The size of the executable should increase much less than 25%.
I'm actually a little surprised that it increases much at all, but some quick tests show that at least one large example project (ScummVM) increases the .exe from 10,205,184 bytes to 10,996,224 bytes just by adding the /DEBUG
option to the link step (about an 8% increase). /DEBUG
is specified using the "Linker | Debugging | Generate Debug Info"
option in the IDE. Note that this settings should have no effect on the optimizations generated by the compiler.
I know that a pointer to the .pdb file is put in the executable, but there's not much to that. I experimented a bit and found that enabling the /OPT:REF
linker option changed the size difference to 10,205,184 vs. 10,205,696. So the non /DEBUG
build stayed the same size, but the /DEBUG
build dropped to only 512 bytes larger (which could be accounted for by the pointer-to-.pdb - maybe the linker rounds to some multiple of 512 or something). Much less than 1% increase. Apparently, adding /DEBUG
causes the linker to keep unreferenced objects unless you also specify /OPT:REF
. ("Linker | Optimization | References"
option in the IDE).
The program will run fine without the .pdb file - you can choose to send it to customers if you want to provide a better debugging experience at the customer site. If you just want to be able to get decent stack traces, you don't need to have the .pdb file on the customer machine - they (or some tool/functionality you provide) can send a dump file which can be loaded into a debugger at your site with the .pdb file available and get the same stack trace information port-mortem.
Of course, one thing to be aware of is that you'll need to archive the .pdb files along with your releases. The "Debugging Tools for Windows" package (which is now distributed in the Windows SDK) provides a symbol server tool so you can archive .pdb files and easily retrieve them for debugging.
The only drawback that I can think of to distributing .pdb files is that it can make reverse engineering your application easier, if that's a concern for you. Note that Microsoft distributes symbols for Windows (using a public symbol server - as well as packages of the full symbols sets for some specific releases). However, the symbols they distribute do get run through a sanitizing step that removes certain items they consider sensitive. You can do the same (or similar) using the linker's /PDBSTRIPPED
option ("Linker | Debugging | Strip Private Symbols"
in the IDE). See the MSDN documentation for details on what the option removes. If you're going to distribute symbols, it's probably appropriate to use that option.
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