How can I determine if a compiled Objective-C app is using garbage collection?

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执笔经年
执笔经年 2021-02-20 12:57

For any application that I have on my Mac, is there a way to tell if it was compiled with GC enabled, or if it\'s doing manual memory management?

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  •  隐瞒了意图╮
    2021-02-20 13:47

    I found the answer here. Mind you that the original post is wrong, but contains a comment by Mark Rowe, an Apple engineer, that points the way.

    I have re-run the otool commands he mentions on my machine with the current OS (10.6.4). Here's the output:

    $ uname -a
    Darwin meaningless.local 10.4.0 Darwin Kernel Version 10.4.0: Fri Apr 23 18:28:53 PDT 2010; root:xnu-1504.7.4~1/RELEASE_I386 i386
    
    ### Mail doesn't use GC
    $ otool -oV /Applications/Mail.app/Contents/MacOS/Mail | tail -3
    Contents of (__DATA,__objc_imageinfo) section
      version 0
        flags 0x0
    
    ### Xcode supports GC and retain/release
    $ otool -oV /Developer/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/MacOS/Xcode | tail -3
    Contents of (__DATA,__objc_imageinfo) section
      version 0
        flags 0x2 OBJC_IMAGE_SUPPORTS_GC
    

    Mark Rowe's explanation:

    The field of interest here is the “flags” field of the __image_info section of the __OBJC segment. If garbage collection is supported it will have the value 0×2 and will be shown as “GC RR” to represent that both garbage collection and retain/release are supported. If garbage collection is required then the field will have the value 0×4 and will be shown as “GC-only” indicating that only garbage collection is supported and that retain/release is not available. The field can also contain other values, but those two are the only values that are relevant to garbage collection.

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