stdump(1) — Commands
NAME
stdump − Dump portions of a file containing symbolic information
SYNOPSIS
stdump [options] file
OPTIONS
−aPrints dense numbers.
−bPrints external symbols.
−cPrints local symbols.
−dPrints procedures.
−fPrints file descriptors.
−gDumps auxiliary symbol information in hexadecimal. (Use in combination with −b or −c to have type information interpreted.)
−hPrints line numbers.
−iPrints relative file descriptors.
−jPrints optimization symbols.
−n number
Specifies index number of file to be dumped. You can print the index numbers with the following command: stdump −f file. You can use −n with any other option to get that option’s portion of the symbolic information for the specified file.
−VDisplays the version of the stdump command.
If none of the options are specified, the dump includes all of the items associated with the various options.
[Tru64 UNIX] The DEC C++ compiler encodes type information in function, template, variable, and virtual table names to enable type-safe linkages. This encoding is called name mangling. By default, stdump shows the demangled names only. The following options can be used to instruct the stdump command to print the mangled name or both the mangled and demangled names:
−mangled_name_only
[Tru64 UNIX] Prints only the mangled name.
−mangled_name_also
[Tru64 UNIX] Prints both the mangled names and the demangled names.
DESCRIPTION
The stdump tool dumps symbolic information from an object file, an executable file, or any other file produced by the compiler that contains symbolic information.
FILES
/usr/bin/stdump
Executable file