Reputation: 82535
I don't use Eclipse as an IDE, and have no interest in doing so. However, I do like its source-level debugging.
Is there any way I can use it to debug a C++ Linux app without going through the ritual of creating a project? (In effect, can I just use it like a frontend to gdb?)
If not, what are the steps I need to follow to create a project that I can use to just debug an existing C++ program that is built using Makefiles or other tools (SCons, CMake, etc.). I don't want to be able to "develop" in Eclipse; all I need to do is debug.
Upvotes: 12
Views: 19498
Reputation: 10271
I don't know if this has changed in the 4+ years since the question was posted, but there's a much easier way to do this. I'm on Eclipse Luna (4.4.2).
> eclipse&
then
File
> Import
> C/C++
> C/C++ Executable
> Next
> browse to executable > Next
> choose a project name > Finish
No other project setup required, no source paths (which should be in the object code). Just like running gdb/insight/etc. Almost makes it worth installing Java.
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 1
Configuration for debugging in Eclipse.
In eclipse,
Path Mapping:Project source and click on apply and then ok
. Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 64404
Take a look at this question. Create a C/C++-project, use your project's source directory as project directory, select to use the external builder, and change "make" to whatever tool you want.
The tricky part is to get the indexer to work correctly and find all your header files.
EDIT: CMake 2.6.x has support for generating CDT project files, which might be a more straightforward solution.
Upvotes: 10