strip [-F bfdname |--target=bfdname] [-I bfdname |--input-target=bfdname] [-O bfdname |--output-target=bfdname] [-s|--strip-all] [-S|-g|-d|--strip-debug] [--strip-dwo] [-K symbolname |--keep-symbol=symbolname] [-N symbolname |--strip-symbol=symbolname] [-w|--wildcard] [-x|--discard-all] [-X |--discard-locals] [-R sectionname |--remove-section=sectionname] [-o file] [-p|--preserve-dates] [-D|--enable-deterministic-archives] [-U|--disable-deterministic-archives] [--keep-file-symbols] [--only-keep-debug] [-v |--verbose] [-V|--version] [--help] [--info] objfile...
gnu strip discards all symbols from object files objfile. The list of object files may include archives. At least one object file must be given.
strip modifies the files named in its argument, rather than writing modified copies under different names.
If binutils was configured with
--enable-deterministic-archives, then this mode is on by default.
It can be disabled with the ‘-U’ option, below.
This is the default unless binutils was configured with
--enable-deterministic-archives.
-w -K !foo -K fo*
would cause strip to only keep symbols that start with the letters
“fo”, but to discard the symbol “foo”.
Note - the section headers of the stripped sections are preserved, including their sizes, but the contents of the section are discarded. The section headers are preserved so that other tools can match up the debuginfo file with the real executable, even if that executable has been relocated to a different address space.
The intention is that this option will be used in conjunction with --add-gnu-debuglink to create a two part executable. One a stripped binary which will occupy less space in RAM and in a distribution and the second a debugging information file which is only needed if debugging abilities are required. The suggested procedure to create these files is as follows:
foo
then...
objcopy --only-keep-debug foo foo.dbg
to
create a file containing the debugging info.
objcopy --strip-debug foo
to create a
stripped executable.
objcopy --add-gnu-debuglink=foo.dbg foo
to add a link to the debugging info into the stripped executable.
Note—the choice of .dbg
as an extension for the debug info
file is arbitrary. Also the --only-keep-debug
step is
optional. You could instead do this:
foo
to foo.full
strip --strip-debug foo
objcopy --add-gnu-debuglink=foo.full foo
i.e., the file pointed to by the --add-gnu-debuglink can be the full executable. It does not have to be a file created by the --only-keep-debug switch.
Note—this switch is only intended for use on fully linked files. It
does not make sense to use it on object files where the debugging
information may be incomplete. Besides the gnu_debuglink feature
currently only supports the presence of one filename containing
debugging information, not multiple filenames on a one-per-object-file
basis.