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| |
| <book id="FAQ" xreflabel="Valgrind FAQ"> |
| |
| <bookinfo> |
| <title>Valgrind FAQ</title> |
| </bookinfo> |
| |
| |
| <chapter id="faq.background" xreflabel="Background"> |
| <title>Background</title> |
| |
| <qandaset id="qset.background"> |
| |
| <qandaentry id="faq.pronounce"> |
| <question> |
| <para>How do you pronounce "Valgrind"?</para> |
| </question> |
| <answer> |
| <para>The "Val" as in the world "value". The "grind" is |
| pronounced with a short 'i' -- ie. "grinned" (rhymes with |
| "tinned") rather than "grined" (rhymes with "find").</para> |
| <para>Don't feel bad: almost everyone gets it wrong at |
| first.</para> |
| </answer> |
| </qandaentry> |
| |
| <qandaentry id="faq.whence"> |
| <question> |
| <para>Where does the name "Valgrind" come from?</para> |
| </question> |
| <answer> |
| <para>From Nordic mythology. Originally (before release) the |
| project was named Heimdall, after the watchman of the Nordic |
| gods. He could "see a hundred miles by day or night, hear the |
| grass growing, see the wool growing on a sheep's back" (etc). |
| This would have been a great name, but it was already taken by |
| a security package "Heimdal".</para> <para>Keeping with the |
| Nordic theme, Valgrind was chosen. Valgrind is the name of the |
| main entrance to Valhalla (the Hall of the Chosen Slain in |
| Asgard). Over this entrance there resides a wolf and over it |
| there is the head of a boar and on it perches a huge eagle, |
| whose eyes can see to the far regions of the nine worlds. Only |
| those judged worthy by the guardians are allowed to pass |
| through Valgrind. All others are refused entrance.</para> |
| <para>It's not short for "value grinder", although that's not a |
| bad guess.</para> |
| </answer> |
| </qandaentry> |
| |
| </qandaset> |
| |
| </chapter> |
| |
| |
| <chapter id="faq.installing" |
| xreflabel="Compiling, installing and configuring"> |
| <title>Compiling, installing and configuring</title> |
| <qandaset id="qset.installing"> |
| |
| <qandaentry id="faq.make_dies"> |
| <question> |
| <para>When I trying building Valgrind, 'make' dies partway with |
| an assertion failure, something like this: |
| <screen> |
| % make: expand.c:489: allocated_variable_append: |
| Assertion 'current_variable_set_list->next != 0' failed. |
| </screen> |
| </para> |
| </question> |
| <answer> |
| <para>It's probably a bug in 'make'. Some, but not all, |
| instances of version 3.79.1 have this bug, see |
| www.mail-archive.com/bug-make@gnu.org/msg01658.html. Try |
| upgrading to a more recent version of 'make'. Alternatively, |
| we have heard that unsetting the CFLAGS environment variable |
| avoids the problem.</para> |
| </answer> |
| </qandaentry> |
| |
| </qandaset> |
| </chapter> |
| |
| |
| |
| <chapter id="faq.abort" |
| xreflabel="Valgrind aborts unexpectedly"> |
| <title>Valgrind aborts unexpectedly</title> |
| <qandaset id="qset.abort"> |
| |
| <qandaentry id="faq.exit_errors"> |
| <question> |
| <para>Programs run OK on Valgrind, but at exit produce a bunch |
| of errors a bit like this:</para> |
| </question> |
| <answer><para> |
| <programlisting> |
| ==20755== Invalid read of size 4 |
| ==20755== at 0x40281C8A: _nl_unload_locale (loadlocale.c:238) |
| ==20755== by 0x4028179D: free_mem (findlocale.c:257) |
| ==20755== by 0x402E0962: __libc_freeres (set-freeres.c:34) |
| ==20755== by 0x40048DCC: vgPlain___libc_freeres_wrapper (vg_clientfuncs.c:585) |
| ==20755== Address 0x40CC304C is 8 bytes inside a block of size 380 free'd |
| ==20755== at 0x400484C9: free (vg_clientfuncs.c:180) |
| ==20755== by 0x40281CBA: _nl_unload_locale (loadlocale.c:246) |
| ==20755== by 0x40281218: free_mem (setlocale.c:461) |
| ==20755== by 0x402E0962: __libc_freeres (set-freeres.c:34) |
| </programlisting> |
| |
| and then die with a segmentation fault.</para> |
| <para>When the program exits, Valgrind runs the procedure |
| <literal>__libc_freeres()</literal> in glibc. This is a hook |
| for memory debuggers, so they can ask glibc to free up any |
| memory it has used. Doing that is needed to ensure that |
| Valgrind doesn't incorrectly report space leaks in glibc.</para> |
| <para>Problem is that running |
| <literal>__libc_freeres()</literal> in older glibc versions |
| causes this crash.</para> <para>WORKAROUND FOR 1.1.X and later |
| versions of Valgrind: use the |
| <literal>--run-libc-freeres=no</literal> flag. You may then get |
| space leak reports for glibc-allocations (please _don't_ report |
| these to the glibc people, since they are not real leaks), but |
| at least the program runs.</para> |
| </answer> |
| </qandaentry> |
| |
| <qandaentry id="faq.bugdeath"> |
| <question> |
| <para>My (buggy) program dies like this:</para> |
| </question> |
| <answer> |
| <screen> |
| % valgrind: vg_malloc2.c:442 (bszW_to_pszW): Assertion 'pszW >= 0' failed. |
| </screen> |
| |
| <para>If Memcheck (the memory checker) shows any invalid reads, |
| invalid writes and invalid frees in your program, the above may |
| happen. Reason is that your program may trash Valgrind's |
| low-level memory manager, which then dies with the above |
| assertion, or something like this. The cure is to fix your |
| program so that it doesn't do any illegal memory accesses. The |
| above failure will hopefully go away after that.</para> |
| </answer> |
| </qandaentry> |
| |
| <qandaentry id="faq.msgdeath"> |
| <question> |
| <para>My program dies, printing a message like this along the |
| way:</para> |
| </question> |
| <answer> |
| <screen> |
| % disInstr: unhandled instruction bytes: 0x66 0xF 0x2E 0x5 |
| </screen> |
| |
| <para>Older versions did not support some x86 instructions, |
| particularly SSE/SSE2 instructions. Try a newer Valgrind; we |
| now support almost all instructions. If it still happens with |
| newer versions, if the failing instruction is an SSE/SSE2 |
| instruction, you might be able to recompile your program |
| without it by using the flag |
| <computeroutput>-march</computeroutput> to gcc. Either way, |
| let us know and we'll try to fix it.</para> |
| |
| <para>Another possibility is that your program has a bug and |
| erroneously jumps to a non-code address, in which case you'll |
| get a SIGILL signal. Memcheck/Addrcheck may issue a warning |
| just before this happens, but they might not if the jump |
| happens to land in addressable memory.</para> |
| </answer> |
| </qandaentry> |
| |
| </qandaset> |
| </chapter> |
| |
| |
| <chapter id="faq.unexpected" |
| xreflabel="Valgrind behaves unexpectedly"> |
| <title>Valgrind behaves unexpectedly</title> |
| <qandaset id="qset.unexpected"> |
| |
| <qandaentry id="faq.slowthread"> |
| <question> |
| <para>My threaded server process runs unbelievably slowly on |
| Valgrind. So slowly, in fact, that at first I thought it had |
| completely locked up.</para> |
| </question> |
| <answer> |
| <para>We are not completely sure about this, but one |
| possibility is that laptops with power management fool |
| Valgrind's timekeeping mechanism, which is (somewhat in error) |
| based on the x86 RDTSC instruction. A "fix" which is claimed |
| to work is to run some other cpu-intensive process at the same |
| time, so that the laptop's power-management clock-slowing does |
| not kick in. We would be interested in hearing more feedback |
| on this.</para> |
| |
| <para>Another possible cause is that versions prior to 1.9.6 |
| did not support threading on glibc 2.3.X systems well. |
| Hopefully the situation is much improved with 1.9.6 and later |
| versions.</para> |
| </answer> |
| </qandaentry> |
| |
| |
| <qandaentry id="faq.reports"> |
| <question> |
| <para>My program uses the C++ STL and string classes. Valgrind |
| reports 'still reachable' memory leaks involving these classes |
| at the exit of the program, but there should be none.</para> |
| </question> |
| <answer> |
| <para>First of all: relax, it's probably not a bug, but a |
| feature. Many implementations of the C++ standard libraries |
| use their own memory pool allocators. Memory for quite a |
| number of destructed objects is not immediately freed and given |
| back to the OS, but kept in the pool(s) for later re-use. The |
| fact that the pools are not freed at the exit() of the program |
| cause Valgrind to report this memory as still reachable. The |
| behaviour not to free pools at the exit() could be called a bug |
| of the library though.</para> |
| |
| <para>Using gcc, you can force the STL to use malloc and to |
| free memory as soon as possible by globally disabling memory |
| caching. Beware! Doing so will probably slow down your |
| program, sometimes drastically.</para> |
| <itemizedlist> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>With gcc 2.91, 2.95, 3.0 and 3.1, compile all source |
| using the STL with <literal>-D__USE_MALLOC</literal>. Beware! |
| This is removed from gcc starting with version 3.3.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>With gcc 3.2.2 and later, you should export the environment |
| variable <literal>GLIBCPP_FORCE_NEW</literal> before running |
| your program.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>With gcc 3.4 and later, that variable has changed name to |
| <literal>GLIBCXX_FORCE_NEW</literal>.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </itemizedlist> |
| |
| <para>There are other ways to disable memory pooling: using the |
| <literal>malloc_alloc</literal> template with your objects (not |
| portable, but should work for gcc) or even writing your own |
| memory allocators. But all this goes beyond the scope of this |
| FAQ. Start by reading <ulink |
| url="http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/libstdc++/ext/howto.html#3"> |
| http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/libstdc++/ext/howto.html#3</ulink> |
| if you absolutely want to do that. But beware:</para> |
| |
| <orderedlist> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>there are currently changes underway for gcc which are |
| not totally reflected in the docs right now ("now" == 26 Apr |
| 03)</para> |
| </listitem> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>allocators belong to the more messy parts of the STL |
| and people went to great lengths to make it portable across |
| platforms. Chances are good that your solution will work on |
| your platform, but not on others.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </orderedlist> |
| </answer> |
| </qandaentry> |
| |
| |
| <qandaentry id="faq.unhelpful"> |
| <question> |
| <para>The stack traces given by Memcheck (or another tool) |
| aren't helpful. How can I improve them?</para> |
| </question> |
| <answer> |
| <para>If they're not long enough, use |
| <literal>--num-callers</literal> to make them longer.</para> |
| <para>If they're not detailed enough, make sure you are |
| compiling with <literal>-g</literal> to add debug information. |
| And don't strip symbol tables (programs should be unstripped |
| unless you run 'strip' on them; some libraries ship |
| stripped).</para> |
| |
| <para>Also, for leak reports involving shared objects, if the shared |
| object is unloaded before the program terminates, Valgrind will discard |
| the debug information and the error message will be full of |
| <literal>???</literal> entries. The workaround here is to avoid calling |
| dlclose() on these shared objects. |
| </para> |
| |
| <para>Also, <literal>-fomit-frame-pointer</literal> and |
| <literal>-fstack-check</literal> can make stack traces |
| worse.</para> |
| |
| <para>Some example sub-traces:</para> |
| |
| <para>With debug information and unstripped (best):</para> |
| <programlisting> |
| Invalid write of size 1 |
| at 0x80483BF: really (malloc1.c:20) |
| by 0x8048370: main (malloc1.c:9) |
| </programlisting> |
| |
| <para>With no debug information, unstripped:</para> |
| <programlisting> |
| Invalid write of size 1 |
| at 0x80483BF: really (in /auto/homes/njn25/grind/head5/a.out) |
| by 0x8048370: main (in /auto/homes/njn25/grind/head5/a.out) |
| </programlisting> |
| |
| <para>With no debug information, stripped:</para> |
| <programlisting> |
| Invalid write of size 1 |
| at 0x80483BF: (within /auto/homes/njn25/grind/head5/a.out) |
| by 0x8048370: (within /auto/homes/njn25/grind/head5/a.out) |
| by 0x42015703: __libc_start_main (in /lib/tls/libc-2.3.2.so) |
| by 0x80482CC: (within /auto/homes/njn25/grind/head5/a.out) |
| </programlisting> |
| |
| <para>With debug information and -fomit-frame-pointer:</para> |
| <programlisting> |
| Invalid write of size 1 |
| at 0x80483C4: really (malloc1.c:20) |
| by 0x42015703: __libc_start_main (in /lib/tls/libc-2.3.2.so) |
| by 0x80482CC: ??? (start.S:81) |
| </programlisting> |
| |
| <para>A leak error message involving an unloaded shared object:</para> |
| |
| <programlisting> |
| 84 bytes in 1 blocks are possibly lost in loss record 488 of 713 |
| at 0x1B9036DA: operator new(unsigned) (vg_replace_malloc.c:132) |
| by 0x1DB63EEB: ??? |
| by 0x1DB4B800: ??? |
| by 0x1D65E007: ??? |
| by 0x8049EE6: main (main.cpp:24) |
| </programlisting> |
| |
| </answer> |
| </qandaentry> |
| |
| <qandaentry id="faq.aliases"> |
| <question> |
| <para>The stack traces given by Memcheck (or another tool) seem to |
| have the wrong function name in them. What's happening?</para> |
| </question> |
| <answer> |
| <para>Occasionally Valgrind stack traces get the wrong function names. |
| This is caused by glibc using aliases to effectively give one function two |
| names. Most of the time Valgrind chooses a suitable name, but very |
| occasionally it gets it wrong. |
| |
| Examples we know of are printing 'bcmp' instead of 'memcmp', 'index' |
| instead of 'strchr', and 'rindex' instead of 'strrchr'.</para> |
| </answer> |
| </qandaentry> |
| |
| </qandaset> |
| </chapter> |
| |
| |
| <chapter id="faq.notfound" xreflabel="Memcheck doesn't find my bug"> |
| <title>Memcheck doesn't find my bug</title> |
| <qandaset id="qset.notfound"> |
| |
| <qandaentry id="faq.hiddenbug"> |
| <question> |
| <para>I try running "valgrind --tool=memcheck my_program" and |
| get Valgrind's startup message, but I don't get any errors and |
| I know my program has errors.</para> |
| </question> |
| <answer> |
| <para>There are two possible causes of this.</para> |
| |
| <para>First, by default, Valgrind only traces the top-level process. |
| So if your program spawns children, they won't be traced by |
| Valgrind by default. Also, if your program is started by a |
| shell script, Perl script, or something similar, Valgrind will |
| trace the shell, or the Perl interpreter, or equivalent.</para> |
| |
| <para>To trace child processes, use the |
| <literal>--trace-children=yes</literal> option.</para> |
| |
| <para>If you are tracing large trees of processes, it can be |
| less disruptive to have the output sent over the network. Give |
| Valgrind the flag |
| <literal>--log-socket=127.0.0.1:12345</literal> (if you want |
| logging output sent to <literal>port 12345</literal> on |
| <literal>localhost</literal>). You can use the |
| valgrind-listener program to listen on that port:</para> |
| <programlisting> |
| valgrind-listener 12345 |
| </programlisting> |
| |
| <para>Obviously you have to start the listener process first. |
| See the Manual: <ulink url="http://www.valgrind.org/docs/bookset/manual-core.out2file.html">Directing output to file</ulink> for more details.</para> |
| |
| <para>Second, if your program is statically linked, most Valgrind tools |
| won't work as well, because they won't be able to replace certain |
| functions, such as malloc(), with their own versions. A key indicator of |
| this is if Memcheck says: |
| <programlisting> |
| No malloc'd blocks -- no leaks are possible |
| </programlisting> |
| when you know your program calls malloc(). The workaround is to avoid |
| statically linking your program.</para> |
| </answer> |
| </qandaentry> |
| |
| |
| <qandaentry id="faq.overruns"> |
| <question> |
| <para>Why doesn't Memcheck find the array overruns in this program?</para> |
| </question> |
| <answer> |
| <programlisting> |
| int static[5]; |
| |
| int main(void) |
| { |
| int stack[5]; |
| |
| static[5] = 0; |
| stack [5] = 0; |
| |
| return 0; |
| } |
| </programlisting> |
| <para>Unfortunately, Memcheck doesn't do bounds checking on |
| static or stack arrays. We'd like to, but it's just not |
| possible to do in a reasonable way that fits with how Memcheck |
| works. Sorry.</para> |
| </answer> |
| </qandaentry> |
| |
| |
| </qandaset> |
| </chapter> |
| |
| |
| <chapter id="faq.misc" |
| xreflabel="Miscellaneous"> |
| <title>Miscellaneous</title> |
| <qandaset id="qset.misc"> |
| |
| <qandaentry id="faq.writesupp"> |
| <question> |
| <para>I tried writing a suppression but it didn't work. Can |
| you write my suppression for me?</para> |
| </question> |
| <answer> |
| <para>Yes! Use the |
| <computeroutput>--gen-suppressions=yes</computeroutput> feature |
| to spit out suppressions automatically for you. You can then |
| edit them if you like, eg. combining similar automatically |
| generated suppressions using wildcards like |
| <literal>'*'</literal>.</para> |
| |
| <para>If you really want to write suppressions by hand, read |
| the manual carefully. Note particularly that C++ function |
| names must be <literal>_mangled_</literal>.</para> |
| </answer> |
| </qandaentry> |
| |
| |
| <qandaentry id="faq.deflost"> |
| <question> |
| <para>With Memcheck/Addrcheck's memory leak detector, what's |
| the difference between "definitely lost", "possibly lost", |
| "still reachable", and "suppressed"?</para> |
| </question> |
| <answer> |
| <para>The details are in the Manual: |
| <ulink url="http://www.valgrind.org/docs/bookset/mc-manual.leaks.html">Memory leak detection</ulink>.</para> |
| |
| <para>In short:</para> |
| <itemizedlist> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>"definitely lost" means your program is leaking memory |
| -- fix it!</para> |
| </listitem> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>"possibly lost" means your program is probably leaking |
| memory, unless you're doing funny things with |
| pointers.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>"still reachable" means your program is probably ok -- |
| it didn't free some memory it could have. This is quite |
| common and often reasonable. Don't use |
| <computeroutput>--show-reachable=yes</computeroutput> if you |
| don't want to see these reports.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>"suppressed" means that a leak error has been |
| suppressed. There are some suppressions in the default |
| suppression files. You can ignore suppressed errors.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </itemizedlist> |
| </answer> |
| </qandaentry> |
| |
| |
| </qandaset> |
| </chapter> |
| |
| |
| <!-- template |
| <chapter id="faq." |
| xreflabel="xx"> |
| <title>xx</title> |
| <qandaset id="qset."> |
| |
| <qandaentry id="faq.deflost"> |
| <question> |
| <para></para> |
| </question> |
| <answer> |
| <para></para> |
| </answer> |
| </qandaentry> |
| |
| </qandaset> |
| </chapter> |
| --> |
| |
| |
| |
| <chapter id="faq.help" xreflabel="How To Get Further Assistance"> |
| <title>How To Get Further Assistance</title> |
| |
| |
| <para>Please read all of this section before posting.</para> |
| |
| <para>If you think an answer is incomplete or inaccurate, please |
| e-mail <ulink url="mailto:&vg-vemail;">&vg-vemail;</ulink>.</para> |
| |
| <para>Read the appropriate section(s) of the Manual(s): |
| <ulink url="http://www.valgrind.org/docs/">Valgrind |
| Documentation</ulink>.</para> |
| |
| <para>Read the <ulink url="http://www.valgrind.org/docs/">Distribution Documents</ulink>.</para> |
| |
| <para><ulink url="http://search.gmane.org">Search</ulink> the |
| <ulink url="http://news.gmane.org/gmane.comp.debugging.valgrind">valgrind-users</ulink> mailing list archives, using the group name |
| <computeroutput>gmane.comp.debugging.valgrind</computeroutput>.</para> |
| |
| <para>Only when you have tried all of these things and are still stuck, |
| should you post to the <ulink url="&vg-users-list;">valgrind-users |
| mailing list</ulink>. In which case, please read the following |
| carefully. Making a complete posting will greatly increase the chances |
| that an expert or fellow user reading it will have enough information |
| and motivation to reply.</para> |
| |
| <para>Make sure you give full details of the problem, |
| including the full output of <computeroutput>valgrind |
| -v</computeroutput>, if applicable. Also which Linux distribution |
| you're using (Red Hat, Debian, etc) and its version number.</para> |
| |
| <para>You are in little danger of making your posting too long |
| unless you include large chunks of valgrind's (unsuppressed) |
| output, so err on the side of giving too much information.</para> |
| |
| <para>Clearly written subject lines and message bodies are appreciated, |
| too.</para> |
| |
| <para>Finally, remember that, despite the fact that most of the |
| community are very helpful and responsive to emailed questions, |
| you are probably requesting help from unpaid volunteers, so you |
| have no guarantee of receiving an answer.</para> |
| |
| </chapter> |
| |
| </book> |