This question might be a good starting point: how can I put a breakpoint on "something is printed to the terminal" in gdb?
So you could at least break whenever something is written to stdout. The method basically involves setting a breakpoint on the write
syscall with a condition that the first argument is 1
(i.e. STDOUT). In the comments, there is also a hint as to how you could inspect the string parameter of the write
call as well.
x86 32-bit mode
I came up with the following and tested it with gdb 7.0.1-debian. It seems to work quite well. $esp + 8
contains a pointer to the memory location of the string passed to write
, so first you cast it to an integral, then to a pointer to char
. $esp + 4
contains the file descriptor to write to (1 for STDOUT).
$ gdb break write if 1 == *(int*)($esp + 4) && strcmp((char*)*(int*)($esp + 8), "your string") == 0
x86 64-bit mode
If your process is running in x86-64 mode, then the parameters are passed through scratch registers %rdi
and %rsi
$ gdb break write if 1 == $rdi && strcmp((char*)($rsi), "your string") == 0
Note that one level of indirection is removed since we're using scratch registers rather than variables on the stack.
Variants
Functions other than strcmp
can be used in the above snippets:
strncmp
is useful if you want match the first n
number of characters of the string being written
strstr
can be used to find matches within a string, since you can't always be certain that the string you're looking for is at the beginning of string being written through the write
function.
Edit: I enjoyed this question and finding it's subsequent answer. I decided to do a blog post about it.
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