| The libbacktrace library |
| Initially written by Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org> |
| |
| The libbacktrace library may be linked into a program or library and |
| used to produce symbolic backtraces. |
| Sample uses would be to print a detailed backtrace when an error |
| occurs or to gather detailed profiling information. |
| |
| In general the functions provided by this library are async-signal-safe, |
| meaning that they may be safely called from a signal handler. |
| That said, on systems that use dl_iterate_phdr, such as GNU/Linux, |
| the first call to a libbacktrace function will call dl_iterate_phdr, |
| which is not in general async-signal-safe. Therefore, programs |
| that call libbacktrace from a signal handler should ensure that they |
| make an initial call from outside of a signal handler. |
| Similar considerations apply when arranging to call libbacktrace |
| from within malloc; dl_iterate_phdr can also call malloc, |
| so make an initial call to a libbacktrace function outside of |
| malloc before trying to call libbacktrace functions within malloc. |
| |
| The libbacktrace library is provided under a BSD license. |
| See the source files for the exact license text. |
| |
| The public functions are declared and documented in the header file |
| backtrace.h, which should be #include'd by a user of the library. |
| |
| Building libbacktrace will generate a file backtrace-supported.h, |
| which a user of the library may use to determine whether backtraces |
| will work. |
| See the source file backtrace-supported.h.in for the macros that it |
| defines. |
| |
| As of July 2024, libbacktrace supports ELF, PE/COFF, Mach-O, and |
| XCOFF executables with DWARF debugging information. |
| In other words, it supports GNU/Linux, *BSD, macOS, Windows, and AIX. |
| The library is written to make it straightforward to add support for |
| other object file and debugging formats. |
| |
| The library relies on the C++ unwind API defined at |
| https://itanium-cxx-abi.github.io/cxx-abi/abi-eh.html |
| This API is provided by GCC and clang. |