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njn4e59bd92003-04-22 20:58:47 +00001
sewardj36a53ad2003-04-22 23:26:24 +00002A mini-FAQ for valgrind, version 1.9.6
njn4e59bd92003-04-22 20:58:47 +00003~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
sewardj3d47b792003-05-05 22:15:35 +00004Last revised 5 May 2003
5~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
njn4e59bd92003-04-22 20:58:47 +00006
sewardj36a53ad2003-04-22 23:26:24 +00007-----------------------------------------------------------------
8
njn4e59bd92003-04-22 20:58:47 +00009Q1. Programs run OK on valgrind, but at exit produce a bunch
10 of errors a bit like this
11
12 ==20755== Invalid read of size 4
13 ==20755== at 0x40281C8A: _nl_unload_locale (loadlocale.c:238)
14 ==20755== by 0x4028179D: free_mem (findlocale.c:257)
15 ==20755== by 0x402E0962: __libc_freeres (set-freeres.c:34)
16 ==20755== by 0x40048DCC: vgPlain___libc_freeres_wrapper
17 (vg_clientfuncs.c:585)
18 ==20755== Address 0x40CC304C is 8 bytes inside a block of size 380 free'd
19 ==20755== at 0x400484C9: free (vg_clientfuncs.c:180)
20 ==20755== by 0x40281CBA: _nl_unload_locale (loadlocale.c:246)
21 ==20755== by 0x40281218: free_mem (setlocale.c:461)
22 ==20755== by 0x402E0962: __libc_freeres (set-freeres.c:34)
23
24 and then die with a segmentation fault.
25
26A1. When the program exits, valgrind runs the procedure
27 __libc_freeres() in glibc. This is a hook for memory debuggers,
28 so they can ask glibc to free up any memory it has used. Doing
29 that is needed to ensure that valgrind doesn't incorrectly
30 report space leaks in glibc.
31
32 Problem is that running __libc_freeres() in older glibc versions
33 causes this crash.
34
njn4e59bd92003-04-22 20:58:47 +000035 WORKAROUND FOR 1.1.X and later versions of valgrind: use the
sewardj36a53ad2003-04-22 23:26:24 +000036 --run-libc-freeres=no flag. You may then get space leak
37 reports for glibc-allocations (please _don't_ report these
38 to the glibc people, since they are not real leaks), but at
39 least the program runs.
njn4e59bd92003-04-22 20:58:47 +000040
sewardj36a53ad2003-04-22 23:26:24 +000041-----------------------------------------------------------------
njn4e59bd92003-04-22 20:58:47 +000042
nethercote206c4692003-11-02 16:27:39 +000043Q2. [Question erased, as it is no longer relevant]
njn4e59bd92003-04-22 20:58:47 +000044
sewardj36a53ad2003-04-22 23:26:24 +000045-----------------------------------------------------------------
njn4e59bd92003-04-22 20:58:47 +000046
47Q3. My (buggy) program dies like this:
48 valgrind: vg_malloc2.c:442 (bszW_to_pszW):
49 Assertion `pszW >= 0' failed.
50 And/or my (buggy) program runs OK on valgrind, but dies like
51 this on cachegrind.
52
53A3. If valgrind shows any invalid reads, invalid writes and invalid
54 frees in your program, the above may happen. Reason is that your
55 program may trash valgrind's low-level memory manager, which then
56 dies with the above assertion, or something like this. The cure
57 is to fix your program so that it doesn't do any illegal memory
58 accesses. The above failure will hopefully go away after that.
59
sewardj36a53ad2003-04-22 23:26:24 +000060-----------------------------------------------------------------
njn4e59bd92003-04-22 20:58:47 +000061
62Q4. I'm running Red Hat Advanced Server. Valgrind always segfaults at
63 startup.
64
sewardj36a53ad2003-04-22 23:26:24 +000065A4. Known issue with RHAS 2.1, due to funny stack permissions at
66 startup. However, valgrind-1.9.4 and later automatically handle
67 this correctly, and should not segfault.
njn4e59bd92003-04-22 20:58:47 +000068
sewardj36a53ad2003-04-22 23:26:24 +000069-----------------------------------------------------------------
njn4e59bd92003-04-22 20:58:47 +000070
71Q5. I try running "valgrind my_program", but my_program runs normally,
72 and Valgrind doesn't emit any output at all.
73
njnf45a4eb2003-09-28 18:18:47 +000074A5. Valgrind doesn't work out-of-the-box with programs that are entirely
75 statically linked. It does a quick test at startup, and if it detects
76 that the program is statically linked, it aborts with an explanation.
77
78 This test may fail in some obscure cases, eg. if you run a script
79 under Valgrind and the script interpreter is statically linked.
njn4e59bd92003-04-22 20:58:47 +000080
njnf45a4eb2003-09-28 18:18:47 +000081 If you still want static linking, you can ask gcc to link certain
82 libraries statically. Try the following options:
njn4e59bd92003-04-22 20:58:47 +000083
njndc8d5e52003-09-25 18:20:17 +000084 -Wl,-Bstatic -lmyLibrary1 -lotherLibrary -Wl,-Bdynamic
njn4e59bd92003-04-22 20:58:47 +000085
njndc8d5e52003-09-25 18:20:17 +000086 Just make sure you end with -Wl,-Bdynamic so that libc is dynamically
87 linked.
njn4e59bd92003-04-22 20:58:47 +000088
njnf45a4eb2003-09-28 18:18:47 +000089 If you absolutely cannot use dynamic libraries, you can try statically
90 linking together all the .o files in coregrind/, all the .o files of the
91 skin of your choice (eg. those in memcheck/), and the .o files of your
92 program. You'll end up with a statically linked binary that runs
93 permanently under Valgrind's control. Note that we haven't tested this
94 procedure thoroughly.
95
sewardj36a53ad2003-04-22 23:26:24 +000096-----------------------------------------------------------------
njn4e59bd92003-04-22 20:58:47 +000097
98Q6. I try running "valgrind my_program" and get Valgrind's startup message,
99 but I don't get any errors and I know my program has errors.
100
101A6. By default, Valgrind only traces the top-level process. So if your
102 program spawns children, they won't be traced by Valgrind by default.
103 Also, if your program is started by a shell script, Perl script, or
104 something similar, Valgrind will trace the shell, or the Perl
105 interpreter, or equivalent.
106
107 To trace child processes, use the --trace-children=yes option.
108
sewardj36a53ad2003-04-22 23:26:24 +0000109 If you are tracing large trees of processes, it can be less
110 disruptive to have the output sent over the network. Give
111 valgrind the flag --logsocket=127.0.0.1:12345 (if you want
112 logging output sent to port 12345 on localhost). You can
113 use the valgrind-listener program to listen on that port:
114 valgrind-listener 12345
115 Obviously you have to start the listener process first.
116 See the documentation for more details.
117
118-----------------------------------------------------------------
119
120Q7. My threaded server process runs unbelievably slowly on
121 valgrind. So slowly, in fact, that at first I thought it
122 had completely locked up.
123
124A7. We are not completely sure about this, but one possibility
125 is that laptops with power management fool valgrind's
126 timekeeping mechanism, which is (somewhat in error) based
127 on the x86 RDTSC instruction. A "fix" which is claimed to
128 work is to run some other cpu-intensive process at the same
129 time, so that the laptop's power-management clock-slowing
130 does not kick in. We would be interested in hearing more
131 feedback on this.
132
sewardj3d47b792003-05-05 22:15:35 +0000133 Another possible cause is that versions prior to 1.9.6
134 did not support threading on glibc 2.3.X systems well.
135 Hopefully the situation is much improved with 1.9.6.
136
sewardj36a53ad2003-04-22 23:26:24 +0000137-----------------------------------------------------------------
138
139Q8. My program dies (exactly) like this:
140
141 REPE then 0xF
142 valgrind: the `impossible' happened:
143 Unhandled REPE case
144
sewardj3d47b792003-05-05 22:15:35 +0000145A8. Yeah ... that I believe is a SSE or SSE2 instruction. Are you
146 building your app with -march=pentium4 or -march=athlon or
147 something like that? If you can somehow dissuade gcc from
148 producing SSE/SSE2 instructions, you may be able to avoid this.
149 Some folks have reported that removing the flag -march=...
150 works around this.
sewardj36a53ad2003-04-22 23:26:24 +0000151
152 I'd be interested to hear if you can get rid of it by changing
153 your application build flags.
154
155-----------------------------------------------------------------
156
157Q9. My program dies complaining that __libc_current_sigrtmin
158 is unimplemented.
159
sewardj3d47b792003-05-05 22:15:35 +0000160A9. Should be fixed in 1.9.6. I would appreciate confirmation
161 of that.
sewardj03272ff2003-04-26 22:23:35 +0000162
sewardj36a53ad2003-04-22 23:26:24 +0000163-----------------------------------------------------------------
164
165Q10. I upgraded to Red Hat 9 and threaded programs now act
166 strange / deadlock when they didn't before.
167
168A10. Thread support on glibc 2.3.2+ with NPTL is not as
169 good as on older LinuxThreads-based systems. We have
170 this under consideration. Avoid Red Hat >= 8.1 for
171 the time being, if you can.
172
sewardj3d47b792003-05-05 22:15:35 +0000173 5 May 03: 1.9.6 should be significantly improved on
174 Red Hat 9, SuSE 8.2 and other glibc-2.3.2 systems.
175
sewardj36a53ad2003-04-22 23:26:24 +0000176-----------------------------------------------------------------
177
178Q11. I really need to use the NVidia libGL.so in my app.
179 Help!
180
181A11. NVidia also noticed this it seems, and the "latest" drivers
182 (version 4349, apparently) come with this text
183
184 DISABLING CPU SPECIFIC FEATURES
185
186 Setting the environment variable __GL_FORCE_GENERIC_CPU to a
187 non-zero value will inhibit the use of CPU specific features
188 such as MMX, SSE, or 3DNOW!. Use of this option may result in
189 performance loss. This option may be useful in conjunction with
190 software such as the Valgrind memory debugger.
191
192 Set __GL_FORCE_GENERIC_CPU=1 and Valgrind should work. This has
193 been confirmed by various people. Thanks NVidia!
194
195-----------------------------------------------------------------
196
197Q12. My program dies like this (often at exit):
198
199 VG_(mash_LD_PRELOAD_and_LD_LIBRARY_PATH): internal error:
200 (loads of text)
201
njnab882982003-08-13 08:34:42 +0000202A12. One possible cause is that your program modifies its
sewardj36a53ad2003-04-22 23:26:24 +0000203 environment variables, possibly including zeroing them
njn481f8512003-08-13 09:56:30 +0000204 all. Valgrind relies on the LD_PRELOAD, LD_LIBRARY_PATH and
205 VG_ARGS variables. Zeroing them will break things.
sewardj36a53ad2003-04-22 23:26:24 +0000206
njn3cf14302003-08-19 07:50:24 +0000207 As of 1.9.6, Valgrind only uses these variables with
208 --trace-children=no, when executing execve() or using the
209 --stop-after=yes flag. This should reduce the potential for
njnab882982003-08-13 08:34:42 +0000210 problems.
sewardj36a53ad2003-04-22 23:26:24 +0000211
212-----------------------------------------------------------------
213
214Q13. My program dies like this:
215
216 error: /lib/librt.so.1: symbol __pthread_clock_settime, version
217 GLIBC_PRIVATE not defined in file libpthread.so.0 with link time
218 reference
219
220A13. This is a total swamp. Nevertheless there is a way out.
221 It's a problem which is not easy to fix. Really the problem is
222 that /lib/librt.so.1 refers to some symbols
223 __pthread_clock_settime and __pthread_clock_gettime in
224 /lib/libpthread.so which are not intended to be exported, ie
225 they are private.
226
227 Best solution is to ensure your program does not use
228 /lib/librt.so.1.
229
230 However .. since you're probably not using it directly, or even
231 knowingly, that's hard to do. You might instead be able to fix
232 it by playing around with coregrind/vg_libpthread.vs. Things to
233 try:
234
235 Remove this
236
237 GLIBC_PRIVATE {
238 __pthread_clock_gettime;
239 __pthread_clock_settime;
240 };
241
242 or maybe remove this
243
244 GLIBC_2.2.3 {
245 __pthread_clock_gettime;
246 __pthread_clock_settime;
247 } GLIBC_2.2;
248
249 or maybe add this
250
251 GLIBC_2.2.4 {
252 __pthread_clock_gettime;
253 __pthread_clock_settime;
254 } GLIBC_2.2;
255
256 GLIBC_2.2.5 {
257 __pthread_clock_gettime;
258 __pthread_clock_settime;
259 } GLIBC_2.2;
260
261 or some combination of the above. After each change you need to
262 delete coregrind/libpthread.so and do make && make install.
263
264 I just don't know if any of the above will work. If you can
265 find a solution which works, I would be interested to hear it.
266
267 To which someone replied:
268
269 I deleted this:
270
271 GLIBC_2.2.3 {
272 __pthread_clock_gettime;
273 __pthread_clock_settime;
274 } GLIBC_2.2;
275
276 and it worked.
277
278-----------------------------------------------------------------
njn4e59bd92003-04-22 20:58:47 +0000279
sewardj03272ff2003-04-26 22:23:35 +0000280Q14. My program uses the C++ STL and string classes. Valgrind
281 reports 'still reachable' memory leaks involving these classes
282 at the exit of the program, but there should be none.
283
284A14. First of all: relax, it's probably not a bug, but a feature.
285 Many implementations of the C++ standard libraries use their own
286 memory pool allocators. Memory for quite a number of destructed
287 objects is not immediately freed and given back to the OS, but
288 kept in the pool(s) for later re-use. The fact that the pools
289 are not freed at the exit() of the program cause valgrind to
290 report this memory as still reachable. The behaviour not to
291 free pools at the exit() could be called a bug of the library
292 though.
293
294 Using gcc, you can force the STL to use malloc and to free
295 memory as soon as possible by globally disabling memory caching.
296 Beware! Doing so will probably slow down your program,
297 sometimes drastically.
298
299 - With gcc 2.91, 2.95, 3.0 and 3.1, compile all source using the
300 STL with -D__USE_MALLOC. Beware! This is removed from gcc
301 starting with version 3.3.
302
303 - With 3.2.2 and later, you should export the environment
304 variable GLIBCPP_FORCE_NEW before running your program.
305
306 There are other ways to disable memory pooling: using the
307 malloc_alloc template with your objects (not portable, but
308 should work for gcc) or even writing your own memory
309 allocators. But all this goes beyond the scope of this
310 FAQ. Start by reading
311 http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/libstdc++/ext/howto.html#3
312 if you absolutely want to do that. But beware:
313
314 1) there are currently changes underway for gcc which are not
315 totally reflected in the docs right now
316 ("now" == 26 Apr 03)
317
318 2) allocators belong to the more messy parts of the STL and
319 people went at great lengths to make it portable across
320 platforms. Chances are good that your solution will work
321 on your platform, but not on others.
322
323-----------------------------------------------------------------
324
njnae34aef2003-08-07 21:24:24 +0000325Q15. My program dies with a segmentation fault, but Valgrind doesn't give
326 any error messages before it, or none that look related.
327
328A15. The one kind of segmentation fault that Valgrind won't give any
329 warnings about is writes to read-only memory. Maybe your program is
330 writing to a static string like this:
331
332 char* s = "hello";
333 s[0] = 'j';
334
335 or something similar. Writing to read-only memory can also apparently
336 make LinuxThreads behave strangely.
337
338-----------------------------------------------------------------
339
njn1aa18502003-08-15 07:35:20 +0000340Q16. When I trying building Valgrind, 'make' dies partway with an
341 assertion failure, something like this: make: expand.c:489:
342
343 allocated_variable_append: Assertion
344 `current_variable_set_list->next != 0' failed.
345
346A16. It's probably a bug in 'make'. Some, but not all, instances of
347 version 3.79.1 have this bug, see
348 www.mail-archive.com/bug-make@gnu.org/msg01658.html. Try upgrading to a
349 more recent version of 'make'.
350
351-----------------------------------------------------------------
352
njna8fb5a32003-08-20 11:19:17 +0000353Q17. I tried writing a suppression but it didn't work. Can you
354 write my suppression for me?
355
356A17. Yes! Use the --gen-suppressions=yes feature to spit out
357 suppressions automatically for you. You can then edit them
358 if you like, eg. combining similar automatically generated
359 suppressions using wildcards like '*'.
360
361 If you really want to write suppressions by hand, read the
362 manual carefully. Note particularly that C++ function names
363 must be _mangled_.
364
365-----------------------------------------------------------------
366
njn4e59bd92003-04-22 20:58:47 +0000367(this is the end of the FAQ.)