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  2. Data Display Debugger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_Display_Debugger

    Data Display Debugger (GNU DDD) is a graphical user interface (using the Motif toolkit) for command-line debuggers such as GDB, [2] DBX, JDB, HP Wildebeest Debugger, [note 1] XDB, the Perl debugger, the Bash debugger, the Python debugger, and the GNU Make debugger. [4]

  3. dbx (debugger) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dbx_(debugger)

    dbx is a source-level debugger found primarily on Solaris, AIX, IRIX, Tru64 UNIX, Linux and BSD operating systems. It provides symbolic debugging for programs written in C, C++, Fortran, Pascal and Java. Useful features include stepping through programs one source line or machine instruction at a time.

  4. GNU Debugger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Debugger

    GDB was first written by Richard Stallman in 1986 as part of his GNU system, after his GNU Emacs was "reasonably stable". [4] GDB is free software released under the GNU General Public License (GPL). It was modeled after the DBX debugger, which came with Berkeley Unix distributions. [4] From 1990 to 1993 it was maintained by John Gilmore. [5]

  5. KGDB - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KGDB

    The GDB remote protocol is used between the two machines. KGDB was implemented as part of the NetBSD kernel in 1997, [1] and FreeBSD in version 2.2. The concept and existing remote gdb protocol were later adapted as a patch to the Linux kernel. A scaled-down version of the Linux patch was integrated into the official Linux kernel in version 2.6.26.

  6. gdbserver - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gdbserver

    gdbserver is a computer program that makes it possible to remotely debug other programs. [1] Running on the same system as the program to be debugged, it allows the GNU Debugger to connect from another system; that is, only the executable to be debugged needs to be resident on the target system ("target"), while the source code and a copy of the binary file to be debugged reside on the ...

  7. rr (debugging) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rr_(debugging)

    In computing, rr is a debugging tool for Linux designed to record and replay program execution. During the replay phase, rr provides an enhanced gdb debugging experience that supports reverse execution. [1] rr was originally developed by Mozilla to debug Mozilla Firefox on commodity hardware and software.

  8. GNU Binutils - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Binutils

    The GNU Binary Utilities, or binutils, is a collection of programming tools maintained by the GNU Project for working with executable code including assembly, linking and many other development operations.

  9. Nemiver - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nemiver

    Nemiver is computer software, a graphical standalone debugger for the programming languages C and C++, which integrates in the GNOME desktop environment. It currently features a backend which uses the well known GNU Debugger (GDB).