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njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001<?xml version="1.0"?> <!-- -*- sgml -*- -->
2<!DOCTYPE chapter PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.2//EN"
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00003 "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd">
4
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00005
njn05a89172009-07-29 02:36:21 +00006<chapter id="mc-manual" xreflabel="Memcheck: a memory error detector">
7<title>Memcheck: a memory error detector</title>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00008
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00009<para>To use this tool, you may specify <option>--tool=memcheck</option>
10on the Valgrind command line. You don't have to, though, since Memcheck
11is the default tool.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +000012
13
njn05a89172009-07-29 02:36:21 +000014<sect1 id="mc-manual.overview" xreflabel="Overview">
15<title>Overview</title>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +000016
njn05a89172009-07-29 02:36:21 +000017<para>Memcheck is a memory error detector. It can detect the following
18problems that are common in C and C++ programs.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +000019
20<itemizedlist>
21 <listitem>
njn05a89172009-07-29 02:36:21 +000022 <para>Accessing memory you shouldn't, e.g. overrunning and underrunning
23 heap blocks, overrunning the top of the stack, and accessing memory after
24 it has been freed.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +000025 </listitem>
njn05a89172009-07-29 02:36:21 +000026
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +000027 <listitem>
njn05a89172009-07-29 02:36:21 +000028 <para>Using undefined values, i.e. values that have not been initialised,
29 or that have been derived from other undefined values.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +000030 </listitem>
njn05a89172009-07-29 02:36:21 +000031
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +000032 <listitem>
njn05a89172009-07-29 02:36:21 +000033 <para>Incorrect freeing of heap memory, such as double-freeing heap
34 blocks, or mismatched use of
bartaf25f672009-06-26 19:03:53 +000035 <function>malloc</function>/<computeroutput>new</computeroutput>/<computeroutput>new[]</computeroutput>
36 versus
37 <function>free</function>/<computeroutput>delete</computeroutput>/<computeroutput>delete[]</computeroutput></para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +000038 </listitem>
njn05a89172009-07-29 02:36:21 +000039
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +000040 <listitem>
41 <para>Overlapping <computeroutput>src</computeroutput> and
42 <computeroutput>dst</computeroutput> pointers in
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +000043 <computeroutput>memcpy</computeroutput> and related
njn05a89172009-07-29 02:36:21 +000044 functions.</para>
45 </listitem>
46
47 <listitem>
48 <para>Memory leaks.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +000049 </listitem>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +000050</itemizedlist>
51
njn05a89172009-07-29 02:36:21 +000052<para>Problems like these can be difficult to find by other means,
53often remaining undetected for long periods, then causing occasional,
54difficult-to-diagnose crashes.</para>
55
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +000056</sect1>
57
58
59
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +000060<sect1 id="mc-manual.errormsgs"
61 xreflabel="Explanation of error messages from Memcheck">
62<title>Explanation of error messages from Memcheck</title>
63
njnc1abdcb2009-08-05 05:11:02 +000064<para>Memcheck issues a range of error messages. This section presents a
65quick summary of what error messages mean. The precise behaviour of the
66error-checking machinery is described in <xref
67linkend="mc-manual.machine"/>.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +000068
69
70<sect2 id="mc-manual.badrw"
71 xreflabel="Illegal read / Illegal write errors">
72<title>Illegal read / Illegal write errors</title>
73
74<para>For example:</para>
75<programlisting><![CDATA[
76Invalid read of size 4
77 at 0x40F6BBCC: (within /usr/lib/libpng.so.2.1.0.9)
78 by 0x40F6B804: (within /usr/lib/libpng.so.2.1.0.9)
sewardj08e31e22007-05-23 21:58:33 +000079 by 0x40B07FF4: read_png_image(QImageIO *) (kernel/qpngio.cpp:326)
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +000080 by 0x40AC751B: QImageIO::read() (kernel/qimage.cpp:3621)
njn21f91952005-03-12 22:14:42 +000081 Address 0xBFFFF0E0 is not stack'd, malloc'd or free'd
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +000082]]></programlisting>
83
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +000084<para>This happens when your program reads or writes memory at a place
85which Memcheck reckons it shouldn't. In this example, the program did a
864-byte read at address 0xBFFFF0E0, somewhere within the system-supplied
87library libpng.so.2.1.0.9, which was called from somewhere else in the
88same library, called from line 326 of <filename>qpngio.cpp</filename>,
89and so on.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +000090
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +000091<para>Memcheck tries to establish what the illegal address might relate
92to, since that's often useful. So, if it points into a block of memory
93which has already been freed, you'll be informed of this, and also where
njn7316df22009-08-04 01:16:01 +000094the block was freed. Likewise, if it should turn out to be just off
95the end of a heap block, a common result of off-by-one-errors in
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +000096array subscripting, you'll be informed of this fact, and also where the
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +000097block was allocated. If you use the <option><xref
98linkend="opt.read-var-info"/></option> option Memcheck will run more slowly
99but may give a more detailed description of any illegal address.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000100
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +0000101<para>In this example, Memcheck can't identify the address. Actually
102the address is on the stack, but, for some reason, this is not a valid
103stack address -- it is below the stack pointer and that isn't allowed.
njn7316df22009-08-04 01:16:01 +0000104In this particular case it's probably caused by GCC generating invalid
105code, a known bug in some ancient versions of GCC.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000106
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +0000107<para>Note that Memcheck only tells you that your program is about to
108access memory at an illegal address. It can't stop the access from
109happening. So, if your program makes an access which normally would
110result in a segmentation fault, you program will still suffer the same
111fate -- but you will get a message from Memcheck immediately prior to
112this. In this particular example, reading junk on the stack is
113non-fatal, and the program stays alive.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000114
115</sect2>
116
117
118
119<sect2 id="mc-manual.uninitvals"
120 xreflabel="Use of uninitialised values">
121<title>Use of uninitialised values</title>
122
123<para>For example:</para>
124<programlisting><![CDATA[
125Conditional jump or move depends on uninitialised value(s)
126 at 0x402DFA94: _IO_vfprintf (_itoa.h:49)
127 by 0x402E8476: _IO_printf (printf.c:36)
128 by 0x8048472: main (tests/manuel1.c:8)
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000129]]></programlisting>
130
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +0000131<para>An uninitialised-value use error is reported when your program
132uses a value which hasn't been initialised -- in other words, is
133undefined. Here, the undefined value is used somewhere inside the
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +0000134<function>printf</function> machinery of the C library. This error was
135reported when running the following small program:</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000136<programlisting><![CDATA[
137int main()
138{
139 int x;
140 printf ("x = %d\n", x);
141}]]></programlisting>
142
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +0000143<para>It is important to understand that your program can copy around
144junk (uninitialised) data as much as it likes. Memcheck observes this
145and keeps track of the data, but does not complain. A complaint is
146issued only when your program attempts to make use of uninitialised
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +0000147data in a way that might affect your program's externally-visible behaviour.
148In this example, <varname>x</varname> is uninitialised. Memcheck observes
149the value being passed to <function>_IO_printf</function> and thence to
150<function>_IO_vfprintf</function>, but makes no comment. However,
151<function>_IO_vfprintf</function> has to examine the value of
152<varname>x</varname> so it can turn it into the corresponding ASCII string,
153and it is at this point that Memcheck complains.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000154
155<para>Sources of uninitialised data tend to be:</para>
156<itemizedlist>
157 <listitem>
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +0000158 <para>Local variables in procedures which have not been initialised,
159 as in the example above.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000160 </listitem>
161 <listitem>
njn7316df22009-08-04 01:16:01 +0000162 <para>The contents of heap blocks (allocated with
163 <function>malloc</function>, <function>new</function>, or a similar
164 function) before you (or a constructor) write something there.
165 </para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000166 </listitem>
167</itemizedlist>
168
sewardjcd0f2bd2008-05-04 23:06:28 +0000169<para>To see information on the sources of uninitialised data in your
njna3311642009-08-10 01:29:14 +0000170program, use the <option>--track-origins=yes</option> option. This
sewardjcd0f2bd2008-05-04 23:06:28 +0000171makes Memcheck run more slowly, but can make it much easier to track down
172the root causes of uninitialised value errors.</para>
173
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000174</sect2>
175
176
177
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +0000178<sect2 id="mc-manual.bad-syscall-args"
179 xreflabel="Use of uninitialised or unaddressable values in system
180 calls">
181<title>Use of uninitialised or unaddressable values in system
182 calls</title>
183
184<para>Memcheck checks all parameters to system calls:
185<itemizedlist>
186 <listitem>
187 <para>It checks all the direct parameters themselves, whether they are
188 initialised.</para>
189 </listitem>
190 <listitem>
191 <para>Also, if a system call needs to read from a buffer provided by
192 your program, Memcheck checks that the entire buffer is addressable
193 and its contents are initialised.</para>
194 </listitem>
195 <listitem>
196 <para>Also, if the system call needs to write to a user-supplied
197 buffer, Memcheck checks that the buffer is addressable.</para>
198 </listitem>
199</itemizedlist>
200</para>
201
202<para>After the system call, Memcheck updates its tracked information to
203precisely reflect any changes in memory state caused by the system
204call.</para>
205
206<para>Here's an example of two system calls with invalid parameters:</para>
207<programlisting><![CDATA[
208 #include <stdlib.h>
209 #include <unistd.h>
210 int main( void )
211 {
212 char* arr = malloc(10);
213 int* arr2 = malloc(sizeof(int));
214 write( 1 /* stdout */, arr, 10 );
215 exit(arr2[0]);
216 }
217]]></programlisting>
218
219<para>You get these complaints ...</para>
220<programlisting><![CDATA[
221 Syscall param write(buf) points to uninitialised byte(s)
222 at 0x25A48723: __write_nocancel (in /lib/tls/libc-2.3.3.so)
223 by 0x259AFAD3: __libc_start_main (in /lib/tls/libc-2.3.3.so)
224 by 0x8048348: (within /auto/homes/njn25/grind/head4/a.out)
225 Address 0x25AB8028 is 0 bytes inside a block of size 10 alloc'd
226 at 0x259852B0: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:130)
227 by 0x80483F1: main (a.c:5)
228
229 Syscall param exit(error_code) contains uninitialised byte(s)
230 at 0x25A21B44: __GI__exit (in /lib/tls/libc-2.3.3.so)
231 by 0x8048426: main (a.c:8)
232]]></programlisting>
233
234<para>... because the program has (a) written uninitialised junk
235from the heap block to the standard output, and (b) passed an
236uninitialised value to <function>exit</function>. Note that the first
237error refers to the memory pointed to by
238<computeroutput>buf</computeroutput> (not
239<computeroutput>buf</computeroutput> itself), but the second error
240refers directly to <computeroutput>exit</computeroutput>'s argument
241<computeroutput>arr2[0]</computeroutput>.</para>
242
243</sect2>
244
245
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000246<sect2 id="mc-manual.badfrees" xreflabel="Illegal frees">
247<title>Illegal frees</title>
248
249<para>For example:</para>
250<programlisting><![CDATA[
251Invalid free()
252 at 0x4004FFDF: free (vg_clientmalloc.c:577)
253 by 0x80484C7: main (tests/doublefree.c:10)
njn21f91952005-03-12 22:14:42 +0000254 Address 0x3807F7B4 is 0 bytes inside a block of size 177 free'd
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000255 at 0x4004FFDF: free (vg_clientmalloc.c:577)
256 by 0x80484C7: main (tests/doublefree.c:10)
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000257]]></programlisting>
258
bartaf25f672009-06-26 19:03:53 +0000259<para>Memcheck keeps track of the blocks allocated by your program
260with <function>malloc</function>/<computeroutput>new</computeroutput>,
261so it can know exactly whether or not the argument to
262<function>free</function>/<computeroutput>delete</computeroutput> is
263legitimate or not. Here, this test program has freed the same block
264twice. As with the illegal read/write errors, Memcheck attempts to
njn7316df22009-08-04 01:16:01 +0000265make sense of the address freed. If, as here, the address is one
bartaf25f672009-06-26 19:03:53 +0000266which has previously been freed, you wil be told that -- making
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +0000267duplicate frees of the same block easy to spot. You will also get this
268message if you try to free a pointer that doesn't point to the start of a
269heap block.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000270
271</sect2>
272
273
274<sect2 id="mc-manual.rudefn"
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +0000275 xreflabel="When a heap block is freed with an inappropriate deallocation
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000276function">
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +0000277<title>When a heap block is freed with an inappropriate deallocation
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000278function</title>
279
280<para>In the following example, a block allocated with
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +0000281<function>new[]</function> has wrongly been deallocated with
282<function>free</function>:</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000283<programlisting><![CDATA[
284Mismatched free() / delete / delete []
285 at 0x40043249: free (vg_clientfuncs.c:171)
286 by 0x4102BB4E: QGArray::~QGArray(void) (tools/qgarray.cpp:149)
287 by 0x4C261C41: PptDoc::~PptDoc(void) (include/qmemarray.h:60)
288 by 0x4C261F0E: PptXml::~PptXml(void) (pptxml.cc:44)
njn21f91952005-03-12 22:14:42 +0000289 Address 0x4BB292A8 is 0 bytes inside a block of size 64 alloc'd
sewardj08e31e22007-05-23 21:58:33 +0000290 at 0x4004318C: operator new[](unsigned int) (vg_clientfuncs.c:152)
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000291 by 0x4C21BC15: KLaola::readSBStream(int) const (klaola.cc:314)
292 by 0x4C21C155: KLaola::stream(KLaola::OLENode const *) (klaola.cc:416)
293 by 0x4C21788F: OLEFilter::convert(QCString const &) (olefilter.cc:272)
294]]></programlisting>
295
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +0000296<para>In <literal>C++</literal> it's important to deallocate memory in a
297way compatible with how it was allocated. The deal is:</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000298<itemizedlist>
299 <listitem>
300 <para>If allocated with
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +0000301 <function>malloc</function>,
302 <function>calloc</function>,
303 <function>realloc</function>,
304 <function>valloc</function> or
305 <function>memalign</function>, you must
306 deallocate with <function>free</function>.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000307 </listitem>
308 <listitem>
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +0000309 <para>If allocated with <function>new</function>, you must deallocate
310 with <function>delete</function>.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000311 </listitem>
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +0000312 <listitem>
313 <para>If allocated with <function>new[]</function>, you must
314 deallocate with <function>delete[]</function>.</para>
315 </listitem>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000316</itemizedlist>
317
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +0000318<para>The worst thing is that on Linux apparently it doesn't matter if
sewardj08e31e22007-05-23 21:58:33 +0000319you do mix these up, but the same program may then crash on a
320different platform, Solaris for example. So it's best to fix it
321properly. According to the KDE folks "it's amazing how many C++
322programmers don't know this".</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000323
sewardj08e31e22007-05-23 21:58:33 +0000324<para>The reason behind the requirement is as follows. In some C++
325implementations, <function>delete[]</function> must be used for
326objects allocated by <function>new[]</function> because the compiler
327stores the size of the array and the pointer-to-member to the
328destructor of the array's content just before the pointer actually
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +0000329returned. <function>delete</function> doesn't account for this and will get
330confused, possibly corrupting the heap.</para>
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +0000331
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000332</sect2>
333
334
335
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000336<sect2 id="mc-manual.overlap"
337 xreflabel="Overlapping source and destination blocks">
338<title>Overlapping source and destination blocks</title>
339
340<para>The following C library functions copy some data from one
341memory block to another (or something similar):
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +0000342<function>memcpy</function>,
343<function>strcpy</function>,
344<function>strncpy</function>,
345<function>strcat</function>,
346<function>strncat</function>.
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +0000347The blocks pointed to by their <computeroutput>src</computeroutput> and
348<computeroutput>dst</computeroutput> pointers aren't allowed to overlap.
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +0000349The POSIX standards have wording along the lines "If copying takes place
350between objects that overlap, the behavior is undefined." Therefore,
351Memcheck checks for this.
352</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000353
354<para>For example:</para>
355<programlisting><![CDATA[
356==27492== Source and destination overlap in memcpy(0xbffff294, 0xbffff280, 21)
357==27492== at 0x40026CDC: memcpy (mc_replace_strmem.c:71)
358==27492== by 0x804865A: main (overlap.c:40)
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000359]]></programlisting>
360
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +0000361<para>You don't want the two blocks to overlap because one of them could
sewardj08e31e22007-05-23 21:58:33 +0000362get partially overwritten by the copying.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000363
njnccad0b82005-07-19 00:48:55 +0000364<para>You might think that Memcheck is being overly pedantic reporting
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +0000365this in the case where <computeroutput>dst</computeroutput> is less than
366<computeroutput>src</computeroutput>. For example, the obvious way to
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +0000367implement <function>memcpy</function> is by copying from the first
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +0000368byte to the last. However, the optimisation guides of some
369architectures recommend copying from the last byte down to the first.
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +0000370Also, some implementations of <function>memcpy</function> zero
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +0000371<computeroutput>dst</computeroutput> before copying, because zeroing the
372destination's cache line(s) can improve performance.</para>
njnccad0b82005-07-19 00:48:55 +0000373
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +0000374<para>The moral of the story is: if you want to write truly portable
375code, don't make any assumptions about the language
376implementation.</para>
njnccad0b82005-07-19 00:48:55 +0000377
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000378</sect2>
379
380
njnab5b7142005-08-16 02:20:17 +0000381<sect2 id="mc-manual.leaks" xreflabel="Memory leak detection">
382<title>Memory leak detection</title>
383
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +0000384<para>Memcheck keeps track of all heap blocks issued in response to
bartaf25f672009-06-26 19:03:53 +0000385calls to
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +0000386<function>malloc</function>/<function>new</function> et al.
bartaf25f672009-06-26 19:03:53 +0000387So when the program exits, it knows which blocks have not been freed.
njnab5b7142005-08-16 02:20:17 +0000388</para>
389
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +0000390<para>If <option>--leak-check</option> is set appropriately, for each
njn8225cc02009-03-09 22:52:24 +0000391remaining block, Memcheck determines if the block is reachable from pointers
392within the root-set. The root-set consists of (a) general purpose registers
393of all threads, and (b) initialised, aligned, pointer-sized data words in
394accessible client memory, including stacks.</para>
395
396<para>There are two ways a block can be reached. The first is with a
njn389f5702009-07-15 07:18:16 +0000397"start-pointer", i.e. a pointer to the start of the block. The second is with
398an "interior-pointer", i.e. a pointer to the middle of the block. There are
philippeab1fce92013-09-29 13:47:32 +0000399several ways we know of that an interior-pointer can occur:</para>
njn389f5702009-07-15 07:18:16 +0000400
401<itemizedlist>
402 <listitem>
403 <para>The pointer might have originally been a start-pointer and have been
njn7c02ba72011-01-04 23:46:07 +0000404 moved along deliberately (or not deliberately) by the program. In
405 particular, this can happen if your program uses tagged pointers, i.e.
406 if it uses the bottom one, two or three bits of a pointer, which are
407 normally always zero due to alignment, in order to store extra
408 information.</para>
njn389f5702009-07-15 07:18:16 +0000409 </listitem>
410
411 <listitem>
412 <para>It might be a random junk value in memory, entirely unrelated, just
413 a coincidence.</para>
414 </listitem>
415
416 <listitem>
417 <para>It might be a pointer to an array of C++ objects (which possess
418 destructors) allocated with <computeroutput>new[]</computeroutput>. In
419 this case, some compilers store a "magic cookie" containing the array
420 length at the start of the allocated block, and return a pointer to just
421 past that magic cookie, i.e. an interior-pointer.
422 See <ulink url="http://theory.uwinnipeg.ca/gnu/gcc/gxxint_14.html">this
423 page</ulink> for more information.</para>
424 </listitem>
philippeab1fce92013-09-29 13:47:32 +0000425
426 <listitem>
427 <para>It might be a pointer to the inner char array of a C++
428 <computeroutput>std::string</computeroutput>. For example, some
429 compilers add 3 words at the beginning of the std::string to
430 store the length, the capacity and a reference count before the
431 memory containing the array of characters. They return a pointer
432 just after these 3 words, pointing at the char array.</para>
433 </listitem>
434
435 <listitem>
436 <para>It might be a pointer to an inner part of a C++ object using
437 multiple inheritance. </para>
438 </listitem>
bart9d6d2a92009-07-19 09:19:58 +0000439</itemizedlist>
njn8225cc02009-03-09 22:52:24 +0000440
philippeab1fce92013-09-29 13:47:32 +0000441<para>You can optionally activate heuristics to use during the leak
442search to detect the interior pointers corresponding to
443the <computeroutput>newarray</computeroutput>,
444<computeroutput>stdstring</computeroutput> and
445<computeroutput>multipleinheritance</computeroutput> cases. If the
446heuristic detects that an interior pointer corresponds to such a case,
447the block will be considered as reachable by the interior
448pointer. In other words, the interior pointer will be treated
449as if it were a start pointer.</para>
450
451
njn8225cc02009-03-09 22:52:24 +0000452<para>With that in mind, consider the nine possible cases described by the
453following figure.</para>
454
455<programlisting><![CDATA[
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000456 Pointer chain AAA Leak Case BBB Leak Case
457 ------------- ------------- -------------
njn8225cc02009-03-09 22:52:24 +0000458(1) RRR ------------> BBB DR
459(2) RRR ---> AAA ---> BBB DR IR
460(3) RRR BBB DL
461(4) RRR AAA ---> BBB DL IL
462(5) RRR ------?-----> BBB (y)DR, (n)DL
463(6) RRR ---> AAA -?-> BBB DR (y)IR, (n)DL
464(7) RRR -?-> AAA ---> BBB (y)DR, (n)DL (y)IR, (n)IL
465(8) RRR -?-> AAA -?-> BBB (y)DR, (n)DL (y,y)IR, (n,y)IL, (_,n)DL
466(9) RRR AAA -?-> BBB DL (y)IL, (n)DL
467
468Pointer chain legend:
469- RRR: a root set node or DR block
470- AAA, BBB: heap blocks
471- --->: a start-pointer
472- -?->: an interior-pointer
473
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000474Leak Case legend:
njn8225cc02009-03-09 22:52:24 +0000475- DR: Directly reachable
476- IR: Indirectly reachable
477- DL: Directly lost
478- IL: Indirectly lost
479- (y)XY: it's XY if the interior-pointer is a real pointer
480- (n)XY: it's XY if the interior-pointer is not a real pointer
481- (_)XY: it's XY in either case
482]]></programlisting>
483
484<para>Every possible case can be reduced to one of the above nine. Memcheck
485merges some of these cases in its output, resulting in the following four
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000486leak kinds.</para>
njn8225cc02009-03-09 22:52:24 +0000487
njnab5b7142005-08-16 02:20:17 +0000488
489<itemizedlist>
490
491 <listitem>
njn8225cc02009-03-09 22:52:24 +0000492 <para>"Still reachable". This covers cases 1 and 2 (for the BBB blocks)
493 above. A start-pointer or chain of start-pointers to the block is
494 found. Since the block is still pointed at, the programmer could, at
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000495 least in principle, have freed it before program exit. "Still reachable"
496 blocks are very common and arguably not a problem. So, by default,
497 Memcheck won't report such blocks individually.</para>
njnab5b7142005-08-16 02:20:17 +0000498 </listitem>
499
500 <listitem>
njn8225cc02009-03-09 22:52:24 +0000501 <para>"Definitely lost". This covers case 3 (for the BBB blocks) above.
502 This means that no pointer to the block can be found. The block is
503 classified as "lost", because the programmer could not possibly have
504 freed it at program exit, since no pointer to it exists. This is likely
505 a symptom of having lost the pointer at some earlier point in the
506 program. Such cases should be fixed by the programmer.</para>
njnab5b7142005-08-16 02:20:17 +0000507 </listitem>
508
njn8225cc02009-03-09 22:52:24 +0000509 <listitem>
510 <para>"Indirectly lost". This covers cases 4 and 9 (for the BBB blocks)
511 above. This means that the block is lost, not because there are no
512 pointers to it, but rather because all the blocks that point to it are
513 themselves lost. For example, if you have a binary tree and the root
514 node is lost, all its children nodes will be indirectly lost. Because
515 the problem will disappear if the definitely lost block that caused the
516 indirect leak is fixed, Memcheck won't report such blocks individually
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000517 by default.</para>
njn8225cc02009-03-09 22:52:24 +0000518 </listitem>
519
520 <listitem>
521 <para>"Possibly lost". This covers cases 5--8 (for the BBB blocks)
522 above. This means that a chain of one or more pointers to the block has
523 been found, but at least one of the pointers is an interior-pointer.
524 This could just be a random value in memory that happens to point into a
525 block, and so you shouldn't consider this ok unless you know you have
526 interior-pointers.</para>
527 </listitem>
528
njnab5b7142005-08-16 02:20:17 +0000529</itemizedlist>
530
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000531<para>(Note: This mapping of the nine possible cases onto four leak kinds is
njn8225cc02009-03-09 22:52:24 +0000532not necessarily the best way that leaks could be reported; in particular,
533interior-pointers are treated inconsistently. It is possible the
534categorisation may be improved in the future.)</para>
535
536<para>Furthermore, if suppressions exists for a block, it will be reported
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000537as "suppressed" no matter what which of the above four kinds it belongs
njn8225cc02009-03-09 22:52:24 +0000538to.</para>
539
540
541<para>The following is an example leak summary.</para>
542
543<programlisting><![CDATA[
544LEAK SUMMARY:
545 definitely lost: 48 bytes in 3 blocks.
546 indirectly lost: 32 bytes in 2 blocks.
547 possibly lost: 96 bytes in 6 blocks.
548 still reachable: 64 bytes in 4 blocks.
549 suppressed: 0 bytes in 0 blocks.
550]]></programlisting>
551
philippeab1fce92013-09-29 13:47:32 +0000552<para>If heuristics have been used to consider some blocks as
553reachable, the leak summary details the heuristically reachable subset
554of 'still reachable:' per heuristic. In the below example, of the 79
555bytes still reachable, 71 bytes (56+7+8) have been considered
556heuristically reachable.
557</para>
558
559<programlisting><![CDATA[
560LEAK SUMMARY:
561 definitely lost: 4 bytes in 1 blocks
562 indirectly lost: 0 bytes in 0 blocks
563 possibly lost: 0 bytes in 0 blocks
564 still reachable: 79 bytes in 5 blocks
565 of which reachable via heuristic:
566 stdstring : 56 bytes in 2 blocks
567 newarray : 7 bytes in 1 blocks
568 multipleinheritance: 8 bytes in 1 blocks
569 suppressed: 0 bytes in 0 blocks
570]]></programlisting>
571
njn7e5d4ed2009-07-30 02:57:52 +0000572<para>If <option>--leak-check=full</option> is specified,
njn8225cc02009-03-09 22:52:24 +0000573Memcheck will give details for each definitely lost or possibly lost block,
njn62dd9fa2009-03-10 21:40:46 +0000574including where it was allocated. (Actually, it merges results for all
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000575blocks that have the same leak kind and sufficiently similar stack traces
njn62dd9fa2009-03-10 21:40:46 +0000576into a single "loss record". The
njn7e5d4ed2009-07-30 02:57:52 +0000577<option>--leak-resolution</option> lets you control the
njn62dd9fa2009-03-10 21:40:46 +0000578meaning of "sufficiently similar".) It cannot tell you when or how or why
579the pointer to a leaked block was lost; you have to work that out for
580yourself. In general, you should attempt to ensure your programs do not
581have any definitely lost or possibly lost blocks at exit.</para>
njnab5b7142005-08-16 02:20:17 +0000582
583<para>For example:</para>
584<programlisting><![CDATA[
5858 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 1 of 14
586 at 0x........: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:...)
587 by 0x........: mk (leak-tree.c:11)
588 by 0x........: main (leak-tree.c:39)
589
njn8225cc02009-03-09 22:52:24 +000059088 (8 direct, 80 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 13 of 14
njnab5b7142005-08-16 02:20:17 +0000591 at 0x........: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:...)
592 by 0x........: mk (leak-tree.c:11)
593 by 0x........: main (leak-tree.c:25)
594]]></programlisting>
595
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +0000596<para>The first message describes a simple case of a single 8 byte block
njn8225cc02009-03-09 22:52:24 +0000597that has been definitely lost. The second case mentions another 8 byte
598block that has been definitely lost; the difference is that a further 80
njn62dd9fa2009-03-10 21:40:46 +0000599bytes in other blocks are indirectly lost because of this lost block.
600The loss records are not presented in any notable order, so the loss record
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000601numbers aren't particularly meaningful. The loss record numbers can be used
602in the Valgrind gdbserver to list the addresses of the leaked blocks and/or give
603more details about how a block is still reachable.</para>
njnab5b7142005-08-16 02:20:17 +0000604
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000605<para>The option <option>--show-leak-kinds=&lt;set&gt;</option>
606controls the set of leak kinds to show
sewardj4c7254d2013-11-29 23:08:28 +0000607when <option>--leak-check=full</option> is specified. </para>
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000608
sewardj4c7254d2013-11-29 23:08:28 +0000609<para>The <option>&lt;set&gt;</option> of leak kinds is specified
610in one of the following ways:
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000611
612<itemizedlist>
mjw4229cbd2013-12-12 21:20:48 +0000613 <listitem><para>a comma separated list of one or more of
614 <option>definite indirect possible reachable</option>.</para>
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000615 </listitem>
616
mjw4229cbd2013-12-12 21:20:48 +0000617 <listitem><para><option>all</option> to specify the complete set (all leak kinds).</para>
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000618 </listitem>
619
mjw4229cbd2013-12-12 21:20:48 +0000620 <listitem><para><option>none</option> for the empty set.</para>
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000621 </listitem>
622</itemizedlist>
623
624</para>
625
626<para> The default value for the leak kinds to show is
627 <option>--show-leak-kinds=definite,possible</option>.
628</para>
629
sewardj4c7254d2013-11-29 23:08:28 +0000630<para>To also show the reachable and indirectly lost blocks in
631addition to the definitely and possibly lost blocks, you can
632use <option>--show-leak-kinds=all</option>. To only show the
633reachable and indirectly lost blocks, use
634<option>--show-leak-kinds=indirect,reachable</option>. The reachable
635and indirectly lost blocks will then be presented as shown in
636the following two examples.</para>
njn8225cc02009-03-09 22:52:24 +0000637
638<programlisting><![CDATA[
63964 bytes in 4 blocks are still reachable in loss record 2 of 4
640 at 0x........: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:177)
641 by 0x........: mk (leak-cases.c:52)
642 by 0x........: main (leak-cases.c:74)
643
64432 bytes in 2 blocks are indirectly lost in loss record 1 of 4
645 at 0x........: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:177)
646 by 0x........: mk (leak-cases.c:52)
647 by 0x........: main (leak-cases.c:80)
648]]></programlisting>
njnab5b7142005-08-16 02:20:17 +0000649
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000650<para>Because there are different kinds of leaks with different
sewardj4c7254d2013-11-29 23:08:28 +0000651severities, an interesting question is: which leaks should be
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000652counted as true "errors" and which should not?
653</para>
njn26670552009-08-13 00:02:30 +0000654
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000655<para> The answer to this question affects the numbers printed in
656the <computeroutput>ERROR SUMMARY</computeroutput> line, and also the
657effect of the <option>--error-exitcode</option> option. First, a leak
658is only counted as a true "error"
659if <option>--leak-check=full</option> is specified. Then, the
660option <option>--errors-for-leak-kinds=&lt;set&gt;</option> controls
661the set of leak kinds to consider as errors. The default value
662is <option>--errors-for-leak-kinds=definite,possible</option>
663</para>
njn26670552009-08-13 00:02:30 +0000664
njnab5b7142005-08-16 02:20:17 +0000665</sect2>
666
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +0000667</sect1>
668
669
670
njna3311642009-08-10 01:29:14 +0000671<sect1 id="mc-manual.options"
672 xreflabel="Memcheck Command-Line Options">
673<title>Memcheck Command-Line Options</title>
njnc1abdcb2009-08-05 05:11:02 +0000674
675<!-- start of xi:include in the manpage -->
676<variablelist id="mc.opts.list">
677
678 <varlistentry id="opt.leak-check" xreflabel="--leak-check">
679 <term>
680 <option><![CDATA[--leak-check=<no|summary|yes|full> [default: summary] ]]></option>
681 </term>
682 <listitem>
683 <para>When enabled, search for memory leaks when the client
684 program finishes. If set to <varname>summary</varname>, it says how
685 many leaks occurred. If set to <varname>full</varname> or
686 <varname>yes</varname>, it also gives details of each individual
687 leak.</para>
688 </listitem>
689 </varlistentry>
690
691 <varlistentry id="opt.leak-resolution" xreflabel="--leak-resolution">
692 <term>
693 <option><![CDATA[--leak-resolution=<low|med|high> [default: high] ]]></option>
694 </term>
695 <listitem>
696 <para>When doing leak checking, determines how willing
697 Memcheck is to consider different backtraces to
698 be the same for the purposes of merging multiple leaks into a single
699 leak report. When set to <varname>low</varname>, only the first
700 two entries need match. When <varname>med</varname>, four entries
701 have to match. When <varname>high</varname>, all entries need to
702 match.</para>
703
704 <para>For hardcore leak debugging, you probably want to use
705 <option>--leak-resolution=high</option> together with
706 <option>--num-callers=40</option> or some such large number.
707 </para>
708
709 <para>Note that the <option>--leak-resolution</option> setting
710 does not affect Memcheck's ability to find
711 leaks. It only changes how the results are presented.</para>
712 </listitem>
713 </varlistentry>
714
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000715 <varlistentry id="opt.show-leak-kinds" xreflabel="--show-leak-kinds">
njnc1abdcb2009-08-05 05:11:02 +0000716 <term>
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000717 <option><![CDATA[--show-leak-kinds=<set> [default: definite,possible] ]]></option>
njnc1abdcb2009-08-05 05:11:02 +0000718 </term>
719 <listitem>
sewardj4c7254d2013-11-29 23:08:28 +0000720 <para>Specifies the leak kinds to show in a full leak search, in
philippee52e4452013-12-12 23:19:13 +0000721 one of the following ways: </para>
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000722
philippee52e4452013-12-12 23:19:13 +0000723 <itemizedlist>
724 <listitem><para>a comma separated list of one or more of
mjw4229cbd2013-12-12 21:20:48 +0000725 <option>definite indirect possible reachable</option>.</para>
philippee52e4452013-12-12 23:19:13 +0000726 </listitem>
727
728 <listitem><para><option>all</option> to specify the complete set (all leak kinds).
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000729 It is equivalent to
mjw4229cbd2013-12-12 21:20:48 +0000730 <option>--show-leak-kinds=definite,indirect,possible,reachable</option>.</para>
philippee52e4452013-12-12 23:19:13 +0000731 </listitem>
732
733 <listitem><para><option>none</option> for the empty set.</para>
734 </listitem>
735 </itemizedlist>
njnc1abdcb2009-08-05 05:11:02 +0000736 </listitem>
737 </varlistentry>
738
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000739
740 <varlistentry id="opt.errors-for-leak-kinds" xreflabel="--errors-for-leak-kinds">
741 <term>
742 <option><![CDATA[--errors-for-leak-kinds=<set> [default: definite,possible] ]]></option>
743 </term>
744 <listitem>
745 <para>Specifies the leak kinds to count as errors in a full leak search. The
746 <option><![CDATA[<set>]]></option> is specified similarly to
747 <option>--show-leak-kinds</option>
748 </para>
749 </listitem>
750 </varlistentry>
751
752
philippeab1fce92013-09-29 13:47:32 +0000753 <varlistentry id="opt.leak-check-heuristics" xreflabel="--leak-check-heuristics">
754 <term>
755 <option><![CDATA[--leak-check-heuristics=<set> [default: none] ]]></option>
756 </term>
757 <listitem>
sewardj4c7254d2013-11-29 23:08:28 +0000758 <para>Specifies the set of leak check heuristics to be used
philippee52e4452013-12-12 23:19:13 +0000759 during leak searches. The heuristics control which interior pointers
sewardj4c7254d2013-11-29 23:08:28 +0000760 to a block cause it to be considered as reachable.
philippee52e4452013-12-12 23:19:13 +0000761 The heuristic set is specified in one of the following ways:</para>
philippeab1fce92013-09-29 13:47:32 +0000762
philippee52e4452013-12-12 23:19:13 +0000763 <itemizedlist>
764 <listitem><para>a comma separated list of one or more of
mjw4229cbd2013-12-12 21:20:48 +0000765 <option>stdstring newarray multipleinheritance</option>.</para>
philippee52e4452013-12-12 23:19:13 +0000766 </listitem>
philippeab1fce92013-09-29 13:47:32 +0000767
philippee52e4452013-12-12 23:19:13 +0000768 <listitem><para><option>all</option> to activate the complete set of
philippeab1fce92013-09-29 13:47:32 +0000769 heuristics.
770 It is equivalent to
mjw4229cbd2013-12-12 21:20:48 +0000771 <option>--leak-check-heuristics=stdstring,newarray,multipleinheritance</option>.</para>
philippee52e4452013-12-12 23:19:13 +0000772 </listitem>
773
774 <listitem><para><option>none</option> for the empty set.</para>
775 </listitem>
776 </itemizedlist>
777 </listitem>
philippeab1fce92013-09-29 13:47:32 +0000778
philippee52e4452013-12-12 23:19:13 +0000779 <para>Note that these heuristics are dependent on the layout of the objects
philippeab1fce92013-09-29 13:47:32 +0000780 produced by the C++ compiler. They have been tested with some gcc versions
781 (e.g. 4.4 and 4.7). They might not work properly with other C++ compilers.
philippee52e4452013-12-12 23:19:13 +0000782 </para>
philippeab1fce92013-09-29 13:47:32 +0000783 </varlistentry>
784
785
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000786 <varlistentry id="opt.show-reachable" xreflabel="--show-reachable">
787 <term>
788 <option><![CDATA[--show-reachable=<yes|no> ]]></option>
789 </term>
790 <term>
791 <option><![CDATA[--show-possibly-lost=<yes|no> ]]></option>
792 </term>
793 <listitem>
794 <para>These options provide an alternative way to specify the leak kinds to show:
philippee52e4452013-12-12 23:19:13 +0000795 </para>
796 <itemizedlist>
797 <listitem>
798 <para>
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000799 <option>--show-reachable=no --show-possibly-lost=yes</option> is equivalent to
800 <option>--show-leak-kinds=definite,possible</option>.
philippee52e4452013-12-12 23:19:13 +0000801 </para>
802 </listitem>
803 <listitem>
804 <para>
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000805 <option>--show-reachable=no --show-possibly-lost=no</option> is equivalent to
806 <option>--show-leak-kinds=definite</option>.
philippee52e4452013-12-12 23:19:13 +0000807 </para>
808 </listitem>
809 <listitem>
810 <para>
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000811 <option>--show-reachable=yes</option> is equivalent to
812 <option>--show-leak-kinds=all</option>.
philippee52e4452013-12-12 23:19:13 +0000813 </para>
814 </listitem>
815 </itemizedlist>
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000816 </listitem>
philippee52e4452013-12-12 23:19:13 +0000817 <para> Note that <option>--show-possibly-lost=no</option> has no effect
818 if <option>--show-reachable=yes</option> is specified.</para>
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +0000819 </varlistentry>
820
njnc1abdcb2009-08-05 05:11:02 +0000821 <varlistentry id="opt.undef-value-errors" xreflabel="--undef-value-errors">
822 <term>
823 <option><![CDATA[--undef-value-errors=<yes|no> [default: yes] ]]></option>
824 </term>
825 <listitem>
826 <para>Controls whether Memcheck reports
827 uses of undefined value errors. Set this to
828 <varname>no</varname> if you don't want to see undefined value
829 errors. It also has the side effect of speeding up
830 Memcheck somewhat.
831 </para>
832 </listitem>
833 </varlistentry>
834
835 <varlistentry id="opt.track-origins" xreflabel="--track-origins">
836 <term>
837 <option><![CDATA[--track-origins=<yes|no> [default: no] ]]></option>
838 </term>
839 <listitem>
840 <para>Controls whether Memcheck tracks
841 the origin of uninitialised values. By default, it does not,
842 which means that although it can tell you that an
843 uninitialised value is being used in a dangerous way, it
844 cannot tell you where the uninitialised value came from. This
845 often makes it difficult to track down the root problem.
846 </para>
847 <para>When set
848 to <varname>yes</varname>, Memcheck keeps
849 track of the origins of all uninitialised values. Then, when
850 an uninitialised value error is
851 reported, Memcheck will try to show the
852 origin of the value. An origin can be one of the following
853 four places: a heap block, a stack allocation, a client
854 request, or miscellaneous other sources (eg, a call
855 to <varname>brk</varname>).
856 </para>
857 <para>For uninitialised values originating from a heap
858 block, Memcheck shows where the block was
859 allocated. For uninitialised values originating from a stack
860 allocation, Memcheck can tell you which
861 function allocated the value, but no more than that -- typically
862 it shows you the source location of the opening brace of the
863 function. So you should carefully check that all of the
864 function's local variables are initialised properly.
865 </para>
866 <para>Performance overhead: origin tracking is expensive. It
867 halves Memcheck's speed and increases
868 memory use by a minimum of 100MB, and possibly more.
869 Nevertheless it can drastically reduce the effort required to
870 identify the root cause of uninitialised value errors, and so
871 is often a programmer productivity win, despite running
872 more slowly.
873 </para>
874 <para>Accuracy: Memcheck tracks origins
875 quite accurately. To avoid very large space and time
876 overheads, some approximations are made. It is possible,
877 although unlikely, that Memcheck will report an incorrect origin, or
878 not be able to identify any origin.
879 </para>
880 <para>Note that the combination
881 <option>--track-origins=yes</option>
882 and <option>--undef-value-errors=no</option> is
883 nonsensical. Memcheck checks for and
884 rejects this combination at startup.
885 </para>
886 </listitem>
887 </varlistentry>
888
889 <varlistentry id="opt.partial-loads-ok" xreflabel="--partial-loads-ok">
890 <term>
891 <option><![CDATA[--partial-loads-ok=<yes|no> [default: no] ]]></option>
892 </term>
893 <listitem>
sewardj4c7254d2013-11-29 23:08:28 +0000894 <para>Controls how Memcheck handles 32-, 64-, 128- and 256-bit
895 naturally aligned loads from addresses for which some bytes are
njnc1abdcb2009-08-05 05:11:02 +0000896 addressable and others are not. When <varname>yes</varname>, such
897 loads do not produce an address error. Instead, loaded bytes
898 originating from illegal addresses are marked as uninitialised, and
899 those corresponding to legal addresses are handled in the normal
900 way.</para>
901
902 <para>When <varname>no</varname>, loads from partially invalid
903 addresses are treated the same as loads from completely invalid
904 addresses: an illegal-address error is issued, and the resulting
905 bytes are marked as initialised.</para>
906
907 <para>Note that code that behaves in this way is in violation of
mjw2be51222013-04-05 13:19:12 +0000908 the ISO C/C++ standards, and should be considered broken. If
njna3311642009-08-10 01:29:14 +0000909 at all possible, such code should be fixed. This option should be
njnc1abdcb2009-08-05 05:11:02 +0000910 used only as a last resort.</para>
911 </listitem>
912 </varlistentry>
913
philippe8617b5b2013-01-12 19:53:08 +0000914 <varlistentry id="opt.keep-stacktraces" xreflabel="--keep-stacktraces">
915 <term>
916 <option><![CDATA[--keep-stacktraces=alloc|free|alloc-and-free|alloc-then-free|none [default: alloc-then-free] ]]></option>
917 </term>
918 <listitem>
919 <para>Controls which stack trace(s) to keep for malloc'd and/or
920 free'd blocks.
921 </para>
922
sewardj4c7254d2013-11-29 23:08:28 +0000923 <para>With <varname>alloc-then-free</varname>, a stack trace is
924 recorded at allocation time, and is associated with the block.
925 When the block is freed, a second stack trace is recorded, and
926 this replaces the allocation stack trace. As a result, any "use
927 after free" errors relating to this block can only show a stack
928 trace for where the block was freed.
philippe8617b5b2013-01-12 19:53:08 +0000929 </para>
930
sewardj4c7254d2013-11-29 23:08:28 +0000931 <para>With <varname>alloc-and-free</varname>, both allocation
932 and the deallocation stack traces for the block are stored.
933 Hence a "use after free" error will
934 show both, which may make the error easier to diagnose.
935 Compared to <varname>alloc-then-free</varname>, this setting
936 slightly increases Valgrind's memory use as the block contains two
937 references instead of one.
philippe8617b5b2013-01-12 19:53:08 +0000938 </para>
939
sewardj4c7254d2013-11-29 23:08:28 +0000940 <para>With <varname>alloc</varname>, only the allocation stack
941 trace is recorded (and reported). With <varname>free</varname>,
942 only the deallocation stack trace is recorded (and reported).
943 These values somewhat decrease Valgrind's memory and cpu usage.
944 They can be useful depending on the error types you are
945 searching for and the level of detail you need to analyse
946 them. For example, if you are only interested in memory leak
947 errors, it is sufficient to record the allocation stack traces.
philippe8617b5b2013-01-12 19:53:08 +0000948 </para>
949
950 <para>With <varname>none</varname>, no stack traces are recorded
951 for malloc and free operations. If your program allocates a lot
sewardj4c7254d2013-11-29 23:08:28 +0000952 of blocks and/or allocates/frees from many different stack
953 traces, this can significantly decrease cpu and/or memory
954 required. Of course, few details will be reported for errors
955 related to heap blocks.
philippe8617b5b2013-01-12 19:53:08 +0000956 </para>
957
sewardj4c7254d2013-11-29 23:08:28 +0000958 <para>Note that once a stack trace is recorded, Valgrind keeps
959 the stack trace in memory even if it is not referenced by any
960 block. Some programs (for example, recursive algorithms) can
961 generate a huge number of stack traces. If Valgrind uses too
philippe8617b5b2013-01-12 19:53:08 +0000962 much memory in such circumstances, you can reduce the memory
sewardj4c7254d2013-11-29 23:08:28 +0000963 required with the options <varname>--keep-stacktraces</varname>
philippe8617b5b2013-01-12 19:53:08 +0000964 and/or by using a smaller value for the
965 option <varname>--num-callers</varname>.
966 </para>
967 </listitem>
968 </varlistentry>
969
njnc1abdcb2009-08-05 05:11:02 +0000970 <varlistentry id="opt.freelist-vol" xreflabel="--freelist-vol">
971 <term>
sewardje089f012010-10-13 21:47:29 +0000972 <option><![CDATA[--freelist-vol=<number> [default: 20000000] ]]></option>
njnc1abdcb2009-08-05 05:11:02 +0000973 </term>
974 <listitem>
975 <para>When the client program releases memory using
976 <function>free</function> (in <literal>C</literal>) or
977 <computeroutput>delete</computeroutput>
978 (<literal>C++</literal>), that memory is not immediately made
979 available for re-allocation. Instead, it is marked inaccessible
980 and placed in a queue of freed blocks. The purpose is to defer as
981 long as possible the point at which freed-up memory comes back
982 into circulation. This increases the chance that
983 Memcheck will be able to detect invalid
984 accesses to blocks for some significant period of time after they
985 have been freed.</para>
986
njna3311642009-08-10 01:29:14 +0000987 <para>This option specifies the maximum total size, in bytes, of the
sewardje089f012010-10-13 21:47:29 +0000988 blocks in the queue. The default value is twenty million bytes.
njnc1abdcb2009-08-05 05:11:02 +0000989 Increasing this increases the total amount of memory used by
990 Memcheck but may detect invalid uses of freed
991 blocks which would otherwise go undetected.</para>
992 </listitem>
993 </varlistentry>
994
sewardj403d8aa2011-10-22 19:48:57 +0000995 <varlistentry id="opt.freelist-big-blocks" xreflabel="--freelist-big-blocks">
996 <term>
997 <option><![CDATA[--freelist-big-blocks=<number> [default: 1000000] ]]></option>
998 </term>
999 <listitem>
1000 <para>When making blocks from the queue of freed blocks available
1001 for re-allocation, Memcheck will in priority re-circulate the blocks
1002 with a size greater or equal to <option>--freelist-big-blocks</option>.
1003 This ensures that freeing big blocks (in particular freeing blocks bigger than
1004 <option>--freelist-vol</option>) does not immediately lead to a re-circulation
1005 of all (or a lot of) the small blocks in the free list. In other words,
1006 this option increases the likelihood to discover dangling pointers
1007 for the "small" blocks, even when big blocks are freed.</para>
1008 <para>Setting a value of 0 means that all the blocks are re-circulated
1009 in a FIFO order. </para>
1010 </listitem>
1011 </varlistentry>
1012
njnc1abdcb2009-08-05 05:11:02 +00001013 <varlistentry id="opt.workaround-gcc296-bugs" xreflabel="--workaround-gcc296-bugs">
1014 <term>
1015 <option><![CDATA[--workaround-gcc296-bugs=<yes|no> [default: no] ]]></option>
1016 </term>
1017 <listitem>
1018 <para>When enabled, assume that reads and writes some small
1019 distance below the stack pointer are due to bugs in GCC 2.96, and
1020 does not report them. The "small distance" is 256 bytes by
1021 default. Note that GCC 2.96 is the default compiler on some ancient
1022 Linux distributions (RedHat 7.X) and so you may need to use this
njna3311642009-08-10 01:29:14 +00001023 option. Do not use it if you do not have to, as it can cause real
njnc1abdcb2009-08-05 05:11:02 +00001024 errors to be overlooked. A better alternative is to use a more
1025 recent GCC in which this bug is fixed.</para>
1026
njna3311642009-08-10 01:29:14 +00001027 <para>You may also need to use this option when working with
njnc1abdcb2009-08-05 05:11:02 +00001028 GCC 3.X or 4.X on 32-bit PowerPC Linux. This is because
1029 GCC generates code which occasionally accesses below the
1030 stack pointer, particularly for floating-point to/from integer
1031 conversions. This is in violation of the 32-bit PowerPC ELF
1032 specification, which makes no provision for locations below the
1033 stack pointer to be accessible.</para>
1034 </listitem>
1035 </varlistentry>
1036
1037 <varlistentry id="opt.ignore-ranges" xreflabel="--ignore-ranges">
1038 <term>
1039 <option><![CDATA[--ignore-ranges=0xPP-0xQQ[,0xRR-0xSS] ]]></option>
1040 </term>
1041 <listitem>
1042 <para>Any ranges listed in this option (and multiple ranges can be
1043 specified, separated by commas) will be ignored by Memcheck's
1044 addressability checking.</para>
1045 </listitem>
1046 </varlistentry>
1047
1048 <varlistentry id="opt.malloc-fill" xreflabel="--malloc-fill">
1049 <term>
1050 <option><![CDATA[--malloc-fill=<hexnumber> ]]></option>
1051 </term>
1052 <listitem>
1053 <para>Fills blocks allocated
1054 by <computeroutput>malloc</computeroutput>,
1055 <computeroutput>new</computeroutput>, etc, but not
1056 by <computeroutput>calloc</computeroutput>, with the specified
1057 byte. This can be useful when trying to shake out obscure
1058 memory corruption problems. The allocated area is still
njna3311642009-08-10 01:29:14 +00001059 regarded by Memcheck as undefined -- this option only affects its
philippea2cc0c02012-05-11 22:10:39 +00001060 contents. Note that <option>--malloc-fill</option> does not
1061 affect a block of memory when it is used as argument
1062 to client requests VALGRIND_MEMPOOL_ALLOC or
1063 VALGRIND_MALLOCLIKE_BLOCK.
njnc1abdcb2009-08-05 05:11:02 +00001064 </para>
1065 </listitem>
1066 </varlistentry>
1067
1068 <varlistentry id="opt.free-fill" xreflabel="--free-fill">
1069 <term>
1070 <option><![CDATA[--free-fill=<hexnumber> ]]></option>
1071 </term>
1072 <listitem>
1073 <para>Fills blocks freed
1074 by <computeroutput>free</computeroutput>,
1075 <computeroutput>delete</computeroutput>, etc, with the
1076 specified byte value. This can be useful when trying to shake out
1077 obscure memory corruption problems. The freed area is still
njna3311642009-08-10 01:29:14 +00001078 regarded by Memcheck as not valid for access -- this option only
philippea2cc0c02012-05-11 22:10:39 +00001079 affects its contents. Note that <option>--free-fill</option> does not
1080 affect a block of memory when it is used as argument to
1081 client requests VALGRIND_MEMPOOL_FREE or VALGRIND_FREELIKE_BLOCK.
njnc1abdcb2009-08-05 05:11:02 +00001082 </para>
1083 </listitem>
1084 </varlistentry>
1085
1086</variablelist>
1087<!-- end of xi:include in the manpage -->
1088
1089</sect1>
1090
1091
njn62ad73d2005-08-15 04:26:13 +00001092<sect1 id="mc-manual.suppfiles" xreflabel="Writing suppression files">
1093<title>Writing suppression files</title>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001094
1095<para>The basic suppression format is described in
1096<xref linkend="manual-core.suppress"/>.</para>
1097
sewardj08e31e22007-05-23 21:58:33 +00001098<para>The suppression-type (second) line should have the form:</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001099<programlisting><![CDATA[
1100Memcheck:suppression_type]]></programlisting>
1101
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001102<para>The Memcheck suppression types are as follows:</para>
1103
1104<itemizedlist>
1105 <listitem>
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001106 <para><varname>Value1</varname>,
1107 <varname>Value2</varname>,
1108 <varname>Value4</varname>,
1109 <varname>Value8</varname>,
1110 <varname>Value16</varname>,
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001111 meaning an uninitialised-value error when
1112 using a value of 1, 2, 4, 8 or 16 bytes.</para>
1113 </listitem>
1114
1115 <listitem>
sewardj08e31e22007-05-23 21:58:33 +00001116 <para><varname>Cond</varname> (or its old
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001117 name, <varname>Value0</varname>), meaning use
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001118 of an uninitialised CPU condition code.</para>
1119 </listitem>
1120
1121 <listitem>
sewardj08e31e22007-05-23 21:58:33 +00001122 <para><varname>Addr1</varname>,
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001123 <varname>Addr2</varname>,
1124 <varname>Addr4</varname>,
1125 <varname>Addr8</varname>,
1126 <varname>Addr16</varname>,
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001127 meaning an invalid address during a
1128 memory access of 1, 2, 4, 8 or 16 bytes respectively.</para>
1129 </listitem>
1130
1131 <listitem>
sewardj08e31e22007-05-23 21:58:33 +00001132 <para><varname>Jump</varname>, meaning an
njn718d3b12006-12-16 00:54:12 +00001133 jump to an unaddressable location error.</para>
1134 </listitem>
1135
1136 <listitem>
sewardj08e31e22007-05-23 21:58:33 +00001137 <para><varname>Param</varname>, meaning an
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001138 invalid system call parameter error.</para>
1139 </listitem>
1140
1141 <listitem>
sewardj08e31e22007-05-23 21:58:33 +00001142 <para><varname>Free</varname>, meaning an
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001143 invalid or mismatching free.</para>
1144 </listitem>
1145
1146 <listitem>
sewardj08e31e22007-05-23 21:58:33 +00001147 <para><varname>Overlap</varname>, meaning a
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001148 <computeroutput>src</computeroutput> /
1149 <computeroutput>dst</computeroutput> overlap in
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +00001150 <function>memcpy</function> or a similar function.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001151 </listitem>
1152
1153 <listitem>
sewardj08e31e22007-05-23 21:58:33 +00001154 <para><varname>Leak</varname>, meaning
njn62ad73d2005-08-15 04:26:13 +00001155 a memory leak.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001156 </listitem>
1157
1158</itemizedlist>
1159
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +00001160<para><computeroutput>Param</computeroutput> errors have a mandatory extra
sewardj08e31e22007-05-23 21:58:33 +00001161information line at this point, which is the name of the offending
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +00001162system call parameter. </para>
1163
sewardj4c7254d2013-11-29 23:08:28 +00001164<para><computeroutput>Leak</computeroutput> errors have an optional
1165extra information line, with the following format:</para>
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +00001166<programlisting><![CDATA[
1167match-leak-kinds:<set>]]></programlisting>
1168<para>where <computeroutput>&lt;set&gt;</computeroutput> specifies which
1169leak kinds are matched by this suppression entry.
sewardj4c7254d2013-11-29 23:08:28 +00001170<computeroutput>&lt;set&gt;</computeroutput> is specified in the
1171same way as with the option <option>--show-leak-kinds</option>, that is,
1172one of the following:</para>
1173<itemizedlist>
1174 <listitem>a comma separated list of one or more of
1175 <option>definite indirect possible reachable</option>.
1176 </listitem>
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +00001177
sewardj4c7254d2013-11-29 23:08:28 +00001178 <listitem><option>all</option> to specify the complete set (all leak kinds).
1179 </listitem>
1180
1181 <listitem><option>none</option> for the empty set.
1182 </listitem>
1183</itemizedlist>
1184<para>If this optional extra line is not present, the suppression
1185entry will match all leak kinds.</para>
1186
1187<para>Be aware that leak suppressions that are created using
1188<option>--gen-suppressions</option> will contain this optional extra
1189line, and therefore may match fewer leaks than you expect. You may
1190want to remove the line before using the generated
1191suppressions.</para>
1192
1193<para>The other Memcheck error kinds do not have extra lines.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001194
philippe4e32d672013-10-17 22:10:41 +00001195<para>
1196If you give the <option>-v</option> option, Valgrind will print
sewardj4c7254d2013-11-29 23:08:28 +00001197the list of used suppressions at the end of execution.
philippe4e32d672013-10-17 22:10:41 +00001198For a leak suppression, this output gives the number of different
sewardj4c7254d2013-11-29 23:08:28 +00001199loss records that match the suppression, and the number of bytes
1200and blocks suppressed by the suppression.
1201If the run contains multiple leak checks, the number of bytes and blocks
1202are reset to zero before each new leak check. Note that the number of different
1203loss records is not reset to zero.</para>
philippe4e32d672013-10-17 22:10:41 +00001204<para>In the example below, in the last leak search, 7 blocks and 96 bytes have
sewardj4c7254d2013-11-29 23:08:28 +00001205been suppressed by a suppression with the name
1206<option>some_leak_suppression</option>:</para>
philippe4e32d672013-10-17 22:10:41 +00001207<programlisting><![CDATA[
1208--21041-- used_suppression: 10 some_other_leak_suppression s.supp:14 suppressed: 12,400 bytes in 1 blocks
1209--21041-- used_suppression: 39 some_leak_suppression s.supp:2 suppressed: 96 bytes in 7 blocks
1210]]></programlisting>
philippe4e32d672013-10-17 22:10:41 +00001211
sewardj4c7254d2013-11-29 23:08:28 +00001212<para>For <varname>ValueN</varname> and <varname>AddrN</varname>
1213errors, the first line of the calling context is either the name of
1214the function in which the error occurred, or, failing that, the full
1215path of the <filename>.so</filename> file or executable containing the
1216error location. For <varname>Free</varname> errors, the first line is
1217the name of the function doing the freeing (eg,
1218<function>free</function>, <function>__builtin_vec_delete</function>,
1219etc). For <varname>Overlap</varname> errors, the first line is the name of the
1220function with the overlapping arguments (eg.
1221<function>memcpy</function>, <function>strcpy</function>, etc).</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001222
sewardj4c7254d2013-11-29 23:08:28 +00001223<para>The last part of any suppression specifies the rest of the
1224calling context that needs to be matched.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001225
1226</sect1>
1227
1228
1229
1230<sect1 id="mc-manual.machine"
1231 xreflabel="Details of Memcheck's checking machinery">
1232<title>Details of Memcheck's checking machinery</title>
1233
1234<para>Read this section if you want to know, in detail, exactly
1235what and how Memcheck is checking.</para>
1236
1237
1238<sect2 id="mc-manual.value" xreflabel="Valid-value (V) bit">
1239<title>Valid-value (V) bits</title>
1240
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001241<para>It is simplest to think of Memcheck implementing a synthetic CPU
1242which is identical to a real CPU, except for one crucial detail. Every
1243bit (literally) of data processed, stored and handled by the real CPU
1244has, in the synthetic CPU, an associated "valid-value" bit, which says
1245whether or not the accompanying bit has a legitimate value. In the
1246discussions which follow, this bit is referred to as the V (valid-value)
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001247bit.</para>
1248
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001249<para>Each byte in the system therefore has a 8 V bits which follow it
1250wherever it goes. For example, when the CPU loads a word-size item (4
1251bytes) from memory, it also loads the corresponding 32 V bits from a
1252bitmap which stores the V bits for the process' entire address space.
1253If the CPU should later write the whole or some part of that value to
1254memory at a different address, the relevant V bits will be stored back
1255in the V-bit bitmap.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001256
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +00001257<para>In short, each bit in the system has (conceptually) an associated V
1258bit, which follows it around everywhere, even inside the CPU. Yes, all the
1259CPU's registers (integer, floating point, vector and condition registers)
1260have their own V bit vectors. For this to work, Memcheck uses a great deal
1261of compression to represent the V bits compactly.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001262
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001263<para>Copying values around does not cause Memcheck to check for, or
1264report on, errors. However, when a value is used in a way which might
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +00001265conceivably affect your program's externally-visible behaviour,
1266the associated V bits are immediately checked. If any of these indicate
1267that the value is undefined (even partially), an error is reported.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001268
1269<para>Here's an (admittedly nonsensical) example:</para>
1270<programlisting><![CDATA[
1271int i, j;
1272int a[10], b[10];
1273for ( i = 0; i < 10; i++ ) {
1274 j = a[i];
1275 b[i] = j;
1276}]]></programlisting>
1277
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001278<para>Memcheck emits no complaints about this, since it merely copies
1279uninitialised values from <varname>a[]</varname> into
sewardj08e31e22007-05-23 21:58:33 +00001280<varname>b[]</varname>, and doesn't use them in a way which could
1281affect the behaviour of the program. However, if
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001282the loop is changed to:</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001283<programlisting><![CDATA[
1284for ( i = 0; i < 10; i++ ) {
1285 j += a[i];
1286}
1287if ( j == 77 )
1288 printf("hello there\n");
1289]]></programlisting>
1290
sewardj08e31e22007-05-23 21:58:33 +00001291<para>then Memcheck will complain, at the
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001292<computeroutput>if</computeroutput>, that the condition depends on
1293uninitialised values. Note that it <command>doesn't</command> complain
1294at the <varname>j += a[i];</varname>, since at that point the
1295undefinedness is not "observable". It's only when a decision has to be
1296made as to whether or not to do the <function>printf</function> -- an
1297observable action of your program -- that Memcheck complains.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001298
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001299<para>Most low level operations, such as adds, cause Memcheck to use the
1300V bits for the operands to calculate the V bits for the result. Even if
1301the result is partially or wholly undefined, it does not
njn62ad73d2005-08-15 04:26:13 +00001302complain.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001303
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001304<para>Checks on definedness only occur in three places: when a value is
1305used to generate a memory address, when control flow decision needs to
sewardj08e31e22007-05-23 21:58:33 +00001306be made, and when a system call is detected, Memcheck checks definedness
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001307of parameters as required.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001308
1309<para>If a check should detect undefinedness, an error message is
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001310issued. The resulting value is subsequently regarded as well-defined.
sewardj08e31e22007-05-23 21:58:33 +00001311To do otherwise would give long chains of error messages. In other
1312words, once Memcheck reports an undefined value error, it tries to
1313avoid reporting further errors derived from that same undefined
1314value.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001315
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001316<para>This sounds overcomplicated. Why not just check all reads from
1317memory, and complain if an undefined value is loaded into a CPU
1318register? Well, that doesn't work well, because perfectly legitimate C
1319programs routinely copy uninitialised values around in memory, and we
1320don't want endless complaints about that. Here's the canonical example.
1321Consider a struct like this:</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001322<programlisting><![CDATA[
1323struct S { int x; char c; };
1324struct S s1, s2;
1325s1.x = 42;
1326s1.c = 'z';
1327s2 = s1;
1328]]></programlisting>
1329
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001330<para>The question to ask is: how large is <varname>struct S</varname>,
1331in bytes? An <varname>int</varname> is 4 bytes and a
1332<varname>char</varname> one byte, so perhaps a <varname>struct
sewardj08e31e22007-05-23 21:58:33 +00001333S</varname> occupies 5 bytes? Wrong. All non-toy compilers we know
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001334of will round the size of <varname>struct S</varname> up to a whole
1335number of words, in this case 8 bytes. Not doing this forces compilers
sewardj08e31e22007-05-23 21:58:33 +00001336to generate truly appalling code for accessing arrays of
1337<varname>struct S</varname>'s on some architectures.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001338
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001339<para>So <varname>s1</varname> occupies 8 bytes, yet only 5 of them will
njn7316df22009-08-04 01:16:01 +00001340be initialised. For the assignment <varname>s2 = s1</varname>, GCC
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001341generates code to copy all 8 bytes wholesale into <varname>s2</varname>
1342without regard for their meaning. If Memcheck simply checked values as
1343they came out of memory, it would yelp every time a structure assignment
sewardj08e31e22007-05-23 21:58:33 +00001344like this happened. So the more complicated behaviour described above
njn7316df22009-08-04 01:16:01 +00001345is necessary. This allows GCC to copy
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001346<varname>s1</varname> into <varname>s2</varname> any way it likes, and a
1347warning will only be emitted if the uninitialised values are later
1348used.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001349
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001350</sect2>
1351
1352
1353<sect2 id="mc-manual.vaddress" xreflabel=" Valid-address (A) bits">
1354<title>Valid-address (A) bits</title>
1355
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001356<para>Notice that the previous subsection describes how the validity of
1357values is established and maintained without having to say whether the
1358program does or does not have the right to access any particular memory
sewardj08e31e22007-05-23 21:58:33 +00001359location. We now consider the latter question.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001360
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001361<para>As described above, every bit in memory or in the CPU has an
1362associated valid-value (V) bit. In addition, all bytes in memory, but
1363not in the CPU, have an associated valid-address (A) bit. This
1364indicates whether or not the program can legitimately read or write that
sewardj49d5a282011-02-28 10:26:42 +00001365location. It does not give any indication of the validity of the data
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001366at that location -- that's the job of the V bits -- only whether or not
1367the location may be accessed.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001368
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001369<para>Every time your program reads or writes memory, Memcheck checks
1370the A bits associated with the address. If any of them indicate an
1371invalid address, an error is emitted. Note that the reads and writes
1372themselves do not change the A bits, only consult them.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001373
njn62ad73d2005-08-15 04:26:13 +00001374<para>So how do the A bits get set/cleared? Like this:</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001375
1376<itemizedlist>
1377 <listitem>
1378 <para>When the program starts, all the global data areas are
1379 marked as accessible.</para>
1380 </listitem>
1381
1382 <listitem>
bartaf25f672009-06-26 19:03:53 +00001383 <para>When the program does
1384 <function>malloc</function>/<computeroutput>new</computeroutput>,
1385 the A bits for exactly the area allocated, and not a byte more,
1386 are marked as accessible. Upon freeing the area the A bits are
1387 changed to indicate inaccessibility.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001388 </listitem>
1389
1390 <listitem>
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001391 <para>When the stack pointer register (<literal>SP</literal>) moves
1392 up or down, A bits are set. The rule is that the area from
1393 <literal>SP</literal> up to the base of the stack is marked as
1394 accessible, and below <literal>SP</literal> is inaccessible. (If
1395 that sounds illogical, bear in mind that the stack grows down, not
1396 up, on almost all Unix systems, including GNU/Linux.) Tracking
1397 <literal>SP</literal> like this has the useful side-effect that the
1398 section of stack used by a function for local variables etc is
1399 automatically marked accessible on function entry and inaccessible
1400 on exit.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001401 </listitem>
1402
1403 <listitem>
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001404 <para>When doing system calls, A bits are changed appropriately.
sewardj08e31e22007-05-23 21:58:33 +00001405 For example, <literal>mmap</literal>
1406 magically makes files appear in the process'
1407 address space, so the A bits must be updated if <literal>mmap</literal>
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001408 succeeds.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001409 </listitem>
1410
1411 <listitem>
sewardj08e31e22007-05-23 21:58:33 +00001412 <para>Optionally, your program can tell Memcheck about such changes
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001413 explicitly, using the client request mechanism described
1414 above.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001415 </listitem>
1416
1417</itemizedlist>
1418
1419</sect2>
1420
1421
1422<sect2 id="mc-manual.together" xreflabel="Putting it all together">
1423<title>Putting it all together</title>
1424
1425<para>Memcheck's checking machinery can be summarised as
1426follows:</para>
1427
1428<itemizedlist>
1429 <listitem>
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001430 <para>Each byte in memory has 8 associated V (valid-value) bits,
1431 saying whether or not the byte has a defined value, and a single A
1432 (valid-address) bit, saying whether or not the program currently has
sewardje089f012010-10-13 21:47:29 +00001433 the right to read/write that address. As mentioned above, heavy
1434 use of compression means the overhead is typically around 25%.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001435 </listitem>
1436
1437 <listitem>
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001438 <para>When memory is read or written, the relevant A bits are
sewardj08e31e22007-05-23 21:58:33 +00001439 consulted. If they indicate an invalid address, Memcheck emits an
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001440 Invalid read or Invalid write error.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001441 </listitem>
1442
1443 <listitem>
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001444 <para>When memory is read into the CPU's registers, the relevant V
1445 bits are fetched from memory and stored in the simulated CPU. They
1446 are not consulted.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001447 </listitem>
1448
1449 <listitem>
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001450 <para>When a register is written out to memory, the V bits for that
1451 register are written back to memory too.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001452 </listitem>
1453
1454 <listitem>
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001455 <para>When values in CPU registers are used to generate a memory
1456 address, or to determine the outcome of a conditional branch, the V
1457 bits for those values are checked, and an error emitted if any of
1458 them are undefined.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001459 </listitem>
1460
1461 <listitem>
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001462 <para>When values in CPU registers are used for any other purpose,
sewardj08e31e22007-05-23 21:58:33 +00001463 Memcheck computes the V bits for the result, but does not check
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001464 them.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001465 </listitem>
1466
1467 <listitem>
sewardj08e31e22007-05-23 21:58:33 +00001468 <para>Once the V bits for a value in the CPU have been checked, they
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001469 are then set to indicate validity. This avoids long chains of
1470 errors.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001471 </listitem>
1472
1473 <listitem>
sewardj08e31e22007-05-23 21:58:33 +00001474 <para>When values are loaded from memory, Memcheck checks the A bits
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001475 for that location and issues an illegal-address warning if needed.
1476 In that case, the V bits loaded are forced to indicate Valid,
1477 despite the location being invalid.</para>
1478
1479 <para>This apparently strange choice reduces the amount of confusing
1480 information presented to the user. It avoids the unpleasant
1481 phenomenon in which memory is read from a place which is both
sewardj33878892007-11-17 09:43:25 +00001482 unaddressable and contains invalid values, and, as a result, you get
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001483 not only an invalid-address (read/write) error, but also a
1484 potentially large set of uninitialised-value errors, one for every
1485 time the value is used.</para>
1486
1487 <para>There is a hazy boundary case to do with multi-byte loads from
1488 addresses which are partially valid and partially invalid. See
njna3311642009-08-10 01:29:14 +00001489 details of the option <option>--partial-loads-ok</option> for details.
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001490 </para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001491 </listitem>
1492
1493</itemizedlist>
1494
1495
bartaf25f672009-06-26 19:03:53 +00001496<para>Memcheck intercepts calls to <function>malloc</function>,
1497<function>calloc</function>, <function>realloc</function>,
1498<function>valloc</function>, <function>memalign</function>,
1499<function>free</function>, <computeroutput>new</computeroutput>,
1500<computeroutput>new[]</computeroutput>,
1501<computeroutput>delete</computeroutput> and
1502<computeroutput>delete[]</computeroutput>. The behaviour you get
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001503is:</para>
1504
1505<itemizedlist>
1506
1507 <listitem>
bartaf25f672009-06-26 19:03:53 +00001508 <para><function>malloc</function>/<function>new</function>/<computeroutput>new[]</computeroutput>:
1509 the returned memory is marked as addressable but not having valid
1510 values. This means you have to write to it before you can read
1511 it.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001512 </listitem>
1513
1514 <listitem>
bartaf25f672009-06-26 19:03:53 +00001515 <para><function>calloc</function>: returned memory is marked both
1516 addressable and valid, since <function>calloc</function> clears
1517 the area to zero.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001518 </listitem>
1519
1520 <listitem>
bartaf25f672009-06-26 19:03:53 +00001521 <para><function>realloc</function>: if the new size is larger than
1522 the old, the new section is addressable but invalid, as with
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +00001523 <function>malloc</function>. If the new size is smaller, the
1524 dropped-off section is marked as unaddressable. You may only pass to
bartaf25f672009-06-26 19:03:53 +00001525 <function>realloc</function> a pointer previously issued to you by
1526 <function>malloc</function>/<function>calloc</function>/<function>realloc</function>.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001527 </listitem>
1528
1529 <listitem>
bartaf25f672009-06-26 19:03:53 +00001530 <para><function>free</function>/<computeroutput>delete</computeroutput>/<computeroutput>delete[]</computeroutput>:
1531 you may only pass to these functions a pointer previously issued
1532 to you by the corresponding allocation function. Otherwise,
1533 Memcheck complains. If the pointer is indeed valid, Memcheck
1534 marks the entire area it points at as unaddressable, and places
1535 the block in the freed-blocks-queue. The aim is to defer as long
1536 as possible reallocation of this block. Until that happens, all
1537 attempts to access it will elicit an invalid-address error, as you
1538 would hope.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001539 </listitem>
1540
1541</itemizedlist>
1542
1543</sect2>
1544</sect1>
1545
sewardj3b290482011-05-06 21:02:55 +00001546<sect1 id="mc-manual.monitor-commands" xreflabel="Memcheck Monitor Commands">
1547<title>Memcheck Monitor Commands</title>
sewardjc8bd1df2011-06-26 12:41:33 +00001548<para>The Memcheck tool provides monitor commands handled by Valgrind's
1549built-in gdbserver (see <xref linkend="manual-core-adv.gdbserver-commandhandling"/>).
sewardj3b290482011-05-06 21:02:55 +00001550</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001551
sewardj3b290482011-05-06 21:02:55 +00001552<itemizedlist>
1553 <listitem>
sewardj30b3eca2011-06-28 08:20:39 +00001554 <para><varname>get_vbits &lt;addr&gt; [&lt;len&gt;]</varname>
sewardjc8bd1df2011-06-26 12:41:33 +00001555 shows the definedness (V) bits for &lt;len&gt; (default 1) bytes
1556 starting at &lt;addr&gt;. The definedness of each byte in the
1557 range is given using two hexadecimal digits. These hexadecimal
1558 digits encode the validity of each bit of the corresponding byte,
1559 using 0 if the bit is defined and 1 if the bit is undefined.
1560 If a byte is not addressable, its validity bits are replaced
1561 by <varname>__</varname> (a double underscore).
1562 </para>
1563 <para>
1564 In the following example, <varname>string10</varname> is an array
1565 of 10 characters, in which the even numbered bytes are
1566 undefined. In the below example, the byte corresponding
1567 to <varname>string10[5]</varname> is not addressable.
1568 </para>
sewardj3b290482011-05-06 21:02:55 +00001569<programlisting><![CDATA[
1570(gdb) p &string10
1571$4 = (char (*)[10]) 0x8049e28
sewardj30b3eca2011-06-28 08:20:39 +00001572(gdb) monitor get_vbits 0x8049e28 10
sewardj3b290482011-05-06 21:02:55 +00001573ff00ff00 ff__ff00 ff00
1574(gdb)
1575]]></programlisting>
sewardj30b3eca2011-06-28 08:20:39 +00001576
1577 <para> The command get_vbits cannot be used with registers. To get
1578 the validity bits of a register, you must start Valgrind with the
1579 option <option>--vgdb-shadow-registers=yes</option>. The validity
1580 bits of a register can be obtained by printing the 'shadow 1'
1581 corresponding register. In the below x86 example, the register
1582 eax has all its bits undefined, while the register ebx is fully
1583 defined.
1584 </para>
1585<programlisting><![CDATA[
1586(gdb) p /x $eaxs1
1587$9 = 0xffffffff
1588(gdb) p /x $ebxs1
1589$10 = 0x0
1590(gdb)
1591]]></programlisting>
1592
sewardj3b290482011-05-06 21:02:55 +00001593 </listitem>
1594
1595 <listitem>
sewardj30b3eca2011-06-28 08:20:39 +00001596 <para><varname>make_memory
1597 [noaccess|undefined|defined|Definedifaddressable] &lt;addr&gt;
sewardjc8bd1df2011-06-26 12:41:33 +00001598 [&lt;len&gt;]</varname> marks the range of &lt;len&gt; (default 1)
1599 bytes at &lt;addr&gt; as having the given status. Parameter
1600 <varname>noaccess</varname> marks the range as non-accessible, so
1601 Memcheck will report an error on any access to it.
1602 <varname>undefined</varname> or <varname>defined</varname> mark
1603 the area as accessible, but Memcheck regards the bytes in it
1604 respectively as having undefined or defined values.
sewardj30b3eca2011-06-28 08:20:39 +00001605 <varname>Definedifaddressable</varname> marks as defined, bytes in
sewardjc8bd1df2011-06-26 12:41:33 +00001606 the range which are already addressible, but makes no change to
sewardj30b3eca2011-06-28 08:20:39 +00001607 the status of bytes in the range which are not addressible. Note
1608 that the first letter of <varname>Definedifaddressable</varname>
1609 is an uppercase D to avoid confusion with <varname>defined</varname>.
1610 </para>
sewardjc8bd1df2011-06-26 12:41:33 +00001611
1612 <para>
1613 In the following example, the first byte of the
1614 <varname>string10</varname> is marked as defined:
sewardj3b290482011-05-06 21:02:55 +00001615 </para>
1616<programlisting><![CDATA[
sewardj30b3eca2011-06-28 08:20:39 +00001617(gdb) monitor make_memory defined 0x8049e28 1
1618(gdb) monitor get_vbits 0x8049e28 10
sewardj3b290482011-05-06 21:02:55 +000016190000ff00 ff00ff00 ff00
1620(gdb)
1621]]></programlisting>
1622 </listitem>
1623
1624 <listitem>
sewardj30b3eca2011-06-28 08:20:39 +00001625 <para><varname>check_memory [addressable|defined] &lt;addr&gt;
sewardj3b290482011-05-06 21:02:55 +00001626 [&lt;len&gt;]</varname> checks that the range of &lt;len&gt;
sewardj30b3eca2011-06-28 08:20:39 +00001627 (default 1) bytes at &lt;addr&gt; has the specified accessibility.
1628 It then outputs a description of &lt;addr&gt;. In the following
1629 example, a detailed description is available because the
philippea22f59d2012-01-26 23:13:52 +00001630 option <option>--read-var-info=yes</option> was given at Valgrind
sewardj30b3eca2011-06-28 08:20:39 +00001631 startup:
sewardj3b290482011-05-06 21:02:55 +00001632 </para>
1633<programlisting><![CDATA[
sewardj30b3eca2011-06-28 08:20:39 +00001634(gdb) monitor check_memory defined 0x8049e28 1
sewardj3b290482011-05-06 21:02:55 +00001635Address 0x8049E28 len 1 defined
1636==14698== Location 0x8049e28 is 0 bytes inside string10[0],
1637==14698== declared at prog.c:10, in frame #0 of thread 1
1638(gdb)
1639]]></programlisting>
1640 </listitem>
1641
1642 <listitem>
sewardj30b3eca2011-06-28 08:20:39 +00001643 <para><varname>leak_check [full*|summary]
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +00001644 [kinds &lt;set&gt;|reachable|possibleleak*|definiteleak]
philippe278b2a32013-10-09 20:12:39 +00001645 [heuristics heur1,heur2,...]
sewardj30b3eca2011-06-28 08:20:39 +00001646 [increased*|changed|any]
philippe84234902012-01-14 13:53:13 +00001647 [unlimited*|limited &lt;max_loss_records_output&gt;]
sewardjc8bd1df2011-06-26 12:41:33 +00001648 </varname>
1649 performs a leak check. The <varname>*</varname> in the arguments
philippe84234902012-01-14 13:53:13 +00001650 indicates the default values. </para>
sewardj3b290482011-05-06 21:02:55 +00001651
philippe278b2a32013-10-09 20:12:39 +00001652 <para> If the <varname>[full*|summary]</varname> argument is
1653 <varname>summary</varname>, only a summary of the leak search is given;
1654 otherwise a full leak report is produced. A full leak report gives
1655 detailed information for each leak: the stack trace where the leaked blocks
1656 were allocated, the number of blocks leaked and their total size. When a
1657 full report is requested, the next two arguments further specify what
sewardjc8bd1df2011-06-26 12:41:33 +00001658 kind of leaks to report. A leak's details are shown if they match
philippe84234902012-01-14 13:53:13 +00001659 both the second and third argument. A full leak report might
1660 output detailed information for many leaks. The nr of leaks for
1661 which information is output can be controlled using
1662 the <varname>limited</varname> argument followed by the maximum nr
1663 of leak records to output. If this maximum is reached, the leak
1664 search outputs the records with the biggest number of bytes.
sewardj3b290482011-05-06 21:02:55 +00001665 </para>
1666
philippe278b2a32013-10-09 20:12:39 +00001667 <para>The <varname>kinds</varname> argument controls what kind of blocks
1668 are shown for a <varname>full</varname> leak search. The set of leak kinds
1669 to show can be specified using a <varname>&lt;set&gt;</varname> similarly
philippe2193a7c2012-12-08 17:54:16 +00001670 to the command line option <option>--show-leak-kinds</option>.
1671 Alternatively, the value <varname>definiteleak</varname>
1672 is equivalent to <varname>kinds definite</varname>, the
1673 value <varname>possibleleak</varname> is equivalent to
1674 <varname>kinds definite,possible</varname> : it will also show
1675 possibly leaked blocks, .i.e those for which only an interior
1676 pointer was found. The value <varname>reachable</varname> will
1677 show all block categories (i.e. is equivalent to <varname>kinds
1678 all</varname>).
sewardj3b290482011-05-06 21:02:55 +00001679 </para>
sewardjc8bd1df2011-06-26 12:41:33 +00001680
philippe278b2a32013-10-09 20:12:39 +00001681 <para>The <varname>heuristics</varname> argument controls the heuristics
1682 used during the leak search. The set of heuristics to use can be specified
1683 using a <varname>&lt;set&gt;</varname> similarly
1684 to the command line option <option>--leak-check-heuristics</option>.
1685 The default value for the <varname>heuristics</varname> argument is
1686 <varname>heuristics none</varname>.
1687 </para>
1688
1689 <para>The <varname>[increased*|changed|any]</varname> argument controls what
1690 kinds of changes are shown for a <varname>full</varname> leak search. The
sewardjc8bd1df2011-06-26 12:41:33 +00001691 value <varname>increased</varname> specifies that only block
1692 allocation stacks with an increased number of leaked bytes or
1693 blocks since the previous leak check should be shown. The
1694 value <varname>changed</varname> specifies that allocation stacks
1695 with any change since the previous leak check should be shown.
1696 The value <varname>any</varname> specifies that all leak entries
1697 should be shown, regardless of any increase or decrease. When
1698 If <varname>increased</varname> or <varname>changed</varname> are
1699 specified, the leak report entries will show the delta relative to
1700 the previous leak report.
1701 </para>
1702
1703 <para>The following example shows usage of the
philippe84234902012-01-14 13:53:13 +00001704 <varname>leak_check</varname> monitor command on
sewardjc8bd1df2011-06-26 12:41:33 +00001705 the <varname>memcheck/tests/leak-cases.c</varname> regression
1706 test. The first command outputs one entry having an increase in
1707 the leaked bytes. The second command is the same as the first
1708 command, but uses the abbreviated forms accepted by GDB and the
1709 Valgrind gdbserver. It only outputs the summary information, as
1710 there was no increase since the previous leak search.</para>
sewardj3b290482011-05-06 21:02:55 +00001711<programlisting><![CDATA[
sewardj30b3eca2011-06-28 08:20:39 +00001712(gdb) monitor leak_check full possibleleak increased
philippea22f59d2012-01-26 23:13:52 +00001713==19520== 16 (+16) bytes in 1 (+1) blocks are possibly lost in loss record 9 of 12
1714==19520== at 0x40070B4: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:263)
1715==19520== by 0x80484D5: mk (leak-cases.c:52)
1716==19520== by 0x804855F: f (leak-cases.c:81)
1717==19520== by 0x80488E0: main (leak-cases.c:107)
1718==19520==
1719==19520== LEAK SUMMARY:
1720==19520== definitely lost: 32 (+0) bytes in 2 (+0) blocks
1721==19520== indirectly lost: 16 (+0) bytes in 1 (+0) blocks
1722==19520== possibly lost: 32 (+16) bytes in 2 (+1) blocks
1723==19520== still reachable: 96 (+16) bytes in 6 (+1) blocks
1724==19520== suppressed: 0 (+0) bytes in 0 (+0) blocks
1725==19520== Reachable blocks (those to which a pointer was found) are not shown.
1726==19520== To see them, add 'reachable any' args to leak_check
1727==19520==
sewardj30b3eca2011-06-28 08:20:39 +00001728(gdb) mo l
philippea22f59d2012-01-26 23:13:52 +00001729==19520== LEAK SUMMARY:
1730==19520== definitely lost: 32 (+0) bytes in 2 (+0) blocks
1731==19520== indirectly lost: 16 (+0) bytes in 1 (+0) blocks
1732==19520== possibly lost: 32 (+0) bytes in 2 (+0) blocks
1733==19520== still reachable: 96 (+0) bytes in 6 (+0) blocks
1734==19520== suppressed: 0 (+0) bytes in 0 (+0) blocks
1735==19520== Reachable blocks (those to which a pointer was found) are not shown.
1736==19520== To see them, add 'reachable any' args to leak_check
1737==19520==
sewardj3b290482011-05-06 21:02:55 +00001738(gdb)
1739]]></programlisting>
sewardjc8bd1df2011-06-26 12:41:33 +00001740 <para>Note that when using Valgrind's gdbserver, it is not
1741 necessary to rerun
1742 with <option>--leak-check=full</option>
1743 <option>--show-reachable=yes</option> to see the reachable
1744 blocks. You can obtain the same information without rerunning by
sewardj30b3eca2011-06-28 08:20:39 +00001745 using the GDB command <computeroutput>monitor leak_check full
sewardjc8bd1df2011-06-26 12:41:33 +00001746 reachable any</computeroutput> (or, using
sewardj30b3eca2011-06-28 08:20:39 +00001747 abbreviation: <computeroutput>mo l f r a</computeroutput>).
sewardj3b290482011-05-06 21:02:55 +00001748 </para>
1749 </listitem>
philippe84234902012-01-14 13:53:13 +00001750
philippea22f59d2012-01-26 23:13:52 +00001751 <listitem>
1752 <para><varname>block_list &lt;loss_record_nr&gt; </varname>
1753 shows the list of blocks belonging to &lt;loss_record_nr&gt;.
1754 </para>
1755
1756 <para> A leak search merges the allocated blocks in loss records :
1757 a loss record re-groups all blocks having the same state (for
1758 example, Definitely Lost) and the same allocation backtrace.
1759 Each loss record is identified in the leak search result
1760 by a loss record number.
1761 The <varname>block_list</varname> command shows the loss record information
1762 followed by the addresses and sizes of the blocks which have been
1763 merged in the loss record.
1764 </para>
1765
1766 <para> If a directly lost block causes some other blocks to be indirectly
1767 lost, the block_list command will also show these indirectly lost blocks.
1768 The indirectly lost blocks will be indented according to the level of indirection
1769 between the directly lost block and the indirectly lost block(s).
1770 Each indirectly lost block is followed by the reference of its loss record.
1771 </para>
1772
1773 <para> The block_list command can be used on the results of a leak search as long
1774 as no block has been freed after this leak search: as soon as the program frees
1775 a block, a new leak search is needed before block_list can be used again.
1776 </para>
1777
1778 <para>
1779 In the below example, the program leaks a tree structure by losing the pointer to
1780 the block A (top of the tree).
1781 So, the block A is directly lost, causing an indirect
1782 loss of blocks B to G. The first block_list command shows the loss record of A
1783 (a definitely lost block with address 0x4028028, size 16). The addresses and sizes
1784 of the indirectly lost blocks due to block A are shown below the block A.
1785 The second command shows the details of one of the indirect loss records output
1786 by the first command.
1787 </para>
1788<programlisting><![CDATA[
1789 A
1790 / \
1791 B C
1792 / \ / \
1793 D E F G
1794]]></programlisting>
1795
1796<programlisting><![CDATA[
1797(gdb) bt
1798#0 main () at leak-tree.c:69
1799(gdb) monitor leak_check full any
1800==19552== 112 (16 direct, 96 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 7 of 7
1801==19552== at 0x40070B4: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:263)
1802==19552== by 0x80484D5: mk (leak-tree.c:28)
1803==19552== by 0x80484FC: f (leak-tree.c:41)
1804==19552== by 0x8048856: main (leak-tree.c:63)
1805==19552==
1806==19552== LEAK SUMMARY:
1807==19552== definitely lost: 16 bytes in 1 blocks
1808==19552== indirectly lost: 96 bytes in 6 blocks
1809==19552== possibly lost: 0 bytes in 0 blocks
1810==19552== still reachable: 0 bytes in 0 blocks
1811==19552== suppressed: 0 bytes in 0 blocks
1812==19552==
1813(gdb) monitor block_list 7
1814==19552== 112 (16 direct, 96 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 7 of 7
1815==19552== at 0x40070B4: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:263)
1816==19552== by 0x80484D5: mk (leak-tree.c:28)
1817==19552== by 0x80484FC: f (leak-tree.c:41)
1818==19552== by 0x8048856: main (leak-tree.c:63)
1819==19552== 0x4028028[16]
1820==19552== 0x4028068[16] indirect loss record 1
1821==19552== 0x40280E8[16] indirect loss record 3
1822==19552== 0x4028128[16] indirect loss record 4
1823==19552== 0x40280A8[16] indirect loss record 2
1824==19552== 0x4028168[16] indirect loss record 5
1825==19552== 0x40281A8[16] indirect loss record 6
1826(gdb) mo b 2
1827==19552== 16 bytes in 1 blocks are indirectly lost in loss record 2 of 7
1828==19552== at 0x40070B4: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:263)
1829==19552== by 0x80484D5: mk (leak-tree.c:28)
1830==19552== by 0x8048519: f (leak-tree.c:43)
1831==19552== by 0x8048856: main (leak-tree.c:63)
1832==19552== 0x40280A8[16]
1833==19552== 0x4028168[16] indirect loss record 5
1834==19552== 0x40281A8[16] indirect loss record 6
1835(gdb)
1836
1837]]></programlisting>
1838
1839 </listitem>
1840
1841 <listitem>
1842 <para><varname>who_points_at &lt;addr&gt; [&lt;len&gt;]</varname>
1843 shows all the locations where a pointer to addr is found.
1844 If len is equal to 1, the command only shows the locations pointing
1845 exactly at addr (i.e. the "start pointers" to addr).
1846 If len is &gt; 1, "interior pointers" pointing at the len first bytes
1847 will also be shown.
1848 </para>
1849
1850 <para>The locations searched for are the same as the locations
1851 used in the leak search. So, <varname>who_points_at</varname> can a.o.
1852 be used to show why the leak search still can reach a block, or can
1853 search for dangling pointers to a freed block.
1854 Each location pointing at addr (or pointing inside addr if interior pointers
1855 are being searched for) will be described.
1856 </para>
1857
1858 <para>In the below example, the pointers to the 'tree block A' (see example
1859 in command <varname>block_list</varname>) is shown before the tree was leaked.
1860 The descriptions are detailed as the option <option>--read-var-info=yes</option>
1861 was given at Valgrind startup. The second call shows the pointers (start and interior
1862 pointers) to block G. The block G (0x40281A8) is reachable via block C (0x40280a8)
1863 and register ECX of tid 1 (tid is the Valgrind thread id).
1864 It is "interior reachable" via the register EBX.
1865 </para>
1866
1867<programlisting><![CDATA[
1868(gdb) monitor who_points_at 0x4028028
1869==20852== Searching for pointers to 0x4028028
1870==20852== *0x8049e20 points at 0x4028028
1871==20852== Location 0x8049e20 is 0 bytes inside global var "t"
1872==20852== declared at leak-tree.c:35
1873(gdb) monitor who_points_at 0x40281A8 16
1874==20852== Searching for pointers pointing in 16 bytes from 0x40281a8
1875==20852== *0x40280ac points at 0x40281a8
1876==20852== Address 0x40280ac is 4 bytes inside a block of size 16 alloc'd
1877==20852== at 0x40070B4: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:263)
1878==20852== by 0x80484D5: mk (leak-tree.c:28)
1879==20852== by 0x8048519: f (leak-tree.c:43)
1880==20852== by 0x8048856: main (leak-tree.c:63)
1881==20852== tid 1 register ECX points at 0x40281a8
1882==20852== tid 1 register EBX interior points at 2 bytes inside 0x40281a8
1883(gdb)
1884]]></programlisting>
philippea22f59d2012-01-26 23:13:52 +00001885
philippeab1fce92013-09-29 13:47:32 +00001886 <para> When <varname>who_points_at</varname> finds an interior pointer,
1887 it will report the heuristic(s) with which this interior pointer
1888 will be considered as reachable. Note that this is done independently
1889 of the value of the option <option>--leak-check-heuristics</option>.
1890 In the below example, the loss record 6 indicates a possibly lost
1891 block. <varname>who_points_at</varname> reports that there is an interior
1892 pointer pointing in this block, and that the block can be considered
1893 reachable using the heuristic
1894 <computeroutput>multipleinheritance</computeroutput>.
1895 </para>
1896
1897<programlisting><![CDATA[
1898(gdb) monitor block_list 6
1899==3748== 8 bytes in 1 blocks are possibly lost in loss record 6 of 7
1900==3748== at 0x4007D77: operator new(unsigned int) (vg_replace_malloc.c:313)
1901==3748== by 0x8048954: main (leak_cpp_interior.cpp:43)
1902==3748== 0x402A0E0[8]
1903(gdb) monitor who_points_at 0x402A0E0 8
1904==3748== Searching for pointers pointing in 8 bytes from 0x402a0e0
1905==3748== *0xbe8ee078 interior points at 4 bytes inside 0x402a0e0
1906==3748== Address 0xbe8ee078 is on thread 1's stack
1907==3748== block at 0x402a0e0 considered reachable by ptr 0x402a0e4 using multipleinheritance heuristic
1908(gdb)
1909]]></programlisting>
1910
1911 </listitem>
philippea22f59d2012-01-26 23:13:52 +00001912
sewardj3b290482011-05-06 21:02:55 +00001913</itemizedlist>
1914
1915</sect1>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001916
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001917<sect1 id="mc-manual.clientreqs" xreflabel="Client requests">
1918<title>Client Requests</title>
1919
1920<para>The following client requests are defined in
njn1d0825f2006-03-27 11:37:07 +00001921<filename>memcheck.h</filename>.
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001922See <filename>memcheck.h</filename> for exact details of their
1923arguments.</para>
1924
1925<itemizedlist>
1926
1927 <listitem>
njndbf7ca72006-03-31 11:57:59 +00001928 <para><varname>VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_NOACCESS</varname>,
1929 <varname>VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_UNDEFINED</varname> and
1930 <varname>VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_DEFINED</varname>.
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001931 These mark address ranges as completely inaccessible,
1932 accessible but containing undefined data, and accessible and
sewardje7decf82011-01-22 11:21:58 +00001933 containing defined data, respectively.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001934 </listitem>
1935
1936 <listitem>
njndbf7ca72006-03-31 11:57:59 +00001937 <para><varname>VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_DEFINED_IF_ADDRESSABLE</varname>.
1938 This is just like <varname>VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_DEFINED</varname> but only
1939 affects those bytes that are already addressable.</para>
1940 </listitem>
1941
1942 <listitem>
njndbf7ca72006-03-31 11:57:59 +00001943 <para><varname>VALGRIND_CHECK_MEM_IS_ADDRESSABLE</varname> and
1944 <varname>VALGRIND_CHECK_MEM_IS_DEFINED</varname>: check immediately
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001945 whether or not the given address range has the relevant property,
1946 and if not, print an error message. Also, for the convenience of
1947 the client, returns zero if the relevant property holds; otherwise,
1948 the returned value is the address of the first byte for which the
1949 property is not true. Always returns 0 when not run on
1950 Valgrind.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001951 </listitem>
1952
1953 <listitem>
njndbf7ca72006-03-31 11:57:59 +00001954 <para><varname>VALGRIND_CHECK_VALUE_IS_DEFINED</varname>: a quick and easy
1955 way to find out whether Valgrind thinks a particular value
1956 (lvalue, to be precise) is addressable and defined. Prints an error
njn8225cc02009-03-09 22:52:24 +00001957 message if not. It has no return value.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001958 </listitem>
1959
1960 <listitem>
njn8225cc02009-03-09 22:52:24 +00001961 <para><varname>VALGRIND_DO_LEAK_CHECK</varname>: does a full memory leak
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +00001962 check (like <option>--leak-check=full</option>) right now.
njn8225cc02009-03-09 22:52:24 +00001963 This is useful for incrementally checking for leaks between arbitrary
1964 places in the program's execution. It has no return value.</para>
1965 </listitem>
1966
1967 <listitem>
sewardjc8bd1df2011-06-26 12:41:33 +00001968 <para><varname>VALGRIND_DO_ADDED_LEAK_CHECK</varname>: same as
1969 <varname> VALGRIND_DO_LEAK_CHECK</varname> but only shows the
1970 entries for which there was an increase in leaked bytes or leaked
1971 number of blocks since the previous leak search. It has no return
1972 value.</para>
1973 </listitem>
1974
1975 <listitem>
1976 <para><varname>VALGRIND_DO_CHANGED_LEAK_CHECK</varname>: same as
1977 <varname>VALGRIND_DO_LEAK_CHECK</varname> but only shows the
1978 entries for which there was an increase or decrease in leaked
1979 bytes or leaked number of blocks since the previous leak search. It
1980 has no return value.</para>
1981 </listitem>
1982
1983 <listitem>
njn8225cc02009-03-09 22:52:24 +00001984 <para><varname>VALGRIND_DO_QUICK_LEAK_CHECK</varname>: like
1985 <varname>VALGRIND_DO_LEAK_CHECK</varname>, except it produces only a leak
njn7e5d4ed2009-07-30 02:57:52 +00001986 summary (like <option>--leak-check=summary</option>).
njn8225cc02009-03-09 22:52:24 +00001987 It has no return value.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001988 </listitem>
1989
1990 <listitem>
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00001991 <para><varname>VALGRIND_COUNT_LEAKS</varname>: fills in the four
1992 arguments with the number of bytes of memory found by the previous
njn8225cc02009-03-09 22:52:24 +00001993 leak check to be leaked (i.e. the sum of direct leaks and indirect leaks),
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +00001994 dubious, reachable and suppressed. This is useful in test harness code,
njn8225cc02009-03-09 22:52:24 +00001995 after calling <varname>VALGRIND_DO_LEAK_CHECK</varname> or
1996 <varname>VALGRIND_DO_QUICK_LEAK_CHECK</varname>.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00001997 </listitem>
1998
1999 <listitem>
njn8df80b22009-03-02 05:11:06 +00002000 <para><varname>VALGRIND_COUNT_LEAK_BLOCKS</varname>: identical to
2001 <varname>VALGRIND_COUNT_LEAKS</varname> except that it returns the
2002 number of blocks rather than the number of bytes in each
2003 category.</para>
2004 </listitem>
2005
2006 <listitem>
de03e0e7c2005-12-03 23:02:33 +00002007 <para><varname>VALGRIND_GET_VBITS</varname> and
2008 <varname>VALGRIND_SET_VBITS</varname>: allow you to get and set the
2009 V (validity) bits for an address range. You should probably only
2010 set V bits that you have got with
2011 <varname>VALGRIND_GET_VBITS</varname>. Only for those who really
njn1d0825f2006-03-27 11:37:07 +00002012 know what they are doing.</para>
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00002013 </listitem>
2014
sewardje7decf82011-01-22 11:21:58 +00002015 <listitem>
2016 <para><varname>VALGRIND_CREATE_BLOCK</varname> and
2017 <varname>VALGRIND_DISCARD</varname>. <varname>VALGRIND_CREATE_BLOCK</varname>
2018 takes an address, a number of bytes and a character string. The
2019 specified address range is then associated with that string. When
2020 Memcheck reports an invalid access to an address in the range, it
2021 will describe it in terms of this block rather than in terms of
2022 any other block it knows about. Note that the use of this macro
2023 does not actually change the state of memory in any way -- it
2024 merely gives a name for the range.
2025 </para>
2026
2027 <para>At some point you may want Memcheck to stop reporting errors
2028 in terms of the block named
2029 by <varname>VALGRIND_CREATE_BLOCK</varname>. To make this
2030 possible, <varname>VALGRIND_CREATE_BLOCK</varname> returns a
2031 "block handle", which is a C <varname>int</varname> value. You
2032 can pass this block handle to <varname>VALGRIND_DISCARD</varname>.
2033 After doing so, Valgrind will no longer relate addressing errors
2034 in the specified range to the block. Passing invalid handles to
2035 <varname>VALGRIND_DISCARD</varname> is harmless.
2036 </para>
2037 </listitem>
2038
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00002039</itemizedlist>
2040
2041</sect1>
sewardjce10c262006-10-05 17:56:14 +00002042
2043
2044
2045
njn09f2e6c2009-08-10 04:07:54 +00002046<sect1 id="mc-manual.mempools" xreflabel="Memory Pools">
sewardjce10c262006-10-05 17:56:14 +00002047<title>Memory Pools: describing and working with custom allocators</title>
2048
2049<para>Some programs use custom memory allocators, often for performance
njna3311642009-08-10 01:29:14 +00002050reasons. Left to itself, Memcheck is unable to understand the
2051behaviour of custom allocation schemes as well as it understands the
2052standard allocators, and so may miss errors and leaks in your program. What
2053this section describes is a way to give Memcheck enough of a description of
2054your custom allocator that it can make at least some sense of what is
2055happening.</para>
sewardjae0e07b2006-10-06 11:47:01 +00002056
2057<para>There are many different sorts of custom allocator, so Memcheck
sewardjce10c262006-10-05 17:56:14 +00002058attempts to reason about them using a loose, abstract model. We
2059use the following terminology when describing custom allocation
2060systems:</para>
2061
2062<itemizedlist>
2063 <listitem>
2064 <para>Custom allocation involves a set of independent "memory pools".
2065 </para>
2066 </listitem>
2067 <listitem>
2068 <para>Memcheck's notion of a a memory pool consists of a single "anchor
2069 address" and a set of non-overlapping "chunks" associated with the
2070 anchor address.</para>
2071 </listitem>
2072 <listitem>
2073 <para>Typically a pool's anchor address is the address of a
2074 book-keeping "header" structure.</para>
2075 </listitem>
2076 <listitem>
2077 <para>Typically the pool's chunks are drawn from a contiguous
bartaf25f672009-06-26 19:03:53 +00002078 "superblock" acquired through the system
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +00002079 <function>malloc</function> or
2080 <function>mmap</function>.</para>
sewardjce10c262006-10-05 17:56:14 +00002081 </listitem>
2082
2083</itemizedlist>
2084
2085<para>Keep in mind that the last two points above say "typically": the
2086Valgrind mempool client request API is intentionally vague about the
2087exact structure of a mempool. There is no specific mention made of
2088headers or superblocks. Nevertheless, the following picture may help
2089elucidate the intention of the terms in the API:</para>
2090
2091<programlisting><![CDATA[
2092 "pool"
2093 (anchor address)
2094 |
2095 v
2096 +--------+---+
2097 | header | o |
2098 +--------+-|-+
2099 |
2100 v superblock
2101 +------+---+--------------+---+------------------+
2102 | |rzB| allocation |rzB| |
2103 +------+---+--------------+---+------------------+
2104 ^ ^
2105 | |
2106 "addr" "addr"+"size"
2107]]></programlisting>
2108
2109<para>
2110Note that the header and the superblock may be contiguous or
2111discontiguous, and there may be multiple superblocks associated with a
2112single header; such variations are opaque to Memcheck. The API
2113only requires that your allocation scheme can present sensible values
2114of "pool", "addr" and "size".</para>
2115
2116<para>
2117Typically, before making client requests related to mempools, a client
2118program will have allocated such a header and superblock for their
2119mempool, and marked the superblock NOACCESS using the
2120<varname>VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_NOACCESS</varname> client request.</para>
2121
2122<para>
2123When dealing with mempools, the goal is to maintain a particular
2124invariant condition: that Memcheck believes the unallocated portions
2125of the pool's superblock (including redzones) are NOACCESS. To
2126maintain this invariant, the client program must ensure that the
2127superblock starts out in that state; Memcheck cannot make it so, since
2128Memcheck never explicitly learns about the superblock of a pool, only
2129the allocated chunks within the pool.</para>
2130
2131<para>
2132Once the header and superblock for a pool are established and properly
2133marked, there are a number of client requests programs can use to
2134inform Memcheck about changes to the state of a mempool:</para>
2135
2136<itemizedlist>
2137
2138 <listitem>
2139 <para>
2140 <varname>VALGRIND_CREATE_MEMPOOL(pool, rzB, is_zeroed)</varname>:
njna3311642009-08-10 01:29:14 +00002141 This request registers the address <varname>pool</varname> as the anchor
2142 address for a memory pool. It also provides a size
2143 <varname>rzB</varname>, specifying how large the redzones placed around
2144 chunks allocated from the pool should be. Finally, it provides an
2145 <varname>is_zeroed</varname> argument that specifies whether the pool's
2146 chunks are zeroed (more precisely: defined) when allocated.
sewardjce10c262006-10-05 17:56:14 +00002147 </para>
2148 <para>
2149 Upon completion of this request, no chunks are associated with the
2150 pool. The request simply tells Memcheck that the pool exists, so that
2151 subsequent calls can refer to it as a pool.
2152 </para>
2153 </listitem>
2154
2155 <listitem>
2156 <para><varname>VALGRIND_DESTROY_MEMPOOL(pool)</varname>:
2157 This request tells Memcheck that a pool is being torn down. Memcheck
2158 then removes all records of chunks associated with the pool, as well
2159 as its record of the pool's existence. While destroying its records of
2160 a mempool, Memcheck resets the redzones of any live chunks in the pool
2161 to NOACCESS.
2162 </para>
2163 </listitem>
2164
2165 <listitem>
2166 <para><varname>VALGRIND_MEMPOOL_ALLOC(pool, addr, size)</varname>:
njna3311642009-08-10 01:29:14 +00002167 This request informs Memcheck that a <varname>size</varname>-byte chunk
2168 has been allocated at <varname>addr</varname>, and associates the chunk with the
2169 specified
2170 <varname>pool</varname>. If the pool was created with nonzero
2171 <varname>rzB</varname> redzones, Memcheck will mark the
2172 <varname>rzB</varname> bytes before and after the chunk as NOACCESS. If
2173 the pool was created with the <varname>is_zeroed</varname> argument set,
2174 Memcheck will mark the chunk as DEFINED, otherwise Memcheck will mark
2175 the chunk as UNDEFINED.
sewardjce10c262006-10-05 17:56:14 +00002176 </para>
2177 </listitem>
2178
2179 <listitem>
2180 <para><varname>VALGRIND_MEMPOOL_FREE(pool, addr)</varname>:
njna3311642009-08-10 01:29:14 +00002181 This request informs Memcheck that the chunk at <varname>addr</varname>
2182 should no longer be considered allocated. Memcheck will mark the chunk
2183 associated with <varname>addr</varname> as NOACCESS, and delete its
2184 record of the chunk's existence.
sewardjce10c262006-10-05 17:56:14 +00002185 </para>
2186 </listitem>
2187
2188 <listitem>
2189 <para><varname>VALGRIND_MEMPOOL_TRIM(pool, addr, size)</varname>:
njna3311642009-08-10 01:29:14 +00002190 This request trims the chunks associated with <varname>pool</varname>.
2191 The request only operates on chunks associated with
2192 <varname>pool</varname>. Trimming is formally defined as:</para>
sewardjce10c262006-10-05 17:56:14 +00002193 <itemizedlist>
2194 <listitem>
njna3311642009-08-10 01:29:14 +00002195 <para> All chunks entirely inside the range
2196 <varname>addr..(addr+size-1)</varname> are preserved.</para>
sewardjce10c262006-10-05 17:56:14 +00002197 </listitem>
2198 <listitem>
njna3311642009-08-10 01:29:14 +00002199 <para>All chunks entirely outside the range
2200 <varname>addr..(addr+size-1)</varname> are discarded, as though
2201 <varname>VALGRIND_MEMPOOL_FREE</varname> was called on them. </para>
sewardjce10c262006-10-05 17:56:14 +00002202 </listitem>
2203 <listitem>
2204 <para>All other chunks must intersect with the range
njna3311642009-08-10 01:29:14 +00002205 <varname>addr..(addr+size-1)</varname>; areas outside the
2206 intersection are marked as NOACCESS, as though they had been
2207 independently freed with
sewardjce10c262006-10-05 17:56:14 +00002208 <varname>VALGRIND_MEMPOOL_FREE</varname>.</para>
2209 </listitem>
2210 </itemizedlist>
2211 <para>This is a somewhat rare request, but can be useful in
2212 implementing the type of mass-free operations common in custom
2213 LIFO allocators.</para>
2214 </listitem>
2215
2216 <listitem>
bartaf25f672009-06-26 19:03:53 +00002217 <para><varname>VALGRIND_MOVE_MEMPOOL(poolA, poolB)</varname>: This
2218 request informs Memcheck that the pool previously anchored at
njna3311642009-08-10 01:29:14 +00002219 address <varname>poolA</varname> has moved to anchor address
2220 <varname>poolB</varname>. This is a rare request, typically only needed
2221 if you <function>realloc</function> the header of a mempool.</para>
sewardjce10c262006-10-05 17:56:14 +00002222 <para>No memory-status bits are altered by this request.</para>
2223 </listitem>
2224
2225 <listitem>
2226 <para>
bartaf25f672009-06-26 19:03:53 +00002227 <varname>VALGRIND_MEMPOOL_CHANGE(pool, addrA, addrB,
2228 size)</varname>: This request informs Memcheck that the chunk
njna3311642009-08-10 01:29:14 +00002229 previously allocated at address <varname>addrA</varname> within
2230 <varname>pool</varname> has been moved and/or resized, and should be
2231 changed to cover the region <varname>addrB..(addrB+size-1)</varname>. This
2232 is a rare request, typically only needed if you
2233 <function>realloc</function> a superblock or wish to extend a chunk
2234 without changing its memory-status bits.
sewardjce10c262006-10-05 17:56:14 +00002235 </para>
2236 <para>No memory-status bits are altered by this request.
2237 </para>
2238 </listitem>
2239
2240 <listitem>
2241 <para><varname>VALGRIND_MEMPOOL_EXISTS(pool)</varname>:
2242 This request informs the caller whether or not Memcheck is currently
njna3311642009-08-10 01:29:14 +00002243 tracking a mempool at anchor address <varname>pool</varname>. It
2244 evaluates to 1 when there is a mempool associated with that address, 0
2245 otherwise. This is a rare request, only useful in circumstances when
2246 client code might have lost track of the set of active mempools.
sewardjce10c262006-10-05 17:56:14 +00002247 </para>
2248 </listitem>
2249
2250</itemizedlist>
2251
sewardj778d7832007-11-22 01:21:56 +00002252</sect1>
2253
2254
2255
2256
2257
2258
2259
2260<sect1 id="mc-manual.mpiwrap" xreflabel="MPI Wrappers">
2261<title>Debugging MPI Parallel Programs with Valgrind</title>
2262
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +00002263<para>Memcheck supports debugging of distributed-memory applications
sewardj778d7832007-11-22 01:21:56 +00002264which use the MPI message passing standard. This support consists of a
2265library of wrapper functions for the
2266<computeroutput>PMPI_*</computeroutput> interface. When incorporated
2267into the application's address space, either by direct linking or by
2268<computeroutput>LD_PRELOAD</computeroutput>, the wrappers intercept
2269calls to <computeroutput>PMPI_Send</computeroutput>,
2270<computeroutput>PMPI_Recv</computeroutput>, etc. They then
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +00002271use client requests to inform Memcheck of memory state changes caused
sewardj778d7832007-11-22 01:21:56 +00002272by the function being wrapped. This reduces the number of false
2273positives that Memcheck otherwise typically reports for MPI
2274applications.</para>
2275
2276<para>The wrappers also take the opportunity to carefully check
2277size and definedness of buffers passed as arguments to MPI functions, hence
2278detecting errors such as passing undefined data to
2279<computeroutput>PMPI_Send</computeroutput>, or receiving data into a
2280buffer which is too small.</para>
2281
2282<para>Unlike most of the rest of Valgrind, the wrapper library is subject to a
2283BSD-style license, so you can link it into any code base you like.
njna437a602009-08-04 05:24:46 +00002284See the top of <computeroutput>mpi/libmpiwrap.c</computeroutput>
sewardj778d7832007-11-22 01:21:56 +00002285for license details.</para>
2286
2287
2288<sect2 id="mc-manual.mpiwrap.build" xreflabel="Building MPI Wrappers">
2289<title>Building and installing the wrappers</title>
2290
2291<para> The wrapper library will be built automatically if possible.
2292Valgrind's configure script will look for a suitable
2293<computeroutput>mpicc</computeroutput> to build it with. This must be
2294the same <computeroutput>mpicc</computeroutput> you use to build the
2295MPI application you want to debug. By default, Valgrind tries
2296<computeroutput>mpicc</computeroutput>, but you can specify a
njna3311642009-08-10 01:29:14 +00002297different one by using the configure-time option
njn7316df22009-08-04 01:16:01 +00002298<option>--with-mpicc</option>. Currently the
sewardj778d7832007-11-22 01:21:56 +00002299wrappers are only buildable with
2300<computeroutput>mpicc</computeroutput>s which are based on GNU
njn7316df22009-08-04 01:16:01 +00002301GCC or Intel's C++ Compiler.</para>
sewardj778d7832007-11-22 01:21:56 +00002302
2303<para>Check that the configure script prints a line like this:</para>
2304
2305<programlisting><![CDATA[
2306checking for usable MPI2-compliant mpicc and mpi.h... yes, mpicc
2307]]></programlisting>
2308
2309<para>If it says <computeroutput>... no</computeroutput>, your
2310<computeroutput>mpicc</computeroutput> has failed to compile and link
2311a test MPI2 program.</para>
2312
2313<para>If the configure test succeeds, continue in the usual way with
2314<computeroutput>make</computeroutput> and <computeroutput>make
2315install</computeroutput>. The final install tree should then contain
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +00002316<computeroutput>libmpiwrap-&lt;platform&gt;.so</computeroutput>.
sewardj778d7832007-11-22 01:21:56 +00002317</para>
2318
2319<para>Compile up a test MPI program (eg, MPI hello-world) and try
2320this:</para>
2321
2322<programlisting><![CDATA[
njn6bf365c2009-02-11 00:35:45 +00002323LD_PRELOAD=$prefix/lib/valgrind/libmpiwrap-<platform>.so \
sewardj778d7832007-11-22 01:21:56 +00002324 mpirun [args] $prefix/bin/valgrind ./hello
2325]]></programlisting>
2326
2327<para>You should see something similar to the following</para>
2328
2329<programlisting><![CDATA[
2330valgrind MPI wrappers 31901: Active for pid 31901
2331valgrind MPI wrappers 31901: Try MPIWRAP_DEBUG=help for possible options
2332]]></programlisting>
2333
2334<para>repeated for every process in the group. If you do not see
2335these, there is an build/installation problem of some kind.</para>
2336
2337<para> The MPI functions to be wrapped are assumed to be in an ELF
2338shared object with soname matching
2339<computeroutput>libmpi.so*</computeroutput>. This is known to be
2340correct at least for Open MPI and Quadrics MPI, and can easily be
2341changed if required.</para>
2342</sect2>
2343
2344
2345<sect2 id="mc-manual.mpiwrap.gettingstarted"
2346 xreflabel="Getting started with MPI Wrappers">
2347<title>Getting started</title>
2348
2349<para>Compile your MPI application as usual, taking care to link it
2350using the same <computeroutput>mpicc</computeroutput> that your
2351Valgrind build was configured with.</para>
2352
2353<para>
2354Use the following basic scheme to run your application on Valgrind with
2355the wrappers engaged:</para>
2356
2357<programlisting><![CDATA[
2358MPIWRAP_DEBUG=[wrapper-args] \
njn6bf365c2009-02-11 00:35:45 +00002359 LD_PRELOAD=$prefix/lib/valgrind/libmpiwrap-<platform>.so \
sewardj778d7832007-11-22 01:21:56 +00002360 mpirun [mpirun-args] \
2361 $prefix/bin/valgrind [valgrind-args] \
2362 [application] [app-args]
2363]]></programlisting>
2364
2365<para>As an alternative to
2366<computeroutput>LD_PRELOAD</computeroutput>ing
njn6bf365c2009-02-11 00:35:45 +00002367<computeroutput>libmpiwrap-&lt;platform&gt;.so</computeroutput>, you can
2368simply link it to your application if desired. This should not disturb
2369native behaviour of your application in any way.</para>
sewardj778d7832007-11-22 01:21:56 +00002370</sect2>
2371
2372
2373<sect2 id="mc-manual.mpiwrap.controlling"
2374 xreflabel="Controlling the MPI Wrappers">
2375<title>Controlling the wrapper library</title>
2376
2377<para>Environment variable
2378<computeroutput>MPIWRAP_DEBUG</computeroutput> is consulted at
2379startup. The default behaviour is to print a starting banner</para>
2380
2381<programlisting><![CDATA[
2382valgrind MPI wrappers 16386: Active for pid 16386
2383valgrind MPI wrappers 16386: Try MPIWRAP_DEBUG=help for possible options
2384]]></programlisting>
2385
2386<para> and then be relatively quiet.</para>
2387
2388<para>You can give a list of comma-separated options in
2389<computeroutput>MPIWRAP_DEBUG</computeroutput>. These are</para>
2390
2391<itemizedlist>
2392 <listitem>
2393 <para><computeroutput>verbose</computeroutput>:
2394 show entries/exits of all wrappers. Also show extra
2395 debugging info, such as the status of outstanding
2396 <computeroutput>MPI_Request</computeroutput>s resulting
2397 from uncompleted <computeroutput>MPI_Irecv</computeroutput>s.</para>
2398 </listitem>
2399 <listitem>
2400 <para><computeroutput>quiet</computeroutput>:
2401 opposite of <computeroutput>verbose</computeroutput>, only print
2402 anything when the wrappers want
2403 to report a detected programming error, or in case of catastrophic
2404 failure of the wrappers.</para>
2405 </listitem>
2406 <listitem>
2407 <para><computeroutput>warn</computeroutput>:
2408 by default, functions which lack proper wrappers
2409 are not commented on, just silently
2410 ignored. This causes a warning to be printed for each unwrapped
2411 function used, up to a maximum of three warnings per function.</para>
2412 </listitem>
2413 <listitem>
2414 <para><computeroutput>strict</computeroutput>:
2415 print an error message and abort the program if
2416 a function lacking a wrapper is used.</para>
2417 </listitem>
2418</itemizedlist>
2419
2420<para> If you want to use Valgrind's XML output facility
njn7e5d4ed2009-07-30 02:57:52 +00002421(<option>--xml=yes</option>), you should pass
sewardj778d7832007-11-22 01:21:56 +00002422<computeroutput>quiet</computeroutput> in
2423<computeroutput>MPIWRAP_DEBUG</computeroutput> so as to get rid of any
2424extraneous printing from the wrappers.</para>
2425
2426</sect2>
2427
2428
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +00002429<sect2 id="mc-manual.mpiwrap.limitations.functions"
2430 xreflabel="Functions: Abilities and Limitations">
sewardj778d7832007-11-22 01:21:56 +00002431<title>Functions</title>
2432
2433<para>All MPI2 functions except
2434<computeroutput>MPI_Wtick</computeroutput>,
2435<computeroutput>MPI_Wtime</computeroutput> and
2436<computeroutput>MPI_Pcontrol</computeroutput> have wrappers. The
2437first two are not wrapped because they return a
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +00002438<computeroutput>double</computeroutput>, which Valgrind's
2439function-wrap mechanism cannot handle (but it could easily be
2440extended to do so). <computeroutput>MPI_Pcontrol</computeroutput> cannot be
sewardj778d7832007-11-22 01:21:56 +00002441wrapped as it has variable arity:
2442<computeroutput>int MPI_Pcontrol(const int level, ...)</computeroutput></para>
2443
2444<para>Most functions are wrapped with a default wrapper which does
2445nothing except complain or abort if it is called, depending on
2446settings in <computeroutput>MPIWRAP_DEBUG</computeroutput> listed
2447above. The following functions have "real", do-something-useful
2448wrappers:</para>
2449
2450<programlisting><![CDATA[
2451PMPI_Send PMPI_Bsend PMPI_Ssend PMPI_Rsend
2452
2453PMPI_Recv PMPI_Get_count
2454
2455PMPI_Isend PMPI_Ibsend PMPI_Issend PMPI_Irsend
2456
2457PMPI_Irecv
2458PMPI_Wait PMPI_Waitall
2459PMPI_Test PMPI_Testall
2460
2461PMPI_Iprobe PMPI_Probe
2462
2463PMPI_Cancel
2464
2465PMPI_Sendrecv
2466
2467PMPI_Type_commit PMPI_Type_free
2468
2469PMPI_Pack PMPI_Unpack
2470
2471PMPI_Bcast PMPI_Gather PMPI_Scatter PMPI_Alltoall
2472PMPI_Reduce PMPI_Allreduce PMPI_Op_create
2473
2474PMPI_Comm_create PMPI_Comm_dup PMPI_Comm_free PMPI_Comm_rank PMPI_Comm_size
2475
2476PMPI_Error_string
2477PMPI_Init PMPI_Initialized PMPI_Finalize
2478]]></programlisting>
2479
2480<para> A few functions such as
2481<computeroutput>PMPI_Address</computeroutput> are listed as
2482<computeroutput>HAS_NO_WRAPPER</computeroutput>. They have no wrapper
2483at all as there is nothing worth checking, and giving a no-op wrapper
2484would reduce performance for no reason.</para>
2485
2486<para> Note that the wrapper library itself can itself generate large
2487numbers of calls to the MPI implementation, especially when walking
2488complex types. The most common functions called are
2489<computeroutput>PMPI_Extent</computeroutput>,
2490<computeroutput>PMPI_Type_get_envelope</computeroutput>,
2491<computeroutput>PMPI_Type_get_contents</computeroutput>, and
2492<computeroutput>PMPI_Type_free</computeroutput>. </para>
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +00002493</sect2>
sewardj778d7832007-11-22 01:21:56 +00002494
njn2f7eebe2009-08-05 06:34:27 +00002495<sect2 id="mc-manual.mpiwrap.limitations.types"
2496 xreflabel="Types: Abilities and Limitations">
sewardj778d7832007-11-22 01:21:56 +00002497<title>Types</title>
2498
2499<para> MPI-1.1 structured types are supported, and walked exactly.
2500The currently supported combiners are
2501<computeroutput>MPI_COMBINER_NAMED</computeroutput>,
2502<computeroutput>MPI_COMBINER_CONTIGUOUS</computeroutput>,
2503<computeroutput>MPI_COMBINER_VECTOR</computeroutput>,
2504<computeroutput>MPI_COMBINER_HVECTOR</computeroutput>
2505<computeroutput>MPI_COMBINER_INDEXED</computeroutput>,
2506<computeroutput>MPI_COMBINER_HINDEXED</computeroutput> and
2507<computeroutput>MPI_COMBINER_STRUCT</computeroutput>. This should
2508cover all MPI-1.1 types. The mechanism (function
2509<computeroutput>walk_type</computeroutput>) should extend easily to
2510cover MPI2 combiners.</para>
2511
2512<para>MPI defines some named structured types
2513(<computeroutput>MPI_FLOAT_INT</computeroutput>,
2514<computeroutput>MPI_DOUBLE_INT</computeroutput>,
2515<computeroutput>MPI_LONG_INT</computeroutput>,
2516<computeroutput>MPI_2INT</computeroutput>,
2517<computeroutput>MPI_SHORT_INT</computeroutput>,
2518<computeroutput>MPI_LONG_DOUBLE_INT</computeroutput>) which are pairs
2519of some basic type and a C <computeroutput>int</computeroutput>.
2520Unfortunately the MPI specification makes it impossible to look inside
2521these types and see where the fields are. Therefore these wrappers
2522assume the types are laid out as <computeroutput>struct { float val;
2523int loc; }</computeroutput> (for
2524<computeroutput>MPI_FLOAT_INT</computeroutput>), etc, and act
2525accordingly. This appears to be correct at least for Open MPI 1.0.2
2526and for Quadrics MPI.</para>
2527
2528<para>If <computeroutput>strict</computeroutput> is an option specified
2529in <computeroutput>MPIWRAP_DEBUG</computeroutput>, the application
2530will abort if an unhandled type is encountered. Otherwise, the
2531application will print a warning message and continue.</para>
2532
2533<para>Some effort is made to mark/check memory ranges corresponding to
2534arrays of values in a single pass. This is important for performance
2535since asking Valgrind to mark/check any range, no matter how small,
2536carries quite a large constant cost. This optimisation is applied to
2537arrays of primitive types (<computeroutput>double</computeroutput>,
2538<computeroutput>float</computeroutput>,
2539<computeroutput>int</computeroutput>,
2540<computeroutput>long</computeroutput>, <computeroutput>long
2541long</computeroutput>, <computeroutput>short</computeroutput>,
2542<computeroutput>char</computeroutput>, and <computeroutput>long
2543double</computeroutput> on platforms where <computeroutput>sizeof(long
2544double) == 8</computeroutput>). For arrays of all other types, the
2545wrappers handle each element individually and so there can be a very
2546large performance cost.</para>
2547
sewardj778d7832007-11-22 01:21:56 +00002548</sect2>
2549
2550
2551<sect2 id="mc-manual.mpiwrap.writingwrappers"
2552 xreflabel="Writing new MPI Wrappers">
2553<title>Writing new wrappers</title>
2554
2555<para>
2556For the most part the wrappers are straightforward. The only
2557significant complexity arises with nonblocking receives.</para>
2558
2559<para>The issue is that <computeroutput>MPI_Irecv</computeroutput>
2560states the recv buffer and returns immediately, giving a handle
2561(<computeroutput>MPI_Request</computeroutput>) for the transaction.
2562Later the user will have to poll for completion with
2563<computeroutput>MPI_Wait</computeroutput> etc, and when the
2564transaction completes successfully, the wrappers have to paint the
2565recv buffer. But the recv buffer details are not presented to
2566<computeroutput>MPI_Wait</computeroutput> -- only the handle is. The
2567library therefore maintains a shadow table which associates
2568uncompleted <computeroutput>MPI_Request</computeroutput>s with the
2569corresponding buffer address/count/type. When an operation completes,
2570the table is searched for the associated address/count/type info, and
2571memory is marked accordingly.</para>
2572
2573<para>Access to the table is guarded by a (POSIX pthreads) lock, so as
2574to make the library thread-safe.</para>
2575
2576<para>The table is allocated with
2577<computeroutput>malloc</computeroutput> and never
2578<computeroutput>free</computeroutput>d, so it will show up in leak
2579checks.</para>
2580
2581<para>Writing new wrappers should be fairly easy. The source file is
njna437a602009-08-04 05:24:46 +00002582<computeroutput>mpi/libmpiwrap.c</computeroutput>. If possible,
sewardj778d7832007-11-22 01:21:56 +00002583find an existing wrapper for a function of similar behaviour to the
2584one you want to wrap, and use it as a starting point. The wrappers
2585are organised in sections in the same order as the MPI 1.1 spec, to
2586aid navigation. When adding a wrapper, remember to comment out the
2587definition of the default wrapper in the long list of defaults at the
2588bottom of the file (do not remove it, just comment it out).</para>
2589</sect2>
2590
2591<sect2 id="mc-manual.mpiwrap.whattoexpect"
2592 xreflabel="What to expect with MPI Wrappers">
2593<title>What to expect when using the wrappers</title>
2594
2595<para>The wrappers should reduce Memcheck's false-error rate on MPI
2596applications. Because the wrapping is done at the MPI interface,
2597there will still potentially be a large number of errors reported in
2598the MPI implementation below the interface. The best you can do is
2599try to suppress them.</para>
2600
2601<para>You may also find that the input-side (buffer
2602length/definedness) checks find errors in your MPI use, for example
2603passing too short a buffer to
2604<computeroutput>MPI_Recv</computeroutput>.</para>
2605
2606<para>Functions which are not wrapped may increase the false
2607error rate. A possible approach is to run with
2608<computeroutput>MPI_DEBUG</computeroutput> containing
2609<computeroutput>warn</computeroutput>. This will show you functions
2610which lack proper wrappers but which are nevertheless used. You can
2611then write wrappers for them.
2612</para>
2613
2614<para>A known source of potential false errors are the
2615<computeroutput>PMPI_Reduce</computeroutput> family of functions, when
2616using a custom (user-defined) reduction function. In a reduction
2617operation, each node notionally sends data to a "central point" which
2618uses the specified reduction function to merge the data items into a
2619single item. Hence, in general, data is passed between nodes and fed
2620to the reduction function, but the wrapper library cannot mark the
2621transferred data as initialised before it is handed to the reduction
2622function, because all that happens "inside" the
2623<computeroutput>PMPI_Reduce</computeroutput> call. As a result you
2624may see false positives reported in your reduction function.</para>
2625
2626</sect2>
sewardjce10c262006-10-05 17:56:14 +00002627
2628</sect1>
sewardj778d7832007-11-22 01:21:56 +00002629
2630
2631
2632
2633
njn3e986b22004-11-30 10:43:45 +00002634</chapter>