Update: This repo has moved to archive. Currently we are not planning any new updates nor are we taking PRs. Please add any new requests related to debugging and PDB format to Visual Studio Feedback.
This repo contains information from Microsoft about the PDB (Program Database) Symbol File format.
[WILL NOT currently build. There is a cvdump.exe till the repo is completed. pdb.h is in the langapi folder]
The intent here is to provide code that will show all the binary level formats and simple tools that can use the pdb.
Simply put ...We will make best efforts to role this foward with the new compilers and tools that we ship every release. We will continue to innovate and change binary API's and ABI's for all the Microsoft platforms and we will try to include the community by keeping this PDB repo in synch with the latest retail products (compilers,linkers,debuggers) just shipped.
By publishing this source code, we are by passing the publically documented API we provided for only reading a PDB - that was DIA https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/x93ctkx8.aspx
With this information we are now building the information for other compilers (and tools) to efficiently write a PDB.
The PDB format has not been officially documented, presenting a challenge for other compilers and toolsets (such as Clang/LLVM) that want to work with Windows or the Visual Studio debugger. We want to help the Open Source compilers to get onto the Windows platform.
The majority of content on this repo is presented as actual source files from the VC++ compiler toolset. Source code is the ultimate documentation :-) We hope that you will find it helpful. If you find that you need other information to successfully complete your project, please enter an Issue letting us know what information you need.
##Start here The file pdb.h (on in langapi), provides the API surface for mscorpdb.dll, which we ship with every compiler and toolset.
Important points:
• Mscorpdb.dll is what our linker and compiler uses to create PDB files. • Mscorpdb.dll implements the “stream” abstractions.
Also there is another file that we ship that should allow you to determine whether you have correctly produced an “empty” PDB which contains the minimal encoding to let another tool open and correctly parse that “empty” file. “Empty” really meaning a properl y formated file where the sections contain the correct information to indicate zero records or symbols are present A tool that I thought we also ship that would easily verify your “empty” PDB file is dia2dump.exe
So in summary, by using the externally defined function entry points in pdb.h you can call into mscorpdb.dll.
##What is a PDB
PDBs are files with multiple ‘streams’ of information in them. You can almost assume each stream as an individual file, except that storing them as individual files is wasteful and inconvenient, hence this multiple streams approach. PDB streams are not NTFS streams though. They can be implemented as NTFS streams, but since they are to be made available on Win9X as well, they use a home brewed implementation. The implementation allows a primitive form of two-phase commit protocol. The writers of PDB files write what ever they want to in PDBs, but it won’t be committed until an explicit commit is issued. This allows the clients quite a bit of flexibility - say for example, a compiler can keep on writing information, and just not commit it, if it encounters an error in users’ source code.
Each stream is identified with a unique stream number and an optional name. In a nutshell here’s how the PDB looks like -
Stream No. | Contents | Short Description |
---|---|---|
1 | Pdb (header) | Version information, and information to connect this PDB to the EXE |
2 | Tpi (Type manager) | All the types used in the executable. |
3 | Dbi (Debug information) | Holds section contributions, and list of ‘Mods’ |
4 | NameMap | Holds a hashed string table |
4-(n+4) | n Mod’s (Module information) | Each Mod stream holds symbols and line numbers for one compiland |
n+4 | Global symbol hash | An index that allows searching in global symbols by name |
n+5 | Public symbol hash | An index that allows searching in public symbols by addresses |
n+6 | Symbol records | Actual symbol records of global and public symbols |
n+7 | Type hash | Hash used by the TPI stream. |