GNU Binutils

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
GNU Binutils
Developer(s)GNU Project
Stable release
2.42[1] Edit this on Wikidata / 29 January 2024
Repository
TypeProgramming tools
LicenseGNU GPL
Websitewww.gnu.org/software/binutils/

The GNU Binary Utilities, or binutils, are a set of

assembly source code
.

Tools

They were originally written by programmers at Cygnus Solutions.

The GNU Binutils are typically used in conjunction with compilers such as the GNU Compiler Collection (gcc), build tools like make, and the GNU Debugger (gdb).

Through the use of the Binary File Descriptor library (libbfd), most tools support the various object file formats supported by libbfd.

Software

The binutils include the following programs:

as assembler popularly known as GAS (GNU Assembler)
ld
linker
gprof profiler
addr2line convert address to file and line
ar create, modify, and extract from archives
c++filt demangling filter for C++ symbols
dlltool creation of Windows dynamic-link libraries
gold alternative linker for ELF files
nlmconv object file conversion to a NetWare Loadable Module
nm list symbols exported by object file
objcopy copy object files, possibly making changes
objdump dump information about object files
ranlib
generate indices for archives (for compatibility; same as ar -s)
readelf display content of ELF files
size list total and section sizes
strings list printable strings
strip remove symbols from an object file
windmc generates Windows message resources
windres compiler for Windows resource files

elfutils

Ulrich Drepper wrote elfutils, to partially replace GNU Binutils, purely for Linux and with support only for ELF and DWARF. It distributes three libraries with it for programmatic access.[2][3]

See also

  • GNU Core Utilities
  • GNU Debugger
  • ldd (Unix), list symbols imported by the object file; similar to nm
  • List of Unix commands
  • llvm provides similar set of tools
  • strace, a tool for system call debugging (enabled by kernel functionality) available on many distributions

References

  1. ^ Nick Clifton (29 January 2024). "GNU Binutils 2.42 Released". Retrieved 29 January 2024.
  2. ^ elfutils home
  3. ^ elfutils at Drepper's home

External links