Re: Source file paths showing up in strings of executable
Re: Source file paths showing up in strings of executable
- Subject: Re: Source file paths showing up in strings of executable
- From: Daniel DeCovnick <email@hidden>
- Date: Tue, 20 Jul 2010 23:29:44 -0700
That's probably it, thanks!!
On Jul 20, 2010, at 10:23 PM, Jeff Johnson wrote:
> Hi Daniel.
>
> Anything that uses __FILE__ would cause the source file to be compiled into the executable. Do you NSAssert? The definition of NSAssert includes __FILE__. If you don't want assertions to be complied into the app, you can define NS_BLOCK_ASSERTIONS.
>
> -Jeff
>
>
> On Jul 21, 2010, at 12:05 AM, Daniel DeCovnick wrote:
>
>> Not sure if this is the right list, but since it seems to be exclusive to Obj-C, I'm sending it here.
>>
>> Recently I've noticed that running the command line program "strings" against a release build (with debugging or all symbols stripped) reveals several full paths of source code files, specifically .m and .mm files; I haven't seen .cpp or .c files show up. Strangely, it's not all of them, nor can I find any commonality between them. At one point I thought it was from use of a macro we use around NSLog, but some files using it don't show up, and some which don't use it do. I looked for these files in the .pbxproj, but didn't see anything unusual.
>>
>> Running strings on other programs showed that other developers, including Apple, have this issue. I looked at Terminal, Xcode, Interface Builder, and Twitterrific, and all had 1-5 source file paths. We have a lot more than that though, around 20.
>>
>> Does anyone know what causes this, and/or how to prevent it?
>>
>> -Daniel
>
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