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Home/ Questions/Q 3212854
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T14:52:53+00:00 2026-05-17T14:52:53+00:00

Is there any way to dump the call stack in a running process in

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Is there any way to dump the call stack in a running process in C or C++ every time a certain function is called? What I have in mind is something like this:

void foo()
{
   print_stack_trace();

   // foo's body

   return
}

Where print_stack_trace works similarly to caller in Perl.

Or something like this:

int main (void)
{
    // will print out debug info every time foo() is called
    register_stack_trace_function(foo); 

    // etc...
}

where register_stack_trace_function puts some sort of internal breakpoint that will cause a stack trace to be printed whenever foo is called.

Does anything like this exist in some standard C library?

I am working on Linux, using GCC.


Background

I have a test run that behaves differently based on some commandline switches that shouldn’t affect this behavior. My code has a pseudo-random number generator that I assume is being called differently based on these switches. I want to be able to run the test with each set of switches and see if the random number generator is called differently for each one.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T14:52:53+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 2:52 pm

    For a linux-only solution you can use backtrace(3) that simply returns an array of void * (in fact each of these point to the return address from the corresponding stack frame). To translate these to something of use, there’s backtrace_symbols(3).

    Pay attention to the notes section in backtrace(3):

    The symbol names may be unavailable
    without the use of special linker
    options.
    For systems using the GNU linker, it is necessary to use the
    -rdynamic linker
    option. Note that names of “static” functions are not exposed,
    and won’t be
    available in the backtrace.

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