The project I’m compiling uses CMake, which loves absolute pathnames.
When I compile with debugging information enabled, gcc puts those long names into .debug_str sections, which is bad for debugging. I’d like to have short relative-to-project-root pathnames there instead.
Is there some option to tell gcc to strip some part of pathname before emitting debug data? Or, maybe, there is some tool that could do that on compiled binaries?
I’ve tried using SET(CMAKE_USE_RELATIVE_PATHS ON) (which seems to be frowned upon by devs) option, but as I’m using out-of-source builds, pathnames are still not in the form I’d want them to be. I.e. they’re ./../src/mod_foo/foo.c instead of mod_foo/foo.c.
You can set the RULE_LAUNCH_COMPILE property of a CMake target to have CMake invoke a shell script which transforms the source file path to a project relative path before invoking gcc. Use the CMake function configure_file to generate a shell script which knows about the
PROJECT_SOURCE_DIRandPROJECT_BINARY_DIRof your project.In your outermost
CMakeLists.txtadd the following code:The following template shell script
gcc_debug_fix.sh.inneeds to go to the root directory of the CMake project:The shell script uses the information from the variables
PROJECT_BINARY_DIRandPROJECT_SOURCE_DIRto transform the path of the source file to a path relative to the project root and the object file’s path to an absolute path. Because gcc gets passed a project relative path now,.debug_strshould use that path, too.The following caveats apply:
gcc_debug_fix.sh.in.CMAKE_USE_RELATIVE_PATHShas to set toOFFagain.-oand-cflags.