1<?xml version="1.0"?> <!-- -*- sgml -*- --> 2<!DOCTYPE chapter PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.2//EN" 3 "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd" 4[ <!ENTITY % vg-entities SYSTEM "../../docs/xml/vg-entities.xml"> %vg-entities; ]> 5 6 7<chapter id="hg-manual" xreflabel="Helgrind: thread error detector"> 8 <title>Helgrind: a thread error detector</title> 9 10<para>To use this tool, you must specify 11<option>--tool=helgrind</option> on the Valgrind 12command line.</para> 13 14 15<sect1 id="hg-manual.overview" xreflabel="Overview"> 16<title>Overview</title> 17 18<para>Helgrind is a Valgrind tool for detecting synchronisation errors 19in C, C++ and Fortran programs that use the POSIX pthreads 20threading primitives.</para> 21 22<para>The main abstractions in POSIX pthreads are: a set of threads 23sharing a common address space, thread creation, thread joining, 24thread exit, mutexes (locks), condition variables (inter-thread event 25notifications), reader-writer locks, spinlocks, semaphores and 26barriers.</para> 27 28<para>Helgrind can detect three classes of errors, which are discussed 29in detail in the next three sections:</para> 30 31<orderedlist> 32 <listitem> 33 <para><link linkend="hg-manual.api-checks"> 34 Misuses of the POSIX pthreads API.</link></para> 35 </listitem> 36 <listitem> 37 <para><link linkend="hg-manual.lock-orders"> 38 Potential deadlocks arising from lock 39 ordering problems.</link></para> 40 </listitem> 41 <listitem> 42 <para><link linkend="hg-manual.data-races"> 43 Data races -- accessing memory without adequate locking 44 or synchronisation</link>. 45 </para> 46 </listitem> 47</orderedlist> 48 49<para>Problems like these often result in unreproducible, 50timing-dependent crashes, deadlocks and other misbehaviour, and 51can be difficult to find by other means.</para> 52 53<para>Helgrind is aware of all the pthread abstractions and tracks 54their effects as accurately as it can. On x86 and amd64 platforms, it 55understands and partially handles implicit locking arising from the 56use of the LOCK instruction prefix. On PowerPC/POWER and ARM 57platforms, it partially handles implicit locking arising from 58load-linked and store-conditional instruction pairs. 59</para> 60 61<para>Helgrind works best when your application uses only the POSIX 62pthreads API. However, if you want to use custom threading 63primitives, you can describe their behaviour to Helgrind using the 64<varname>ANNOTATE_*</varname> macros defined 65in <varname>helgrind.h</varname>.</para> 66 67 68 69<para>Following those is a section containing 70<link linkend="hg-manual.effective-use"> 71hints and tips on how to get the best out of Helgrind.</link> 72</para> 73 74<para>Then there is a 75<link linkend="hg-manual.options">summary of command-line 76options.</link> 77</para> 78 79<para>Finally, there is 80<link linkend="hg-manual.todolist">a brief summary of areas in which Helgrind 81could be improved.</link> 82</para> 83 84</sect1> 85 86 87 88 89<sect1 id="hg-manual.api-checks" xreflabel="API Checks"> 90<title>Detected errors: Misuses of the POSIX pthreads API</title> 91 92<para>Helgrind intercepts calls to many POSIX pthreads functions, and 93is therefore able to report on various common problems. Although 94these are unglamourous errors, their presence can lead to undefined 95program behaviour and hard-to-find bugs later on. The detected errors 96are:</para> 97 98<itemizedlist> 99 <listitem><para>unlocking an invalid mutex</para></listitem> 100 <listitem><para>unlocking a not-locked mutex</para></listitem> 101 <listitem><para>unlocking a mutex held by a different 102 thread</para></listitem> 103 <listitem><para>destroying an invalid or a locked mutex</para></listitem> 104 <listitem><para>recursively locking a non-recursive mutex</para></listitem> 105 <listitem><para>deallocation of memory that contains a 106 locked mutex</para></listitem> 107 <listitem><para>passing mutex arguments to functions expecting 108 reader-writer lock arguments, and vice 109 versa</para></listitem> 110 <listitem><para>when a POSIX pthread function fails with an 111 error code that must be handled</para></listitem> 112 <listitem><para>when a thread exits whilst still holding locked 113 locks</para></listitem> 114 <listitem><para>calling <function>pthread_cond_wait</function> 115 with a not-locked mutex, an invalid mutex, 116 or one locked by a different 117 thread</para></listitem> 118 <listitem><para>inconsistent bindings between condition 119 variables and their associated mutexes</para></listitem> 120 <listitem><para>invalid or duplicate initialisation of a pthread 121 barrier</para></listitem> 122 <listitem><para>initialisation of a pthread barrier on which threads 123 are still waiting</para></listitem> 124 <listitem><para>destruction of a pthread barrier object which was 125 never initialised, or on which threads are still 126 waiting</para></listitem> 127 <listitem><para>waiting on an uninitialised pthread 128 barrier</para></listitem> 129 <listitem><para>for all of the pthreads functions that Helgrind 130 intercepts, an error is reported, along with a stack 131 trace, if the system threading library routine returns 132 an error code, even if Helgrind itself detected no 133 error</para></listitem> 134</itemizedlist> 135 136<para>Checks pertaining to the validity of mutexes are generally also 137performed for reader-writer locks.</para> 138 139<para>Various kinds of this-can't-possibly-happen events are also 140reported. These usually indicate bugs in the system threading 141library.</para> 142 143<para>Reported errors always contain a primary stack trace indicating 144where the error was detected. They may also contain auxiliary stack 145traces giving additional information. In particular, most errors 146relating to mutexes will also tell you where that mutex first came to 147Helgrind's attention (the "<computeroutput>was first observed 148at</computeroutput>" part), so you have a chance of figuring out which 149mutex it is referring to. For example:</para> 150 151<programlisting><![CDATA[ 152Thread #1 unlocked a not-locked lock at 0x7FEFFFA90 153 at 0x4C2408D: pthread_mutex_unlock (hg_intercepts.c:492) 154 by 0x40073A: nearly_main (tc09_bad_unlock.c:27) 155 by 0x40079B: main (tc09_bad_unlock.c:50) 156 Lock at 0x7FEFFFA90 was first observed 157 at 0x4C25D01: pthread_mutex_init (hg_intercepts.c:326) 158 by 0x40071F: nearly_main (tc09_bad_unlock.c:23) 159 by 0x40079B: main (tc09_bad_unlock.c:50) 160]]></programlisting> 161 162<para>Helgrind has a way of summarising thread identities, as 163you see here with the text "<computeroutput>Thread 164#1</computeroutput>". This is so that it can speak about threads and 165sets of threads without overwhelming you with details. See 166<link linkend="hg-manual.data-races.errmsgs">below</link> 167for more information on interpreting error messages.</para> 168 169</sect1> 170 171 172 173 174<sect1 id="hg-manual.lock-orders" xreflabel="Lock Orders"> 175<title>Detected errors: Inconsistent Lock Orderings</title> 176 177<para>In this section, and in general, to "acquire" a lock simply 178means to lock that lock, and to "release" a lock means to unlock 179it.</para> 180 181<para>Helgrind monitors the order in which threads acquire locks. 182This allows it to detect potential deadlocks which could arise from 183the formation of cycles of locks. Detecting such inconsistencies is 184useful because, whilst actual deadlocks are fairly obvious, potential 185deadlocks may never be discovered during testing and could later lead 186to hard-to-diagnose in-service failures.</para> 187 188<para>The simplest example of such a problem is as 189follows.</para> 190 191<itemizedlist> 192 <listitem><para>Imagine some shared resource R, which, for whatever 193 reason, is guarded by two locks, L1 and L2, which must both be held 194 when R is accessed.</para> 195 </listitem> 196 <listitem><para>Suppose a thread acquires L1, then L2, and proceeds 197 to access R. The implication of this is that all threads in the 198 program must acquire the two locks in the order first L1 then L2. 199 Not doing so risks deadlock.</para> 200 </listitem> 201 <listitem><para>The deadlock could happen if two threads -- call them 202 T1 and T2 -- both want to access R. Suppose T1 acquires L1 first, 203 and T2 acquires L2 first. Then T1 tries to acquire L2, and T2 tries 204 to acquire L1, but those locks are both already held. So T1 and T2 205 become deadlocked.</para> 206 </listitem> 207</itemizedlist> 208 209<para>Helgrind builds a directed graph indicating the order in which 210locks have been acquired in the past. When a thread acquires a new 211lock, the graph is updated, and then checked to see if it now contains 212a cycle. The presence of a cycle indicates a potential deadlock involving 213the locks in the cycle.</para> 214 215<para>In general, Helgrind will choose two locks involved in the cycle 216and show you how their acquisition ordering has become inconsistent. 217It does this by showing the program points that first defined the 218ordering, and the program points which later violated it. Here is a 219simple example involving just two locks:</para> 220 221<programlisting><![CDATA[ 222Thread #1: lock order "0x7FF0006D0 before 0x7FF0006A0" violated 223 224Observed (incorrect) order is: acquisition of lock at 0x7FF0006A0 225 at 0x4C2BC62: pthread_mutex_lock (hg_intercepts.c:494) 226 by 0x400825: main (tc13_laog1.c:23) 227 228 followed by a later acquisition of lock at 0x7FF0006D0 229 at 0x4C2BC62: pthread_mutex_lock (hg_intercepts.c:494) 230 by 0x400853: main (tc13_laog1.c:24) 231 232Required order was established by acquisition of lock at 0x7FF0006D0 233 at 0x4C2BC62: pthread_mutex_lock (hg_intercepts.c:494) 234 by 0x40076D: main (tc13_laog1.c:17) 235 236 followed by a later acquisition of lock at 0x7FF0006A0 237 at 0x4C2BC62: pthread_mutex_lock (hg_intercepts.c:494) 238 by 0x40079B: main (tc13_laog1.c:18) 239]]></programlisting> 240 241<para>When there are more than two locks in the cycle, the error is 242equally serious. However, at present Helgrind does not show the locks 243involved, sometimes because that information is not available, but 244also so as to avoid flooding you with information. For example, a 245naive implementation of the famous Dining Philosophers problem 246involves a cycle of five locks 247(see <computeroutput>helgrind/tests/tc14_laog_dinphils.c</computeroutput>). 248In this case Helgrind has detected that all 5 philosophers could 249simultaneously pick up their left fork and then deadlock whilst 250waiting to pick up their right forks.</para> 251 252<programlisting><![CDATA[ 253Thread #6: lock order "0x80499A0 before 0x8049A00" violated 254 255Observed (incorrect) order is: acquisition of lock at 0x8049A00 256 at 0x40085BC: pthread_mutex_lock (hg_intercepts.c:495) 257 by 0x80485B4: dine (tc14_laog_dinphils.c:18) 258 by 0x400BDA4: mythread_wrapper (hg_intercepts.c:219) 259 by 0x39B924: start_thread (pthread_create.c:297) 260 by 0x2F107D: clone (clone.S:130) 261 262 followed by a later acquisition of lock at 0x80499A0 263 at 0x40085BC: pthread_mutex_lock (hg_intercepts.c:495) 264 by 0x80485CD: dine (tc14_laog_dinphils.c:19) 265 by 0x400BDA4: mythread_wrapper (hg_intercepts.c:219) 266 by 0x39B924: start_thread (pthread_create.c:297) 267 by 0x2F107D: clone (clone.S:130) 268]]></programlisting> 269 270</sect1> 271 272 273 274 275<sect1 id="hg-manual.data-races" xreflabel="Data Races"> 276<title>Detected errors: Data Races</title> 277 278<para>A data race happens, or could happen, when two threads access a 279shared memory location without using suitable locks or other 280synchronisation to ensure single-threaded access. Such missing 281locking can cause obscure timing dependent bugs. Ensuring programs 282are race-free is one of the central difficulties of threaded 283programming.</para> 284 285<para>Reliably detecting races is a difficult problem, and most 286of Helgrind's internals are devoted to dealing with it. 287We begin with a simple example.</para> 288 289 290<sect2 id="hg-manual.data-races.example" xreflabel="Simple Race"> 291<title>A Simple Data Race</title> 292 293<para>About the simplest possible example of a race is as follows. In 294this program, it is impossible to know what the value 295of <computeroutput>var</computeroutput> is at the end of the program. 296Is it 2 ? Or 1 ?</para> 297 298<programlisting><![CDATA[ 299#include <pthread.h> 300 301int var = 0; 302 303void* child_fn ( void* arg ) { 304 var++; /* Unprotected relative to parent */ /* this is line 6 */ 305 return NULL; 306} 307 308int main ( void ) { 309 pthread_t child; 310 pthread_create(&child, NULL, child_fn, NULL); 311 var++; /* Unprotected relative to child */ /* this is line 13 */ 312 pthread_join(child, NULL); 313 return 0; 314} 315]]></programlisting> 316 317<para>The problem is there is nothing to 318stop <varname>var</varname> being updated simultaneously 319by both threads. A correct program would 320protect <varname>var</varname> with a lock of type 321<function>pthread_mutex_t</function>, which is acquired 322before each access and released afterwards. Helgrind's output for 323this program is:</para> 324 325<programlisting><![CDATA[ 326Thread #1 is the program's root thread 327 328Thread #2 was created 329 at 0x511C08E: clone (in /lib64/libc-2.8.so) 330 by 0x4E333A4: do_clone (in /lib64/libpthread-2.8.so) 331 by 0x4E33A30: pthread_create@@GLIBC_2.2.5 (in /lib64/libpthread-2.8.so) 332 by 0x4C299D4: pthread_create@* (hg_intercepts.c:214) 333 by 0x400605: main (simple_race.c:12) 334 335Possible data race during read of size 4 at 0x601038 by thread #1 336Locks held: none 337 at 0x400606: main (simple_race.c:13) 338 339This conflicts with a previous write of size 4 by thread #2 340Locks held: none 341 at 0x4005DC: child_fn (simple_race.c:6) 342 by 0x4C29AFF: mythread_wrapper (hg_intercepts.c:194) 343 by 0x4E3403F: start_thread (in /lib64/libpthread-2.8.so) 344 by 0x511C0CC: clone (in /lib64/libc-2.8.so) 345 346Location 0x601038 is 0 bytes inside global var "var" 347declared at simple_race.c:3 348]]></programlisting> 349 350<para>This is quite a lot of detail for an apparently simple error. 351The last clause is the main error message. It says there is a race as 352a result of a read of size 4 (bytes), at 0x601038, which is the 353address of <computeroutput>var</computeroutput>, happening in 354function <computeroutput>main</computeroutput> at line 13 in the 355program.</para> 356 357<para>Two important parts of the message are:</para> 358 359<itemizedlist> 360 <listitem> 361 <para>Helgrind shows two stack traces for the error, not one. By 362 definition, a race involves two different threads accessing the 363 same location in such a way that the result depends on the relative 364 speeds of the two threads.</para> 365 <para> 366 The first stack trace follows the text "<computeroutput>Possible 367 data race during read of size 4 ...</computeroutput>" and the 368 second trace follows the text "<computeroutput>This conflicts with 369 a previous write of size 4 ...</computeroutput>". Helgrind is 370 usually able to show both accesses involved in a race. At least 371 one of these will be a write (since two concurrent, unsynchronised 372 reads are harmless), and they will of course be from different 373 threads.</para> 374 <para>By examining your program at the two locations, you should be 375 able to get at least some idea of what the root cause of the 376 problem is. For each location, Helgrind shows the set of locks 377 held at the time of the access. This often makes it clear which 378 thread, if any, failed to take a required lock. In this example 379 neither thread holds a lock during the access.</para> 380 </listitem> 381 <listitem> 382 <para>For races which occur on global or stack variables, Helgrind 383 tries to identify the name and defining point of the variable. 384 Hence the text "<computeroutput>Location 0x601038 is 0 bytes inside 385 global var "var" declared at simple_race.c:3</computeroutput>".</para> 386 <para>Showing names of stack and global variables carries no 387 run-time overhead once Helgrind has your program up and running. 388 However, it does require Helgrind to spend considerable extra time 389 and memory at program startup to read the relevant debug info. 390 Hence this facility is disabled by default. To enable it, you need 391 to give the <varname>--read-var-info=yes</varname> option to 392 Helgrind.</para> 393 </listitem> 394</itemizedlist> 395 396<para>The following section explains Helgrind's race detection 397algorithm in more detail.</para> 398 399</sect2> 400 401 402 403<sect2 id="hg-manual.data-races.algorithm" xreflabel="DR Algorithm"> 404<title>Helgrind's Race Detection Algorithm</title> 405 406<para>Most programmers think about threaded programming in terms of 407the basic functionality provided by the threading library (POSIX 408Pthreads): thread creation, thread joining, locks, condition 409variables, semaphores and barriers.</para> 410 411<para>The effect of using these functions is to impose 412constraints upon the order in which memory accesses can 413happen. This implied ordering is generally known as the 414"happens-before relation". Once you understand the happens-before 415relation, it is easy to see how Helgrind finds races in your code. 416Fortunately, the happens-before relation is itself easy to understand, 417and is by itself a useful tool for reasoning about the behaviour of 418parallel programs. We now introduce it using a simple example.</para> 419 420<para>Consider first the following buggy program:</para> 421 422<programlisting><![CDATA[ 423Parent thread: Child thread: 424 425int var; 426 427// create child thread 428pthread_create(...) 429var = 20; var = 10; 430 exit 431 432// wait for child 433pthread_join(...) 434printf("%d\n", var); 435]]></programlisting> 436 437<para>The parent thread creates a child. Both then write different 438values to some variable <computeroutput>var</computeroutput>, and the 439parent then waits for the child to exit.</para> 440 441<para>What is the value of <computeroutput>var</computeroutput> at the 442end of the program, 10 or 20? We don't know. The program is 443considered buggy (it has a race) because the final value 444of <computeroutput>var</computeroutput> depends on the relative rates 445of progress of the parent and child threads. If the parent is fast 446and the child is slow, then the child's assignment may happen later, 447so the final value will be 10; and vice versa if the child is faster 448than the parent.</para> 449 450<para>The relative rates of progress of parent vs child is not something 451the programmer can control, and will often change from run to run. 452It depends on factors such as the load on the machine, what else is 453running, the kernel's scheduling strategy, and many other factors.</para> 454 455<para>The obvious fix is to use a lock to 456protect <computeroutput>var</computeroutput>. It is however 457instructive to consider a somewhat more abstract solution, which is to 458send a message from one thread to the other:</para> 459 460<programlisting><![CDATA[ 461Parent thread: Child thread: 462 463int var; 464 465// create child thread 466pthread_create(...) 467var = 20; 468// send message to child 469 // wait for message to arrive 470 var = 10; 471 exit 472 473// wait for child 474pthread_join(...) 475printf("%d\n", var); 476]]></programlisting> 477 478<para>Now the program reliably prints "10", regardless of the speed of 479the threads. Why? Because the child's assignment cannot happen until 480after it receives the message. And the message is not sent until 481after the parent's assignment is done.</para> 482 483<para>The message transmission creates a "happens-before" dependency 484between the two assignments: <computeroutput>var = 20;</computeroutput> 485must now happen-before <computeroutput>var = 10;</computeroutput>. 486And so there is no longer a race 487on <computeroutput>var</computeroutput>. 488</para> 489 490<para>Note that it's not significant that the parent sends a message 491to the child. Sending a message from the child (after its assignment) 492to the parent (before its assignment) would also fix the problem, causing 493the program to reliably print "20".</para> 494 495<para>Helgrind's algorithm is (conceptually) very simple. It monitors all 496accesses to memory locations. If a location -- in this example, 497<computeroutput>var</computeroutput>, 498is accessed by two different threads, Helgrind checks to see if the 499two accesses are ordered by the happens-before relation. If so, 500that's fine; if not, it reports a race.</para> 501 502<para>It is important to understand that the happens-before relation 503creates only a partial ordering, not a total ordering. An example of 504a total ordering is comparison of numbers: for any two numbers 505<computeroutput>x</computeroutput> and 506<computeroutput>y</computeroutput>, either 507<computeroutput>x</computeroutput> is less than, equal to, or greater 508than 509<computeroutput>y</computeroutput>. A partial ordering is like a 510total ordering, but it can also express the concept that two elements 511are neither equal, less or greater, but merely unordered with respect 512to each other.</para> 513 514<para>In the fixed example above, we say that 515<computeroutput>var = 20;</computeroutput> "happens-before" 516<computeroutput>var = 10;</computeroutput>. But in the original 517version, they are unordered: we cannot say that either happens-before 518the other.</para> 519 520<para>What does it mean to say that two accesses from different 521threads are ordered by the happens-before relation? It means that 522there is some chain of inter-thread synchronisation operations which 523cause those accesses to happen in a particular order, irrespective of 524the actual rates of progress of the individual threads. This is a 525required property for a reliable threaded program, which is why 526Helgrind checks for it.</para> 527 528<para>The happens-before relations created by standard threading 529primitives are as follows:</para> 530 531<itemizedlist> 532 <listitem><para>When a mutex is unlocked by thread T1 and later (or 533 immediately) locked by thread T2, then the memory accesses in T1 534 prior to the unlock must happen-before those in T2 after it acquires 535 the lock.</para> 536 </listitem> 537 <listitem><para>The same idea applies to reader-writer locks, 538 although with some complication so as to allow correct handling of 539 reads vs writes.</para> 540 </listitem> 541 <listitem><para>When a condition variable (CV) is signalled on by 542 thread T1 and some other thread T2 is thereby released from a wait 543 on the same CV, then the memory accesses in T1 prior to the 544 signalling must happen-before those in T2 after it returns from the 545 wait. If no thread was waiting on the CV then there is no 546 effect.</para> 547 </listitem> 548 <listitem><para>If instead T1 broadcasts on a CV, then all of the 549 waiting threads, rather than just one of them, acquire a 550 happens-before dependency on the broadcasting thread at the point it 551 did the broadcast.</para> 552 </listitem> 553 <listitem><para>A thread T2 that continues after completing sem_wait 554 on a semaphore that thread T1 posts on, acquires a happens-before 555 dependence on the posting thread, a bit like dependencies caused 556 mutex unlock-lock pairs. However, since a semaphore can be posted 557 on many times, it is unspecified from which of the post calls the 558 wait call gets its happens-before dependency.</para> 559 </listitem> 560 <listitem><para>For a group of threads T1 .. Tn which arrive at a 561 barrier and then move on, each thread after the call has a 562 happens-after dependency from all threads before the 563 barrier.</para> 564 </listitem> 565 <listitem><para>A newly-created child thread acquires an initial 566 happens-after dependency on the point where its parent created it. 567 That is, all memory accesses performed by the parent prior to 568 creating the child are regarded as happening-before all the accesses 569 of the child.</para> 570 </listitem> 571 <listitem><para>Similarly, when an exiting thread is reaped via a 572 call to <function>pthread_join</function>, once the call returns, the 573 reaping thread acquires a happens-after dependency relative to all memory 574 accesses made by the exiting thread.</para> 575 </listitem> 576</itemizedlist> 577 578<para>In summary: Helgrind intercepts the above listed events, and builds a 579directed acyclic graph represented the collective happens-before 580dependencies. It also monitors all memory accesses.</para> 581 582<para>If a location is accessed by two different threads, but Helgrind 583cannot find any path through the happens-before graph from one access 584to the other, then it reports a race.</para> 585 586<para>There are a couple of caveats:</para> 587 588<itemizedlist> 589 <listitem><para>Helgrind doesn't check for a race in the case where 590 both accesses are reads. That would be silly, since concurrent 591 reads are harmless.</para> 592 </listitem> 593 <listitem><para>Two accesses are considered to be ordered by the 594 happens-before dependency even through arbitrarily long chains of 595 synchronisation events. For example, if T1 accesses some location 596 L, and then <function>pthread_cond_signals</function> T2, which later 597 <function>pthread_cond_signals</function> T3, which then accesses L, then 598 a suitable happens-before dependency exists between the first and second 599 accesses, even though it involves two different inter-thread 600 synchronisation events.</para> 601 </listitem> 602</itemizedlist> 603 604</sect2> 605 606 607 608<sect2 id="hg-manual.data-races.errmsgs" xreflabel="Race Error Messages"> 609<title>Interpreting Race Error Messages</title> 610 611<para>Helgrind's race detection algorithm collects a lot of 612information, and tries to present it in a helpful way when a race is 613detected. Here's an example:</para> 614 615<programlisting><![CDATA[ 616Thread #2 was created 617 at 0x511C08E: clone (in /lib64/libc-2.8.so) 618 by 0x4E333A4: do_clone (in /lib64/libpthread-2.8.so) 619 by 0x4E33A30: pthread_create@@GLIBC_2.2.5 (in /lib64/libpthread-2.8.so) 620 by 0x4C299D4: pthread_create@* (hg_intercepts.c:214) 621 by 0x4008F2: main (tc21_pthonce.c:86) 622 623Thread #3 was created 624 at 0x511C08E: clone (in /lib64/libc-2.8.so) 625 by 0x4E333A4: do_clone (in /lib64/libpthread-2.8.so) 626 by 0x4E33A30: pthread_create@@GLIBC_2.2.5 (in /lib64/libpthread-2.8.so) 627 by 0x4C299D4: pthread_create@* (hg_intercepts.c:214) 628 by 0x4008F2: main (tc21_pthonce.c:86) 629 630Possible data race during read of size 4 at 0x601070 by thread #3 631Locks held: none 632 at 0x40087A: child (tc21_pthonce.c:74) 633 by 0x4C29AFF: mythread_wrapper (hg_intercepts.c:194) 634 by 0x4E3403F: start_thread (in /lib64/libpthread-2.8.so) 635 by 0x511C0CC: clone (in /lib64/libc-2.8.so) 636 637This conflicts with a previous write of size 4 by thread #2 638Locks held: none 639 at 0x400883: child (tc21_pthonce.c:74) 640 by 0x4C29AFF: mythread_wrapper (hg_intercepts.c:194) 641 by 0x4E3403F: start_thread (in /lib64/libpthread-2.8.so) 642 by 0x511C0CC: clone (in /lib64/libc-2.8.so) 643 644Location 0x601070 is 0 bytes inside local var "unprotected2" 645declared at tc21_pthonce.c:51, in frame #0 of thread 3 646]]></programlisting> 647 648<para>Helgrind first announces the creation points of any threads 649referenced in the error message. This is so it can speak concisely 650about threads without repeatedly printing their creation point call 651stacks. Each thread is only ever announced once, the first time it 652appears in any Helgrind error message.</para> 653 654<para>The main error message begins at the text 655"<computeroutput>Possible data race during read</computeroutput>". At 656the start is information you would expect to see -- address and size 657of the racing access, whether a read or a write, and the call stack at 658the point it was detected.</para> 659 660<para>A second call stack is presented starting at the text 661"<computeroutput>This conflicts with a previous 662write</computeroutput>". This shows a previous access which also 663accessed the stated address, and which is believed to be racing 664against the access in the first call stack. Note that this second 665call stack is limited to a maximum of 8 entries to limit the 666memory usage.</para> 667 668<para>Finally, Helgrind may attempt to give a description of the 669raced-on address in source level terms. In this example, it 670identifies it as a local variable, shows its name, declaration point, 671and in which frame (of the first call stack) it lives. Note that this 672information is only shown when <varname>--read-var-info=yes</varname> 673is specified on the command line. That's because reading the DWARF3 674debug information in enough detail to capture variable type and 675location information makes Helgrind much slower at startup, and also 676requires considerable amounts of memory, for large programs. 677</para> 678 679<para>Once you have your two call stacks, how do you find the root 680cause of the race?</para> 681 682<para>The first thing to do is examine the source locations referred 683to by each call stack. They should both show an access to the same 684location, or variable.</para> 685 686<para>Now figure out how how that location should have been made 687thread-safe:</para> 688 689<itemizedlist> 690 <listitem><para>Perhaps the location was intended to be protected by 691 a mutex? If so, you need to lock and unlock the mutex at both 692 access points, even if one of the accesses is reported to be a read. 693 Did you perhaps forget the locking at one or other of the accesses? 694 To help you do this, Helgrind shows the set of locks held by each 695 threads at the time they accessed the raced-on location.</para> 696 </listitem> 697 <listitem><para>Alternatively, perhaps you intended to use a some 698 other scheme to make it safe, such as signalling on a condition 699 variable. In all such cases, try to find a synchronisation event 700 (or a chain thereof) which separates the earlier-observed access (as 701 shown in the second call stack) from the later-observed access (as 702 shown in the first call stack). In other words, try to find 703 evidence that the earlier access "happens-before" the later access. 704 See the previous subsection for an explanation of the happens-before 705 relation.</para> 706 <para> 707 The fact that Helgrind is reporting a race means it did not observe 708 any happens-before relation between the two accesses. If 709 Helgrind is working correctly, it should also be the case that you 710 also cannot find any such relation, even on detailed inspection 711 of the source code. Hopefully, though, your inspection of the code 712 will show where the missing synchronisation operation(s) should have 713 been.</para> 714 </listitem> 715</itemizedlist> 716 717</sect2> 718 719 720</sect1> 721 722<sect1 id="hg-manual.effective-use" xreflabel="Helgrind Effective Use"> 723<title>Hints and Tips for Effective Use of Helgrind</title> 724 725<para>Helgrind can be very helpful in finding and resolving 726threading-related problems. Like all sophisticated tools, it is most 727effective when you understand how to play to its strengths.</para> 728 729<para>Helgrind will be less effective when you merely throw an 730existing threaded program at it and try to make sense of any reported 731errors. It will be more effective if you design threaded programs 732from the start in a way that helps Helgrind verify correctness. The 733same is true for finding memory errors with Memcheck, but applies more 734here, because thread checking is a harder problem. Consequently it is 735much easier to write a correct program for which Helgrind falsely 736reports (threading) errors than it is to write a correct program for 737which Memcheck falsely reports (memory) errors.</para> 738 739<para>With that in mind, here are some tips, listed most important first, 740for getting reliable results and avoiding false errors. The first two 741are critical. Any violations of them will swamp you with huge numbers 742of false data-race errors.</para> 743 744 745<orderedlist> 746 747 <listitem> 748 <para>Make sure your application, and all the libraries it uses, 749 use the POSIX threading primitives. Helgrind needs to be able to 750 see all events pertaining to thread creation, exit, locking and 751 other synchronisation events. To do so it intercepts many POSIX 752 pthreads functions.</para> 753 754 <para>Do not roll your own threading primitives (mutexes, etc) 755 from combinations of the Linux futex syscall, atomic counters, etc. 756 These throw Helgrind's internal what's-going-on models 757 way off course and will give bogus results.</para> 758 759 <para>Also, do not reimplement existing POSIX abstractions using 760 other POSIX abstractions. For example, don't build your own 761 semaphore routines or reader-writer locks from POSIX mutexes and 762 condition variables. Instead use POSIX reader-writer locks and 763 semaphores directly, since Helgrind supports them directly.</para> 764 765 <para>Helgrind directly supports the following POSIX threading 766 abstractions: mutexes, reader-writer locks, condition variables 767 (but see below), semaphores and barriers. Currently spinlocks 768 are not supported, although they could be in future.</para> 769 770 <para>At the time of writing, the following popular Linux packages 771 are known to implement their own threading primitives:</para> 772 773 <itemizedlist> 774 <listitem><para>Qt version 4.X. Qt 3.X is harmless in that it 775 only uses POSIX pthreads primitives. Unfortunately Qt 4.X 776 has its own implementation of mutexes (QMutex) and thread reaping. 777 Helgrind 3.4.x contains direct support 778 for Qt 4.X threading, which is experimental but is believed to 779 work fairly well. A side effect of supporting Qt 4 directly is 780 that Helgrind can be used to debug KDE4 applications. As this 781 is an experimental feature, we would particularly appreciate 782 feedback from folks who have used Helgrind to successfully debug 783 Qt 4 and/or KDE4 applications.</para> 784 </listitem> 785 <listitem><para>Runtime support library for GNU OpenMP (part of 786 GCC), at least for GCC versions 4.2 and 4.3. The GNU OpenMP runtime 787 library (<filename>libgomp.so</filename>) constructs its own 788 synchronisation primitives using combinations of atomic memory 789 instructions and the futex syscall, which causes total chaos since in 790 Helgrind since it cannot "see" those.</para> 791 <para>Fortunately, this can be solved using a configuration-time 792 option (for GCC). Rebuild GCC from source, and configure using 793 <varname>--disable-linux-futex</varname>. 794 This makes libgomp.so use the standard 795 POSIX threading primitives instead. Note that this was tested 796 using GCC 4.2.3 and has not been re-tested using more recent GCC 797 versions. We would appreciate hearing about any successes or 798 failures with more recent versions.</para> 799 </listitem> 800 </itemizedlist> 801 802 <para>If you must implement your own threading primitives, there 803 are a set of client request macros 804 in <computeroutput>helgrind.h</computeroutput> to help you 805 describe your primitives to Helgrind. You should be able to 806 mark up mutexes, condition variables, etc, without difficulty. 807 </para> 808 <para> 809 It is also possible to mark up the effects of thread-safe 810 reference counting using the 811 <computeroutput>ANNOTATE_HAPPENS_BEFORE</computeroutput>, 812 <computeroutput>ANNOTATE_HAPPENS_AFTER</computeroutput> and 813 <computeroutput>ANNOTATE_HAPPENS_BEFORE_FORGET_ALL</computeroutput>, 814 macros. Thread-safe reference counting using an atomically 815 incremented/decremented refcount variable causes Helgrind 816 problems because a one-to-zero transition of the reference count 817 means the accessing thread has exclusive ownership of the 818 associated resource (normally, a C++ object) and can therefore 819 access it (normally, to run its destructor) without locking. 820 Helgrind doesn't understand this, and markup is essential to 821 avoid false positives. 822 </para> 823 824 <para> 825 Here are recommended guidelines for marking up thread safe 826 reference counting in C++. You only need to mark up your 827 release methods -- the ones which decrement the reference count. 828 Given a class like this: 829 </para> 830 831<programlisting><![CDATA[ 832class MyClass { 833 unsigned int mRefCount; 834 835 void Release ( void ) { 836 unsigned int newCount = atomic_decrement(&mRefCount); 837 if (newCount == 0) { 838 delete this; 839 } 840 } 841} 842]]></programlisting> 843 844 <para> 845 the release method should be marked up as follows: 846 </para> 847 848<programlisting><![CDATA[ 849 void Release ( void ) { 850 unsigned int newCount = atomic_decrement(&mRefCount); 851 if (newCount == 0) { 852 ANNOTATE_HAPPENS_AFTER(&mRefCount); 853 ANNOTATE_HAPPENS_BEFORE_FORGET_ALL(&mRefCount); 854 delete this; 855 } else { 856 ANNOTATE_HAPPENS_BEFORE(&mRefCount); 857 } 858 } 859]]></programlisting> 860 861 <para> 862 There are a number of complex, mostly-theoretical objections to 863 this scheme. From a theoretical standpoint it appears to be 864 impossible to devise a markup scheme which is completely correct 865 in the sense of guaranteeing to remove all false races. The 866 proposed scheme however works well in practice. 867 </para> 868 869 </listitem> 870 871 <listitem> 872 <para>Avoid memory recycling. If you can't avoid it, you must use 873 tell Helgrind what is going on via the 874 <function>VALGRIND_HG_CLEAN_MEMORY</function> client request (in 875 <computeroutput>helgrind.h</computeroutput>).</para> 876 877 <para>Helgrind is aware of standard heap memory allocation and 878 deallocation that occurs via 879 <function>malloc</function>/<function>free</function>/<function>new</function>/<function>delete</function> 880 and from entry and exit of stack frames. In particular, when memory is 881 deallocated via <function>free</function>, <function>delete</function>, 882 or function exit, Helgrind considers that memory clean, so when it is 883 eventually reallocated, its history is irrelevant.</para> 884 885 <para>However, it is common practice to implement memory recycling 886 schemes. In these, memory to be freed is not handed to 887 <function>free</function>/<function>delete</function>, but instead put 888 into a pool of free buffers to be handed out again as required. The 889 problem is that Helgrind has no 890 way to know that such memory is logically no longer in use, and 891 its history is irrelevant. Hence you must make that explicit, 892 using the <function>VALGRIND_HG_CLEAN_MEMORY</function> client request 893 to specify the relevant address ranges. It's easiest to put these 894 requests into the pool manager code, and use them either when memory is 895 returned to the pool, or is allocated from it.</para> 896 </listitem> 897 898 <listitem> 899 <para>Avoid POSIX condition variables. If you can, use POSIX 900 semaphores (<function>sem_t</function>, <function>sem_post</function>, 901 <function>sem_wait</function>) to do inter-thread event signalling. 902 Semaphores with an initial value of zero are particularly useful for 903 this.</para> 904 905 <para>Helgrind only partially correctly handles POSIX condition 906 variables. This is because Helgrind can see inter-thread 907 dependencies between a <function>pthread_cond_wait</function> call and a 908 <function>pthread_cond_signal</function>/<function>pthread_cond_broadcast</function> 909 call only if the waiting thread actually gets to the rendezvous first 910 (so that it actually calls 911 <function>pthread_cond_wait</function>). It can't see dependencies 912 between the threads if the signaller arrives first. In the latter case, 913 POSIX guidelines imply that the associated boolean condition still 914 provides an inter-thread synchronisation event, but one which is 915 invisible to Helgrind.</para> 916 917 <para>The result of Helgrind missing some inter-thread 918 synchronisation events is to cause it to report false positives. 919 </para> 920 921 <para>The root cause of this synchronisation lossage is 922 particularly hard to understand, so an example is helpful. It was 923 discussed at length by Arndt Muehlenfeld ("Runtime Race Detection 924 in Multi-Threaded Programs", Dissertation, TU Graz, Austria). The 925 canonical POSIX-recommended usage scheme for condition variables 926 is as follows:</para> 927 928<programlisting><![CDATA[ 929b is a Boolean condition, which is False most of the time 930cv is a condition variable 931mx is its associated mutex 932 933Signaller: Waiter: 934 935lock(mx) lock(mx) 936b = True while (b == False) 937signal(cv) wait(cv,mx) 938unlock(mx) unlock(mx) 939]]></programlisting> 940 941 <para>Assume <computeroutput>b</computeroutput> is False most of 942 the time. If the waiter arrives at the rendezvous first, it 943 enters its while-loop, waits for the signaller to signal, and 944 eventually proceeds. Helgrind sees the signal, notes the 945 dependency, and all is well.</para> 946 947 <para>If the signaller arrives 948 first, <computeroutput>b</computeroutput> is set to true, and the 949 signal disappears into nowhere. When the waiter later arrives, it 950 does not enter its while-loop and simply carries on. But even in 951 this case, the waiter code following the while-loop cannot execute 952 until the signaller sets <computeroutput>b</computeroutput> to 953 True. Hence there is still the same inter-thread dependency, but 954 this time it is through an arbitrary in-memory condition, and 955 Helgrind cannot see it.</para> 956 957 <para>By comparison, Helgrind's detection of inter-thread 958 dependencies caused by semaphore operations is believed to be 959 exactly correct.</para> 960 961 <para>As far as I know, a solution to this problem that does not 962 require source-level annotation of condition-variable wait loops 963 is beyond the current state of the art.</para> 964 </listitem> 965 966 <listitem> 967 <para>Make sure you are using a supported Linux distribution. At 968 present, Helgrind only properly supports glibc-2.3 or later. This 969 in turn means we only support glibc's NPTL threading 970 implementation. The old LinuxThreads implementation is not 971 supported.</para> 972 </listitem> 973 974 <listitem> 975 <para>If your application is using thread local variables, 976 helgrind might report false positive race conditions on these 977 variables, despite being very probably race free. On Linux, you can 978 use <option>--sim-hints=deactivate-pthread-stack-cache-via-hack</option> 979 to avoid such false positive error messages 980 (see <xref linkend="opt.sim-hints"/>). 981 </para> 982 </listitem> 983 984 <listitem> 985 <para>Round up all finished threads using 986 <function>pthread_join</function>. Avoid 987 detaching threads: don't create threads in the detached state, and 988 don't call <function>pthread_detach</function> on existing threads.</para> 989 990 <para>Using <function>pthread_join</function> to round up finished 991 threads provides a clear synchronisation point that both Helgrind and 992 programmers can see. If you don't call 993 <function>pthread_join</function> on a thread, Helgrind has no way to 994 know when it finishes, relative to any 995 significant synchronisation points for other threads in the program. So 996 it assumes that the thread lingers indefinitely and can potentially 997 interfere indefinitely with the memory state of the program. It 998 has every right to assume that -- after all, it might really be 999 the case that, for scheduling reasons, the exiting thread did run 1000 very slowly in the last stages of its life.</para> 1001 </listitem> 1002 1003 <listitem> 1004 <para>Perform thread debugging (with Helgrind) and memory 1005 debugging (with Memcheck) together.</para> 1006 1007 <para>Helgrind tracks the state of memory in detail, and memory 1008 management bugs in the application are liable to cause confusion. 1009 In extreme cases, applications which do many invalid reads and 1010 writes (particularly to freed memory) have been known to crash 1011 Helgrind. So, ideally, you should make your application 1012 Memcheck-clean before using Helgrind.</para> 1013 1014 <para>It may be impossible to make your application Memcheck-clean 1015 unless you first remove threading bugs. In particular, it may be 1016 difficult to remove all reads and writes to freed memory in 1017 multithreaded C++ destructor sequences at program termination. 1018 So, ideally, you should make your application Helgrind-clean 1019 before using Memcheck.</para> 1020 1021 <para>Since this circularity is obviously unresolvable, at least 1022 bear in mind that Memcheck and Helgrind are to some extent 1023 complementary, and you may need to use them together.</para> 1024 </listitem> 1025 1026 <listitem> 1027 <para>POSIX requires that implementations of standard I/O 1028 (<function>printf</function>, <function>fprintf</function>, 1029 <function>fwrite</function>, <function>fread</function>, etc) are thread 1030 safe. Unfortunately GNU libc implements this by using internal locking 1031 primitives that Helgrind is unable to intercept. Consequently Helgrind 1032 generates many false race reports when you use these functions.</para> 1033 1034 <para>Helgrind attempts to hide these errors using the standard 1035 Valgrind error-suppression mechanism. So, at least for simple 1036 test cases, you don't see any. Nevertheless, some may slip 1037 through. Just something to be aware of.</para> 1038 </listitem> 1039 1040 <listitem> 1041 <para>Helgrind's error checks do not work properly inside the 1042 system threading library itself 1043 (<computeroutput>libpthread.so</computeroutput>), and it usually 1044 observes large numbers of (false) errors in there. Valgrind's 1045 suppression system then filters these out, so you should not see 1046 them.</para> 1047 1048 <para>If you see any race errors reported 1049 where <computeroutput>libpthread.so</computeroutput> or 1050 <computeroutput>ld.so</computeroutput> is the object associated 1051 with the innermost stack frame, please file a bug report at 1052 <ulink url="&vg-url;">&vg-url;</ulink>. 1053 </para> 1054 </listitem> 1055 1056</orderedlist> 1057 1058</sect1> 1059 1060 1061 1062 1063<sect1 id="hg-manual.options" xreflabel="Helgrind Command-line Options"> 1064<title>Helgrind Command-line Options</title> 1065 1066<para>The following end-user options are available:</para> 1067 1068<!-- start of xi:include in the manpage --> 1069<variablelist id="hg.opts.list"> 1070 1071 <varlistentry id="opt.free-is-write" 1072 xreflabel="--free-is-write"> 1073 <term> 1074 <option><![CDATA[--free-is-write=no|yes 1075 [default: no] ]]></option> 1076 </term> 1077 <listitem> 1078 <para>When enabled (not the default), Helgrind treats freeing of 1079 heap memory as if the memory was written immediately before 1080 the free. This exposes races where memory is referenced by 1081 one thread, and freed by another, but there is no observable 1082 synchronisation event to ensure that the reference happens 1083 before the free. 1084 </para> 1085 <para>This functionality is new in Valgrind 3.7.0, and is 1086 regarded as experimental. It is not enabled by default 1087 because its interaction with custom memory allocators is not 1088 well understood at present. User feedback is welcomed. 1089 </para> 1090 </listitem> 1091 </varlistentry> 1092 1093 <varlistentry id="opt.track-lockorders" 1094 xreflabel="--track-lockorders"> 1095 <term> 1096 <option><![CDATA[--track-lockorders=no|yes 1097 [default: yes] ]]></option> 1098 </term> 1099 <listitem> 1100 <para>When enabled (the default), Helgrind performs lock order 1101 consistency checking. For some buggy programs, the large number 1102 of lock order errors reported can become annoying, particularly 1103 if you're only interested in race errors. You may therefore find 1104 it helpful to disable lock order checking.</para> 1105 </listitem> 1106 </varlistentry> 1107 1108 <varlistentry id="opt.history-level" 1109 xreflabel="--history-level"> 1110 <term> 1111 <option><![CDATA[--history-level=none|approx|full 1112 [default: full] ]]></option> 1113 </term> 1114 <listitem> 1115 <para><option>--history-level=full</option> (the default) causes 1116 Helgrind collects enough information about "old" accesses that 1117 it can produce two stack traces in a race report -- both the 1118 stack trace for the current access, and the trace for the 1119 older, conflicting access. To limit memory usage, "old" accesses 1120 stack traces are limited to a maximum of 8 entries, even if 1121 <option>--num-callers</option> value is bigger.</para> 1122 <para>Collecting such information is expensive in both speed and 1123 memory, particularly for programs that do many inter-thread 1124 synchronisation events (locks, unlocks, etc). Without such 1125 information, it is more difficult to track down the root 1126 causes of races. Nonetheless, you may not need it in 1127 situations where you just want to check for the presence or 1128 absence of races, for example, when doing regression testing 1129 of a previously race-free program.</para> 1130 <para><option>--history-level=none</option> is the opposite 1131 extreme. It causes Helgrind not to collect any information 1132 about previous accesses. This can be dramatically faster 1133 than <option>--history-level=full</option>.</para> 1134 <para><option>--history-level=approx</option> provides a 1135 compromise between these two extremes. It causes Helgrind to 1136 show a full trace for the later access, and approximate 1137 information regarding the earlier access. This approximate 1138 information consists of two stacks, and the earlier access is 1139 guaranteed to have occurred somewhere between program points 1140 denoted by the two stacks. This is not as useful as showing 1141 the exact stack for the previous access 1142 (as <option>--history-level=full</option> does), but it is 1143 better than nothing, and it is almost as fast as 1144 <option>--history-level=none</option>.</para> 1145 </listitem> 1146 </varlistentry> 1147 1148 <varlistentry id="opt.conflict-cache-size" 1149 xreflabel="--conflict-cache-size"> 1150 <term> 1151 <option><![CDATA[--conflict-cache-size=N 1152 [default: 1000000] ]]></option> 1153 </term> 1154 <listitem> 1155 <para>This flag only has any effect 1156 at <option>--history-level=full</option>.</para> 1157 <para>Information about "old" conflicting accesses is stored in 1158 a cache of limited size, with LRU-style management. This is 1159 necessary because it isn't practical to store a stack trace 1160 for every single memory access made by the program. 1161 Historical information on not recently accessed locations is 1162 periodically discarded, to free up space in the cache.</para> 1163 <para>This option controls the size of the cache, in terms of the 1164 number of different memory addresses for which 1165 conflicting access information is stored. If you find that 1166 Helgrind is showing race errors with only one stack instead of 1167 the expected two stacks, try increasing this value.</para> 1168 <para>The minimum value is 10,000 and the maximum is 30,000,000 1169 (thirty times the default value). Increasing the value by 1 1170 increases Helgrind's memory requirement by very roughly 100 1171 bytes, so the maximum value will easily eat up three extra 1172 gigabytes or so of memory.</para> 1173 </listitem> 1174 </varlistentry> 1175 1176 <varlistentry id="opt.check-stack-refs" 1177 xreflabel="--check-stack-refs"> 1178 <term> 1179 <option><![CDATA[--check-stack-refs=no|yes 1180 [default: yes] ]]></option> 1181 </term> 1182 <listitem> 1183 <para> 1184 By default Helgrind checks all data memory accesses made by your 1185 program. This flag enables you to skip checking for accesses 1186 to thread stacks (local variables). This can improve 1187 performance, but comes at the cost of missing races on 1188 stack-allocated data. 1189 </para> 1190 </listitem> 1191 </varlistentry> 1192 1193 <varlistentry id="opt.ignore-thread-creation" 1194 xreflabel="--ignore-thread-creation"> 1195 <term> 1196 <option><![CDATA[--ignore-thread-creation=<yes|no> 1197 [default: no]]]></option> 1198 </term> 1199 <listitem> 1200 <para> 1201 Controls whether all activities during thread creation should be 1202 ignored. By default enabled only on Solaris. 1203 Solaris provides higher throughput, parallelism and scalability than 1204 other operating systems, at the cost of more fine-grained locking 1205 activity. This means for example that when a thread is created under 1206 glibc, just one big lock is used for all thread setup. Solaris libc 1207 uses several fine-grained locks and the creator thread resumes its 1208 activities as soon as possible, leaving for example stack and TLS setup 1209 sequence to the created thread. 1210 This situation confuses Helgrind as it assumes there is some false 1211 ordering in place between creator and created thread; and therefore many 1212 types of race conditions in the application would not be reported. 1213 To prevent such false ordering, this command line option is set to 1214 <computeroutput>yes</computeroutput> by default on Solaris. 1215 All activity (loads, stores, client requests) is therefore ignored 1216 during:</para> 1217 <itemizedlist> 1218 <listitem> 1219 <para> 1220 pthread_create() call in the creator thread 1221 </para> 1222 </listitem> 1223 <listitem> 1224 <para> 1225 thread creation phase (stack and TLS setup) in the created thread 1226 </para> 1227 </listitem> 1228 </itemizedlist> 1229 <para> 1230 Also new memory allocated during thread creation is untracked, 1231 that is race reporting is suppressed there. DRD does the same thing 1232 implicitly. This is necessary because Solaris libc caches many objects 1233 and reuses them for different threads and that confuses 1234 Helgrind.</para> 1235 </listitem> 1236 </varlistentry> 1237 1238 1239</variablelist> 1240<!-- end of xi:include in the manpage --> 1241 1242<!-- start of xi:include in the manpage --> 1243<!-- commented out, because we don't document debugging options in the 1244 manual. Nb: all the double-dashes below had a space inserted in them 1245 to avoid problems with premature closing of this comment. 1246<para>In addition, the following debugging options are available for 1247Helgrind:</para> 1248 1249<variablelist id="hg.debugopts.list"> 1250 1251 <varlistentry id="opt.trace-malloc" xreflabel="- -trace-malloc"> 1252 <term> 1253 <option><![CDATA[- -trace-malloc=no|yes [no] 1254 ]]></option> 1255 </term> 1256 <listitem> 1257 <para>Show all client <function>malloc</function> (etc) and 1258 <function>free</function> (etc) requests.</para> 1259 </listitem> 1260 </varlistentry> 1261 1262 <varlistentry id="opt.cmp-race-err-addrs" 1263 xreflabel="- -cmp-race-err-addrs"> 1264 <term> 1265 <option><![CDATA[- -cmp-race-err-addrs=no|yes [no] 1266 ]]></option> 1267 </term> 1268 <listitem> 1269 <para>Controls whether or not race (data) addresses should be 1270 taken into account when removing duplicates of race errors. 1271 With <varname>- -cmp-race-err-addrs=no</varname>, two otherwise 1272 identical race errors will be considered to be the same if 1273 their race addresses differ. With 1274 With <varname>- -cmp-race-err-addrs=yes</varname> they will be 1275 considered different. This is provided to help make certain 1276 regression tests work reliably.</para> 1277 </listitem> 1278 </varlistentry> 1279 1280 <varlistentry id="opt.hg-sanity-flags" xreflabel="- -hg-sanity-flags"> 1281 <term> 1282 <option><![CDATA[- -hg-sanity-flags=<XXXXXX> (X = 0|1) [000000] 1283 ]]></option> 1284 </term> 1285 <listitem> 1286 <para>Run extensive sanity checks on Helgrind's internal 1287 data structures at events defined by the bitstring, as 1288 follows:</para> 1289 <para><computeroutput>010000 </computeroutput>after changes to 1290 the lock order acquisition graph</para> 1291 <para><computeroutput>001000 </computeroutput>after every client 1292 memory access (NB: not currently used)</para> 1293 <para><computeroutput>000100 </computeroutput>after every client 1294 memory range permission setting of 256 bytes or greater</para> 1295 <para><computeroutput>000010 </computeroutput>after every client 1296 lock or unlock event</para> 1297 <para><computeroutput>000001 </computeroutput>after every client 1298 thread creation or joinage event</para> 1299 <para>Note these will make Helgrind run very slowly, often to 1300 the point of being completely unusable.</para> 1301 </listitem> 1302 </varlistentry> 1303 1304</variablelist> 1305--> 1306<!-- end of xi:include in the manpage --> 1307 1308 1309</sect1> 1310 1311 1312<sect1 id="hg-manual.monitor-commands" xreflabel="Helgrind Monitor Commands"> 1313<title>Helgrind Monitor Commands</title> 1314<para>The Helgrind tool provides monitor commands handled by Valgrind's 1315built-in gdbserver (see <xref linkend="manual-core-adv.gdbserver-commandhandling"/>). 1316</para> 1317<itemizedlist> 1318 <listitem> 1319 <para><varname>info locks [lock_addr]</varname> shows the list of locks 1320 and their status. If <varname>lock_addr</varname> is given, only shows 1321 the lock located at this address. </para> 1322 <para> 1323 In the following example, helgrind knows about one lock. This 1324 lock is located at the guest address <varname>ga 1325 0x8049a20</varname>. The lock kind is <varname>rdwr</varname> 1326 indicating a reader-writer lock. Other possible lock kinds 1327 are <varname>nonRec</varname> (simple mutex, non recursive) 1328 and <varname>mbRec</varname> (simple mutex, possibly recursive). 1329 The lock kind is then followed by the list of threads helding the 1330 lock. In the below example, <varname>R1:thread #6 tid 3</varname> 1331 indicates that the helgrind thread #6 has acquired (once, as the 1332 counter following the letter R is one) the lock in read mode. The 1333 helgrind thread nr is incremented for each started thread. The 1334 presence of 'tid 3' indicates that the thread #6 is has not exited 1335 yet and is the valgrind tid 3. If a thread has terminated, then 1336 this is indicated with 'tid (exited)'. 1337 </para> 1338<programlisting><![CDATA[ 1339(gdb) monitor info locks 1340Lock ga 0x8049a20 { 1341 kind rdwr 1342 { R1:thread #6 tid 3 } 1343} 1344(gdb) 1345]]></programlisting> 1346 1347 <para> If you give the option <varname>--read-var-info=yes</varname>, 1348 then more information will be provided about the lock location, such as 1349 the global variable or the heap block that contains the lock: 1350 </para> 1351<programlisting><![CDATA[ 1352Lock ga 0x8049a20 { 1353 Location 0x8049a20 is 0 bytes inside global var "s_rwlock" 1354 declared at rwlock_race.c:17 1355 kind rdwr 1356 { R1:thread #3 tid 3 } 1357} 1358]]></programlisting> 1359 1360 </listitem> 1361 1362 <listitem> 1363 <para><varname>accesshistory <addr> [<len>]</varname> 1364 shows the access history recorded for <len> (default 1) bytes 1365 starting at <addr>. For each recorded access that overlaps 1366 with the given range, <varname>accesshistory</varname> shows the operation 1367 type (read or write), the address and size read or written, the helgrind 1368 thread nr/valgrind tid number that did the operation and the locks held 1369 by the thread at the time of the operation. 1370 The oldest access is shown first, the most recent access is shown last. 1371 </para> 1372 <para> 1373 In the following example, we see first a recorded write of 4 bytes by 1374 thread #7 that has modified the given 2 bytes range. 1375 The second recorded write is the most recent recorded write : thread #9 1376 modified the same 2 bytes as part of a 4 bytes write operation. 1377 The list of locks held by each thread at the time of the write operation 1378 are also shown. 1379 </para> 1380<programlisting><![CDATA[ 1381(gdb) monitor accesshistory 0x8049D8A 2 1382write of size 4 at 0x8049D88 by thread #7 tid 3 1383==6319== Locks held: 2, at address 0x8049D8C (and 1 that can't be shown) 1384==6319== at 0x804865F: child_fn1 (locked_vs_unlocked2.c:29) 1385==6319== by 0x400AE61: mythread_wrapper (hg_intercepts.c:234) 1386==6319== by 0x39B924: start_thread (pthread_create.c:297) 1387==6319== by 0x2F107D: clone (clone.S:130) 1388 1389write of size 4 at 0x8049D88 by thread #9 tid 2 1390==6319== Locks held: 2, at addresses 0x8049DA4 0x8049DD4 1391==6319== at 0x804877B: child_fn2 (locked_vs_unlocked2.c:45) 1392==6319== by 0x400AE61: mythread_wrapper (hg_intercepts.c:234) 1393==6319== by 0x39B924: start_thread (pthread_create.c:297) 1394==6319== by 0x2F107D: clone (clone.S:130) 1395 1396]]></programlisting> 1397 1398 </listitem> 1399 1400</itemizedlist> 1401 1402</sect1> 1403 1404<sect1 id="hg-manual.client-requests" xreflabel="Helgrind Client Requests"> 1405<title>Helgrind Client Requests</title> 1406 1407<para>The following client requests are defined in 1408<filename>helgrind.h</filename>. See that file for exact details of their 1409arguments.</para> 1410 1411<itemizedlist> 1412 1413 <listitem> 1414 <para><function>VALGRIND_HG_CLEAN_MEMORY</function></para> 1415 <para>This makes Helgrind forget everything it knows about a 1416 specified memory range. This is particularly useful for memory 1417 allocators that wish to recycle memory.</para> 1418 </listitem> 1419 <listitem> 1420 <para><function>ANNOTATE_HAPPENS_BEFORE</function></para> 1421 </listitem> 1422 <listitem> 1423 <para><function>ANNOTATE_HAPPENS_AFTER</function></para> 1424 </listitem> 1425 <listitem> 1426 <para><function>ANNOTATE_NEW_MEMORY</function></para> 1427 </listitem> 1428 <listitem> 1429 <para><function>ANNOTATE_RWLOCK_CREATE</function></para> 1430 </listitem> 1431 <listitem> 1432 <para><function>ANNOTATE_RWLOCK_DESTROY</function></para> 1433 </listitem> 1434 <listitem> 1435 <para><function>ANNOTATE_RWLOCK_ACQUIRED</function></para> 1436 </listitem> 1437 <listitem> 1438 <para><function>ANNOTATE_RWLOCK_RELEASED</function></para> 1439 <para>These are used to describe to Helgrind, the behaviour of 1440 custom (non-POSIX) synchronisation primitives, which it otherwise 1441 has no way to understand. See comments 1442 in <filename>helgrind.h</filename> for further 1443 documentation.</para> 1444 </listitem> 1445 1446</itemizedlist> 1447 1448</sect1> 1449 1450 1451 1452<sect1 id="hg-manual.todolist" xreflabel="To Do List"> 1453<title>A To-Do List for Helgrind</title> 1454 1455<para>The following is a list of loose ends which should be tidied up 1456some time.</para> 1457 1458<itemizedlist> 1459 <listitem><para>For lock order errors, print the complete lock 1460 cycle, rather than only doing for size-2 cycles as at 1461 present.</para> 1462 </listitem> 1463 <listitem><para>The conflicting access mechanism sometimes 1464 mysteriously fails to show the conflicting access' stack, even 1465 when provided with unbounded storage for conflicting access info. 1466 This should be investigated.</para> 1467 </listitem> 1468 <listitem><para>Document races caused by GCC's thread-unsafe code 1469 generation for speculative stores. In the interim see 1470 <computeroutput>http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc/2007-10/msg00266.html 1471 </computeroutput> 1472 and <computeroutput>http://lkml.org/lkml/2007/10/24/673</computeroutput>. 1473 </para> 1474 </listitem> 1475 <listitem><para>Don't update the lock-order graph, and don't check 1476 for errors, when a "try"-style lock operation happens (e.g. 1477 <function>pthread_mutex_trylock</function>). Such calls do not add any real 1478 restrictions to the locking order, since they can always fail to 1479 acquire the lock, resulting in the caller going off and doing Plan 1480 B (presumably it will have a Plan B). Doing such checks could 1481 generate false lock-order errors and confuse users.</para> 1482 </listitem> 1483 <listitem><para> Performance can be very poor. Slowdowns on the 1484 order of 100:1 are not unusual. There is limited scope for 1485 performance improvements. 1486 </para> 1487 </listitem> 1488 1489</itemizedlist> 1490 1491</sect1> 1492 1493</chapter> 1494