Debuginfod is now available in Ubuntu
sergiodj
on 20 September 2022
We are happy to announce that Ubuntu now has a debuginfod
service available for its users!
What is debuginfod?
According to the project’s official page, debuginfod
“… is a client/server software that automatically distributes ELF/DWARF/source-code from servers to clients such as debuggers across HTTP”
You can think of debuginfod
as a much better replacement for debuginfo packages (i.e., the ddebs
packages we have in Ubuntu). When you configure your system to use a debuginfod
server, the debugging tool you are using will automatically download the debug symbols it needs over HTTPS, making the process much more seamless.
How can I use it?
If you are using Ubuntu 22.10 Kinetic Kudo, when you install GDB (GNU Debugger) your system will be configured to contact Ubuntu’s debuginfod
service automatically when you are debugging a program. GDB will ask you to confirm whether you want to use debuginfod
when you invoke it. Please refer to the service webpage for more details on how to configure GDB to automatically use the service
If you are using a supported Ubuntu series released before 22.10 (e.g., 22.04 LTS), you will need to manually configure the service for now. But don’t despair! All you need to do is make sure that the DEBUGINFOD_URLS
variable is exported into your environment. The following should do it:
export DEBUGINFOD_URLS="https://debuginfod.ubuntu.com"
If you are using Bash as your shell, you can add the above snippet to your ~/.bashrc
file.
Where can I find more information about the service?
You can visit the service webpage, which should redirect you to the Ubuntu Server Guide’s debuginfod
page. There you will find more details about the service and a link to a FAQ page as well.
Talk to us today
Interested in running Ubuntu in your organisation?
Newsletter signup
Related posts
The hitchhiker’s guide to infrastructure modernization
One of my favourite authors, Douglas Adams, once said that “we are stuck with technology when what we really want is just stuff that works.” Whilst Adams is...
Canonical and Ampere announce AmpereOne® SoC certification and other partnership milestones
Ampere and Canonical are pleased to celebrate new milestones in their ongoing partnership including the completion of Canonical’s System-on-Chip (SoC)...
Canonical Releases Ubuntu 25.04 Plucky Puffin
The latest interim release of Ubuntu introduces “devpacks” for popular frameworks like Spring, along with performance enhancements across a broad range of...