Making warnings fatal

See Running GLib Applications for notes on how to make GTK warnings fatal.

Using GTK Debug packages

sudo apt-get install libgtk2.0-0-dbg

Make sure that you're building a binary that matches your architecture (e.g. 64-bit on a 64-bit machine), and there you go.

Source

You‘ll likely want to get the source for gtk too so that you can step through it. You can tell gdb that you’ve downloaded the source to your system's GTK by doing:

$ cd /my/dir
$ apt-get source libgtk2.0-0
$ gdb ...
(gdb) set substitute-path /build/buildd /my/dir

NOTE: I tried debugging pango in a similar manner, but for some reason gdb didn't pick up the symbols from the symbols from the -dbg package. I ended up building from source and setting my LD_LIBRARY_PATH.

See LinuxBuildingDebugGtk for more on how to build your own debug version of GTK.

Parasite

http://chipx86.github.com/gtkparasite/ is great. Go check out the site for more about it.

Install it with

sudo apt-get install gtkparasite

And then run Chrome with

GTK_MODULES=gtkparasite ./out/Debug/chrome

ghardy

If you're within the Google network on ghardy, which is too old to include gtkparasite, you can do:

scp bunny.sfo:/usr/lib/gtk-2.0/modules/libgtkparasite.so /tmp
sudo cp /tmp/libgtkparasite.so /usr/lib/gtk-2.0/modules/libgtkparasite.so

GDK_DEBUG

14:43 < xan> mrobinson: there's a way to run GTK+ without grabs fwiw, useful for gdb sessions
14:44 < xan> GDK_DEBUG=nograbs