int y)
    {
      inner(x*y);
    }
    
    void outer(int a, int b, int c)
    {
      middle(a+b, b+c);
    }
    
    int main()
    {
      outer(2,3,5);
      return(EXIT_SUCCESS);
    }
    

    #define STACK_TRACE_ON and #include “stack_trace.h” from RosettaCode.org then insert BEGIN(f)/ENDs where required:

    #include <stdio.h>
    #include <stdlib.h>
    
    #define STACK_TRACE_ON /* compile in these "stack_trace" routines */
    #include "stack_trace.h"
    
    void inner(int k)
    BEGIN(inner)
       print_indent(); printf("*** Now dump the stack ***\n");
       print_stack_trace();
       for(;;){} /* hang */
    END
    
    void middle(int x, int y)
    BEGIN(middle)
      inner(x*y);
    END
    
    void outer(int a, int b, int c)
    BEGIN(outer)
      middle(a+b, b+c);
    END
    
    int main()
    BEGIN(main)
      stack_trace.on = TRUE; /* turn on runtime tracing */
      outer(2,3,5);
      stack_trace.on = FALSE;
      RETURN(EXIT_SUCCESS);
    END
    

    Produces:

    stack_trace_test.c:19: BEGIN outer[0x80487b4], stack(depth:1, size:60)
    stack_trace_test.c:14:   BEGIN middle[0x8048749], stack(depth:2, size:108)
    stack_trace_test.c:8:     BEGIN inner[0x80486d8], stack(depth:3, size:156)
    stack_trace_test.c:8:       *** Now dump the stack ***
    stack_trace_test.c:8:   inner[0x80486d8]        --- stack(depth:4, size:156) ---
    stack_trace_test.c:14:  middle[0x8048749]       --- stack(depth:3, size:108) ---
    stack_trace_test.c:19:  outer[0x80487b4]        --- stack(depth:2, size:60) ---
    stack_trace_test.c:24:  main[0x804882a] --- stack(depth:1, size:0) ---
    stack_trace_test.c:8:       --- (depth 4) ---
    

    A well polished [open source] version of this BEGIN ~ END method would be perfect. (Esp if it has a “FINALLY” clause for exception handling).

    Hints/URLs appreciated.

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