dump_syms VS breakpad

Compare dump_syms vs breakpad and see what are their differences.

dump_syms

Rewrite of breakpad dump_syms tools in Rust (by mozilla)
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dump_syms breakpad
1 4
116 2,534
0.9% 0.8%
7.7 7.8
9 days ago 7 days ago
Rust C++
Apache License 2.0 GNU General Public License v3.0 or later
The number of mentions indicates the total number of mentions that we've tracked plus the number of user suggested alternatives.
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.

dump_syms

Posts with mentions or reviews of dump_syms. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2021-05-19.

breakpad

Posts with mentions or reviews of breakpad. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2022-08-30.
  • Monitoring C++ Applications
    3 projects | dev.to | 30 Aug 2022
    Another onr is Raygun. Although it doesn't have an SDK itself, it shows how you can integrate your software with Google's breakpad and send the crash report via an http request.
  • We Halved Go Monorepo CI Build Time
    4 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 26 Jun 2022
    Google also has projects like this: https://github.com/google/breakpad

    It supports 5 platforms, but uses 4 completely different build systems, including 2 custom ones (3 if you count depot_tools). There is very little overlap between the platform versions, meaning it's effectively 5 different projects smashed together into a single folder, and pretty much no way to use them in a cross platform project without some serious work. There isn't even a basic abstraction over the similar callback APIs between the platforms, although that's not a huge deal because the effort to write a basic abstraction layer is nothing compared to the effort of getting to a point where you can actually use it in a cross-platform project.

    It's also funny that one of the build systems is GYP, which is basically a reinvention of CMake, except it's only used for the Windows build even though it can generate projects for the other platforms. Also, the VS project generator for GYP has been broken for a while (simple typo, trying to import OrderedDict from the wrong module. There's a PR to fix it, hasn't been merged for some reason), so it doesn't even work. Beyond that, it's also broken because GYP forces treating all warnings as errors, with a whitelist of warnings, yet the latest version (since yesterday at least) fails to build (tested on VS2019) because there's a warning that isn't in the whitelist.

    You could try to fork it and fix these issues, but depot_tools doesn't provide a way to change the clone URL for repos, meaning you need to dig through the source code and wrap it in your own script that interacts with the internal APIs to do a simple clone (hint: fetch.py has a 'run' method that you can call with a custom constructed 'spec' object, which is a dictionary where you can inject your own url; just look at the hard-coded spec object for breakpad as a starting point). If you don't use depot_tools, then you need to manually clone all of the dependencies in the project since they're not even set up as git submodules.

    There's also no versioning scheme whatsoever. Depot_tools seems to automatically checkout the latest version of everything (including itself).

    I spent the past week wrestling with this monstrosity. Ended up successfully writing a Conan package for it that builds for Windows and Linux (there's one on Conan center, but it only supports Linux). I have 3 more platforms to go, but I think it'll be a better idea to just scrap everything and refactor into something more reasonable using CMake.

    Instead of Breakpad, they also have a newer one called Crashpad, which is meant to improve reliability on Mac OS. Unfortunately, it depends on Chromium, so it won't work for my purposes.

    ...so all I'm saying is, maybe don't use Google as a role model for your project infrastructure.

    /end rant

  • How can I collect native crashes info without Crashlytics and without writing my own signals handler with <signal.h>?
    3 projects | /r/androiddev | 15 Jun 2022
    I don't think you're accomplishing this without writing a least a little bit of C at some level. but I'd use this if for some reason you cannot connect a third party.
  • Improving Firefox Stability on Linux
    4 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 19 May 2021

What are some alternatives?

When comparing dump_syms and breakpad you can also consider the following projects:

svntogit-packages - Automatic import of svn 'packages' repo (read-only mirror)

sentry-native - Sentry SDK for C, C++ and native applications.

rust-minidump - Type definitions, parsing, and analysis for the minidump file format.

opentelemetry-cpp - The OpenTelemetry C++ Client

yalc - Work with yarn/npm packages locally like a boss.

Bugsnag - BugSnag crash monitoring and reporting tool for Android apps

nixpkgs - Nix Packages collection & NixOS

target-determinator - Determines which Bazel targets were affected between two git commits.