Rr (debugging) explained

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In computing, rr is a debugging tool for Linux designed to record and replay program execution. During the replay phase, rr provides an enhanced gdb debugging experience that supports reverse execution.[1]

rr was originally developed by Mozilla to debug Mozilla Firefox on commodity hardware and software.[2] rr is now widely used outside Mozilla and capable of debugging software such as Google Chrome, QEMU, and LibreOffice.[3] rr is free software.[4]

Design

During the recording phase, rr records all inputs to a Linux process group from the kernel, as well as nondeterministic CPU effects (such as rdtsc). These inputs are logged to disk and become the "trace". Once the trace is recorded, it can be replayed as many times as desired and all state will be reproduced exactly. During replay rr will act as a gdbserver providing a gdb experience capable of reverse-execution. Because a bug can be replayed over and over again, rr enables new methods of debugging issues that are very difficult to solve with traditional debuggers.[4]

rr's design is documented in the paper Lightweight User-Space Record And Replay, with more details in Engineering Record And Replay For Deployability.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: rr 4.0 Released With Reverse Execution.
  2. Web site: Introducing rr.
  3. Web site: rr: lightweight recording & deterministic debugging. rr-project.org.
  4. Web site: rr-debugger/rr. GitHub. 24 December 2022 .