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<sect1 id="ch06-aboutdebug">
<title>About debugging symbols</title>
-<para>
-Most programs and libraries by default are compiled with debugging
+<para>Most programs and libraries by default are compiled with debugging
symbols (gcc option -g) Let me explain what these debugging symbols
-are and why you may not want them.
-</para>
+are and why you may not want them.</para>
-<para>
-A program compiled with debugging symbols means a user can run a program or
-library through a debugger and the debugger's output will be user
+<para>A program compiled with debugging symbols means a user can run a program
+or library through a debugger and the debugger's output will be user
friendly. These debugging symbols also enlarge the program or library
-significantly.
-</para>
+significantly.</para>
-<para>
-Before you start wondering whether these debugging symbols really make a
+<para>Before you start wondering whether these debugging symbols really make a
big difference, here are some statistics. Use them to draw your own
-conclusion.
-</para>
+conclusion.</para>
<itemizedlist>
-<listitem><para>
- A dynamic Bash binary with debugging symbols: 1.2MB
-</para></listitem>
+<listitem><para>A dynamic Bash binary
+with debugging symbols: 1.2MB</para></listitem>
-<listitem><para>
- A dynamic Bash binary without debugging symbols: 478KB
-</para></listitem>
+<listitem><para>A dynamic Bash binary
+without debugging symbols: 478KB</para></listitem>
-<listitem><para>
- /lib and /usr/lib (glibc and gcc files) with debugging
- symbols: 87MB
-</para></listitem>
+<listitem><para>/lib and /usr/lib (glibc
+and gcc files) with debugging symbols: 87MB</para></listitem>
-<listitem><para>
- /lib and /usr/lib (glibc and gcc files) without
- debugging symbols: 16MB
-</para></listitem>
+<listitem><para>/lib and /usr/lib (glibc
+and gcc files) without debugging symbols: 16MB</para></listitem>
</itemizedlist>
-<para>
-Sizes vary depending on which compiler was used and which C library
+<para>Sizes vary depending on which compiler was used and which C library
version was used to link dynamic programs against, but results will be
similar if you compare programs with and without debugging symbols. After
I was done with this chapter and stripped all debugging symbols from all LFS
-binaries I regained a little over 102 MB of disk space. Quite the difference.
-</para>
+binaries I regained a little over 102 MB of disk space. Quite the
+difference.</para>
-<para>
-To remove debugging symbols from a binary (must be an a.out or ELF
+<para>To remove debugging symbols from a binary (must be an a.out or ELF
binary) run <userinput>strip --strip-debug filename</userinput>. Wild cards
can be used to strip debugging symbols from multiple files (use something
like <userinput>strip --strip-debug $LFS/usr/bin/*</userinput>).
Most people will probably never use a debugger on software, so by
-removing those symbols a lot of disk space can be regained.
-</para>
+removing those symbols a lot of disk space can be regained.</para>
-<para>
-You might find additional information in the optimization hint which can
+<para>You might find additional information in the optimization hint which can
be found at <ulink
-url="http://archive.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs-hints/optimization.txt">
-http://archive.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs-hints/optimization.txt</ulink>.
-</para>
+url="http://archive.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs-hints/optimization.txt">http://archive.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs-hints/optimization.txt</ulink>
+.</para>
</sect1>