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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
5
6<chapter id="mc-manual" xreflabel="Memcheck: a memory error detector">
7<title>Memcheck: a memory error detector</title>
8
9<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>
12
13
14<sect1 id="mc-manual.overview" xreflabel="Overview">
15<title>Overview</title>
16
17<para>Memcheck is a memory error detector.  It can detect the following
18problems that are common in C and C++ programs.</para>
19
20<itemizedlist>
21  <listitem>
22    <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>
25  </listitem>
26
27  <listitem>
28    <para>Using undefined values, i.e. values that have not been initialised,
29    or that have been derived from other undefined values.</para>
30  </listitem>
31
32  <listitem>
33    <para>Incorrect freeing of heap memory, such as double-freeing heap
34    blocks, or mismatched use of
35    <function>malloc</function>/<computeroutput>new</computeroutput>/<computeroutput>new[]</computeroutput>
36    versus
37    <function>free</function>/<computeroutput>delete</computeroutput>/<computeroutput>delete[]</computeroutput></para>
38  </listitem>
39
40  <listitem>
41    <para>Overlapping <computeroutput>src</computeroutput> and
42    <computeroutput>dst</computeroutput> pointers in
43    <computeroutput>memcpy</computeroutput> and related
44    functions.</para>
45  </listitem>
46
47  <listitem>
48    <para>Passing a fishy (presumably negative) value to the
49    <computeroutput>size</computeroutput> parameter of a memory
50    allocation function.</para>
51  </listitem>
52
53  <listitem>
54    <para>Memory leaks.</para>
55  </listitem>
56</itemizedlist>
57
58<para>Problems like these can be difficult to find by other means,
59often remaining undetected for long periods, then causing occasional,
60difficult-to-diagnose crashes.</para>
61
62</sect1>
63
64
65
66<sect1 id="mc-manual.errormsgs"
67       xreflabel="Explanation of error messages from Memcheck">
68<title>Explanation of error messages from Memcheck</title>
69
70<para>Memcheck issues a range of error messages.  This section presents a
71quick summary of what error messages mean.  The precise behaviour of the
72error-checking machinery is described in <xref
73linkend="mc-manual.machine"/>.</para>
74
75
76<sect2 id="mc-manual.badrw"
77       xreflabel="Illegal read / Illegal write errors">
78<title>Illegal read / Illegal write errors</title>
79
80<para>For example:</para>
81<programlisting><![CDATA[
82Invalid read of size 4
83   at 0x40F6BBCC: (within /usr/lib/libpng.so.2.1.0.9)
84   by 0x40F6B804: (within /usr/lib/libpng.so.2.1.0.9)
85   by 0x40B07FF4: read_png_image(QImageIO *) (kernel/qpngio.cpp:326)
86   by 0x40AC751B: QImageIO::read() (kernel/qimage.cpp:3621)
87 Address 0xBFFFF0E0 is not stack'd, malloc'd or free'd
88]]></programlisting>
89
90<para>This happens when your program reads or writes memory at a place
91which Memcheck reckons it shouldn't.  In this example, the program did a
924-byte read at address 0xBFFFF0E0, somewhere within the system-supplied
93library libpng.so.2.1.0.9, which was called from somewhere else in the
94same library, called from line 326 of <filename>qpngio.cpp</filename>,
95and so on.</para>
96
97<para>Memcheck tries to establish what the illegal address might relate
98to, since that's often useful.  So, if it points into a block of memory
99which has already been freed, you'll be informed of this, and also where
100the block was freed.  Likewise, if it should turn out to be just off
101the end of a heap block, a common result of off-by-one-errors in
102array subscripting, you'll be informed of this fact, and also where the
103block was allocated.  If you use the <option><xref
104linkend="opt.read-var-info"/></option> option Memcheck will run more slowly
105but may give a more detailed description of any illegal address.</para>
106
107<para>In this example, Memcheck can't identify the address.  Actually
108the address is on the stack, but, for some reason, this is not a valid
109stack address -- it is below the stack pointer and that isn't allowed.
110In this particular case it's probably caused by GCC generating invalid
111code, a known bug in some ancient versions of GCC.</para>
112
113<para>Note that Memcheck only tells you that your program is about to
114access memory at an illegal address.  It can't stop the access from
115happening.  So, if your program makes an access which normally would
116result in a segmentation fault, you program will still suffer the same
117fate -- but you will get a message from Memcheck immediately prior to
118this.  In this particular example, reading junk on the stack is
119non-fatal, and the program stays alive.</para>
120
121</sect2>
122
123
124
125<sect2 id="mc-manual.uninitvals"
126       xreflabel="Use of uninitialised values">
127<title>Use of uninitialised values</title>
128
129<para>For example:</para>
130<programlisting><![CDATA[
131Conditional jump or move depends on uninitialised value(s)
132   at 0x402DFA94: _IO_vfprintf (_itoa.h:49)
133   by 0x402E8476: _IO_printf (printf.c:36)
134   by 0x8048472: main (tests/manuel1.c:8)
135]]></programlisting>
136
137<para>An uninitialised-value use error is reported when your program
138uses a value which hasn't been initialised -- in other words, is
139undefined.  Here, the undefined value is used somewhere inside the
140<function>printf</function> machinery of the C library.  This error was
141reported when running the following small program:</para>
142<programlisting><![CDATA[
143int main()
144{
145  int x;
146  printf ("x = %d\n", x);
147}]]></programlisting>
148
149<para>It is important to understand that your program can copy around
150junk (uninitialised) data as much as it likes.  Memcheck observes this
151and keeps track of the data, but does not complain.  A complaint is
152issued only when your program attempts to make use of uninitialised
153data in a way that might affect your program's externally-visible behaviour.
154In this example, <varname>x</varname> is uninitialised.  Memcheck observes
155the value being passed to <function>_IO_printf</function> and thence to
156<function>_IO_vfprintf</function>, but makes no comment.  However,
157<function>_IO_vfprintf</function> has to examine the value of
158<varname>x</varname> so it can turn it into the corresponding ASCII string,
159and it is at this point that Memcheck complains.</para>
160
161<para>Sources of uninitialised data tend to be:</para>
162<itemizedlist>
163  <listitem>
164    <para>Local variables in procedures which have not been initialised,
165    as in the example above.</para>
166  </listitem>
167  <listitem>
168    <para>The contents of heap blocks (allocated with
169    <function>malloc</function>, <function>new</function>, or a similar
170    function) before you (or a constructor) write something there.
171    </para>
172  </listitem>
173</itemizedlist>
174
175<para>To see information on the sources of uninitialised data in your
176program, use the <option>--track-origins=yes</option> option.  This
177makes Memcheck run more slowly, but can make it much easier to track down
178the root causes of uninitialised value errors.</para>
179
180</sect2>
181
182
183
184<sect2 id="mc-manual.bad-syscall-args"
185       xreflabel="Use of uninitialised or unaddressable values in system
186       calls">
187<title>Use of uninitialised or unaddressable values in system
188       calls</title>
189
190<para>Memcheck checks all parameters to system calls:
191<itemizedlist>
192  <listitem>
193    <para>It checks all the direct parameters themselves, whether they are
194    initialised.</para>
195  </listitem>
196  <listitem>
197    <para>Also, if a system call needs to read from a buffer provided by
198    your program, Memcheck checks that the entire buffer is addressable
199    and its contents are initialised.</para>
200  </listitem>
201  <listitem>
202    <para>Also, if the system call needs to write to a user-supplied
203    buffer, Memcheck checks that the buffer is addressable.</para>
204  </listitem>
205</itemizedlist>
206</para>
207
208<para>After the system call, Memcheck updates its tracked information to
209precisely reflect any changes in memory state caused by the system
210call.</para>
211
212<para>Here's an example of two system calls with invalid parameters:</para>
213<programlisting><![CDATA[
214  #include <stdlib.h>
215  #include <unistd.h>
216  int main( void )
217  {
218    char* arr  = malloc(10);
219    int*  arr2 = malloc(sizeof(int));
220    write( 1 /* stdout */, arr, 10 );
221    exit(arr2[0]);
222  }
223]]></programlisting>
224
225<para>You get these complaints ...</para>
226<programlisting><![CDATA[
227  Syscall param write(buf) points to uninitialised byte(s)
228     at 0x25A48723: __write_nocancel (in /lib/tls/libc-2.3.3.so)
229     by 0x259AFAD3: __libc_start_main (in /lib/tls/libc-2.3.3.so)
230     by 0x8048348: (within /auto/homes/njn25/grind/head4/a.out)
231   Address 0x25AB8028 is 0 bytes inside a block of size 10 alloc'd
232     at 0x259852B0: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:130)
233     by 0x80483F1: main (a.c:5)
234
235  Syscall param exit(error_code) contains uninitialised byte(s)
236     at 0x25A21B44: __GI__exit (in /lib/tls/libc-2.3.3.so)
237     by 0x8048426: main (a.c:8)
238]]></programlisting>
239
240<para>... because the program has (a) written uninitialised junk
241from the heap block to the standard output, and (b) passed an
242uninitialised value to <function>exit</function>.  Note that the first
243error refers to the memory pointed to by
244<computeroutput>buf</computeroutput> (not
245<computeroutput>buf</computeroutput> itself), but the second error
246refers directly to <computeroutput>exit</computeroutput>'s argument
247<computeroutput>arr2[0]</computeroutput>.</para>
248
249</sect2>
250
251
252<sect2 id="mc-manual.badfrees" xreflabel="Illegal frees">
253<title>Illegal frees</title>
254
255<para>For example:</para>
256<programlisting><![CDATA[
257Invalid free()
258   at 0x4004FFDF: free (vg_clientmalloc.c:577)
259   by 0x80484C7: main (tests/doublefree.c:10)
260 Address 0x3807F7B4 is 0 bytes inside a block of size 177 free'd
261   at 0x4004FFDF: free (vg_clientmalloc.c:577)
262   by 0x80484C7: main (tests/doublefree.c:10)
263]]></programlisting>
264
265<para>Memcheck keeps track of the blocks allocated by your program
266with <function>malloc</function>/<computeroutput>new</computeroutput>,
267so it can know exactly whether or not the argument to
268<function>free</function>/<computeroutput>delete</computeroutput> is
269legitimate or not.  Here, this test program has freed the same block
270twice.  As with the illegal read/write errors, Memcheck attempts to
271make sense of the address freed.  If, as here, the address is one
272which has previously been freed, you wil be told that -- making
273duplicate frees of the same block easy to spot.  You will also get this
274message if you try to free a pointer that doesn't point to the start of a
275heap block.</para>
276
277</sect2>
278
279
280<sect2 id="mc-manual.rudefn"
281       xreflabel="When a heap block is freed with an inappropriate deallocation
282function">
283<title>When a heap block is freed with an inappropriate deallocation
284function</title>
285
286<para>In the following example, a block allocated with
287<function>new[]</function> has wrongly been deallocated with
288<function>free</function>:</para>
289<programlisting><![CDATA[
290Mismatched free() / delete / delete []
291   at 0x40043249: free (vg_clientfuncs.c:171)
292   by 0x4102BB4E: QGArray::~QGArray(void) (tools/qgarray.cpp:149)
293   by 0x4C261C41: PptDoc::~PptDoc(void) (include/qmemarray.h:60)
294   by 0x4C261F0E: PptXml::~PptXml(void) (pptxml.cc:44)
295 Address 0x4BB292A8 is 0 bytes inside a block of size 64 alloc'd
296   at 0x4004318C: operator new[](unsigned int) (vg_clientfuncs.c:152)
297   by 0x4C21BC15: KLaola::readSBStream(int) const (klaola.cc:314)
298   by 0x4C21C155: KLaola::stream(KLaola::OLENode const *) (klaola.cc:416)
299   by 0x4C21788F: OLEFilter::convert(QCString const &) (olefilter.cc:272)
300]]></programlisting>
301
302<para>In <literal>C++</literal> it's important to deallocate memory in a
303way compatible with how it was allocated.  The deal is:</para>
304<itemizedlist>
305  <listitem>
306    <para>If allocated with
307    <function>malloc</function>,
308    <function>calloc</function>,
309    <function>realloc</function>,
310    <function>valloc</function> or
311    <function>memalign</function>, you must
312    deallocate with <function>free</function>.</para>
313  </listitem>
314  <listitem>
315   <para>If allocated with <function>new</function>, you must deallocate
316   with <function>delete</function>.</para>
317  </listitem>
318  <listitem>
319    <para>If allocated with <function>new[]</function>, you must
320    deallocate with <function>delete[]</function>.</para>
321  </listitem>
322</itemizedlist>
323
324<para>The worst thing is that on Linux apparently it doesn't matter if
325you do mix these up, but the same program may then crash on a
326different platform, Solaris for example.  So it's best to fix it
327properly.  According to the KDE folks "it's amazing how many C++
328programmers don't know this".</para>
329
330<para>The reason behind the requirement is as follows.  In some C++
331implementations, <function>delete[]</function> must be used for
332objects allocated by <function>new[]</function> because the compiler
333stores the size of the array and the pointer-to-member to the
334destructor of the array's content just before the pointer actually
335returned.  <function>delete</function> doesn't account for this and will get
336confused, possibly corrupting the heap.</para>
337
338</sect2>
339
340
341
342<sect2 id="mc-manual.overlap"
343       xreflabel="Overlapping source and destination blocks">
344<title>Overlapping source and destination blocks</title>
345
346<para>The following C library functions copy some data from one
347memory block to another (or something similar):
348<function>memcpy</function>,
349<function>strcpy</function>,
350<function>strncpy</function>,
351<function>strcat</function>,
352<function>strncat</function>.
353The blocks pointed to by their <computeroutput>src</computeroutput> and
354<computeroutput>dst</computeroutput> pointers aren't allowed to overlap.
355The POSIX standards have wording along the lines "If copying takes place
356between objects that overlap, the behavior is undefined." Therefore,
357Memcheck checks for this.
358</para>
359
360<para>For example:</para>
361<programlisting><![CDATA[
362==27492== Source and destination overlap in memcpy(0xbffff294, 0xbffff280, 21)
363==27492==    at 0x40026CDC: memcpy (mc_replace_strmem.c:71)
364==27492==    by 0x804865A: main (overlap.c:40)
365]]></programlisting>
366
367<para>You don't want the two blocks to overlap because one of them could
368get partially overwritten by the copying.</para>
369
370<para>You might think that Memcheck is being overly pedantic reporting
371this in the case where <computeroutput>dst</computeroutput> is less than
372<computeroutput>src</computeroutput>.  For example, the obvious way to
373implement <function>memcpy</function> is by copying from the first
374byte to the last.  However, the optimisation guides of some
375architectures recommend copying from the last byte down to the first.
376Also, some implementations of <function>memcpy</function> zero
377<computeroutput>dst</computeroutput> before copying, because zeroing the
378destination's cache line(s) can improve performance.</para>
379
380<para>The moral of the story is: if you want to write truly portable
381code, don't make any assumptions about the language
382implementation.</para>
383
384</sect2>
385
386
387<sect2 id="mc-manual.fishyvalue"
388       xreflabel="Fishy argument values">
389<title>Fishy argument values</title>
390
391<para>All memory allocation functions take an argument specifying the
392size of the memory block that should be allocated. Clearly, the requested
393size should be a non-negative value and is typically not excessively large.
394For instance, it is extremely unlikly that the size of an allocation
395request exceeds 2**63 bytes on a 64-bit machine. It is much more likely that
396such a value is the result of an erroneous size calculation and is in effect
397a negative value (that just happens to appear excessively large because
398the bit pattern is interpreted as an unsigned integer).
399Such a value is called a "fishy value".
400
401The <varname>size</varname> argument of the following allocation functions
402is checked for being fishy:
403<function>malloc</function>,
404<function>calloc</function>,
405<function>realloc</function>,
406<function>memalign</function>,
407<function>new</function>,
408<function>new []</function>.
409<function>__builtin_new</function>,
410<function>__builtin_vec_new</function>,
411For <function>calloc</function> both arguments are being checked.
412</para>
413
414<para>For example:</para>
415<programlisting><![CDATA[
416==32233== Argument 'size' of function malloc has a fishy (possibly negative) value: -3
417==32233==    at 0x4C2CFA7: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:298)
418==32233==    by 0x400555: foo (fishy.c:15)
419==32233==    by 0x400583: main (fishy.c:23)
420]]></programlisting>
421
422<para>In earlier Valgrind versions those values were being referred to
423as "silly arguments" and no back-trace was included.
424</para>
425
426</sect2>
427
428
429<sect2 id="mc-manual.leaks" xreflabel="Memory leak detection">
430<title>Memory leak detection</title>
431
432<para>Memcheck keeps track of all heap blocks issued in response to
433calls to
434<function>malloc</function>/<function>new</function> et al.
435So when the program exits, it knows which blocks have not been freed.
436</para>
437
438<para>If <option>--leak-check</option> is set appropriately, for each
439remaining block, Memcheck determines if the block is reachable from pointers
440within the root-set.  The root-set consists of (a) general purpose registers
441of all threads, and (b) initialised, aligned, pointer-sized data words in
442accessible client memory, including stacks.</para>
443
444<para>There are two ways a block can be reached.  The first is with a
445"start-pointer", i.e. a pointer to the start of the block.  The second is with
446an "interior-pointer", i.e. a pointer to the middle of the block.  There are
447several ways we know of that an interior-pointer can occur:</para>
448
449<itemizedlist>
450  <listitem>
451    <para>The pointer might have originally been a start-pointer and have been
452    moved along deliberately (or not deliberately) by the program.  In
453    particular, this can happen if your program uses tagged pointers, i.e.
454    if it uses the bottom one, two or three bits of a pointer, which are
455    normally always zero due to alignment, in order to store extra
456    information.</para>
457  </listitem>
458
459  <listitem>
460    <para>It might be a random junk value in memory, entirely unrelated, just
461    a coincidence.</para>
462  </listitem>
463
464  <listitem>
465    <para>It might be a pointer to the inner char array of a C++
466    <computeroutput>std::string</computeroutput>.  For example, some
467    compilers add 3 words at the beginning of the std::string to
468    store the length, the capacity and a reference count before the
469    memory containing the array of characters. They return a pointer
470    just after these 3 words, pointing at the char array.</para>
471  </listitem>
472
473  <listitem>
474    <para>Some code might allocate a block of memory, and use the first 8
475    bytes to store (block size - 8) as a 64bit number.
476    <computeroutput>sqlite3MemMalloc</computeroutput> does this.</para>
477  </listitem>
478
479  <listitem>
480    <para>It might be a pointer to an array of C++ objects (which possess
481    destructors) allocated with <computeroutput>new[]</computeroutput>.  In
482    this case, some compilers store a "magic cookie" containing the array
483    length at the start of the allocated block, and return a pointer to just
484    past that magic cookie, i.e. an interior-pointer.
485    See <ulink url="http://theory.uwinnipeg.ca/gnu/gcc/gxxint_14.html">this
486    page</ulink> for more information.</para>
487  </listitem>
488
489  <listitem>
490    <para>It might be a pointer to an inner part of a C++ object using
491    multiple inheritance. </para>
492  </listitem>
493</itemizedlist>
494
495<para>You can optionally activate heuristics to use during the leak
496search to detect the interior pointers corresponding to
497the <computeroutput>stdstring</computeroutput>,
498<computeroutput>length64</computeroutput>,
499<computeroutput>newarray</computeroutput>
500and <computeroutput>multipleinheritance</computeroutput> cases. If the
501heuristic detects that an interior pointer corresponds to such a case,
502the block will be considered as reachable by the interior
503pointer. In other words, the interior pointer will be treated
504as if it were a start pointer.</para>
505
506
507<para>With that in mind, consider the nine possible cases described by the
508following figure.</para>
509
510<programlisting><![CDATA[
511     Pointer chain            AAA Leak Case   BBB Leak Case
512     -------------            -------------   -------------
513(1)  RRR ------------> BBB                    DR
514(2)  RRR ---> AAA ---> BBB    DR              IR
515(3)  RRR               BBB                    DL
516(4)  RRR      AAA ---> BBB    DL              IL
517(5)  RRR ------?-----> BBB                    (y)DR, (n)DL
518(6)  RRR ---> AAA -?-> BBB    DR              (y)IR, (n)DL
519(7)  RRR -?-> AAA ---> BBB    (y)DR, (n)DL    (y)IR, (n)IL
520(8)  RRR -?-> AAA -?-> BBB    (y)DR, (n)DL    (y,y)IR, (n,y)IL, (_,n)DL
521(9)  RRR      AAA -?-> BBB    DL              (y)IL, (n)DL
522
523Pointer chain legend:
524- RRR: a root set node or DR block
525- AAA, BBB: heap blocks
526- --->: a start-pointer
527- -?->: an interior-pointer
528
529Leak Case legend:
530- DR: Directly reachable
531- IR: Indirectly reachable
532- DL: Directly lost
533- IL: Indirectly lost
534- (y)XY: it's XY if the interior-pointer is a real pointer
535- (n)XY: it's XY if the interior-pointer is not a real pointer
536- (_)XY: it's XY in either case
537]]></programlisting>
538
539<para>Every possible case can be reduced to one of the above nine.  Memcheck
540merges some of these cases in its output, resulting in the following four
541leak kinds.</para>
542
543
544<itemizedlist>
545
546  <listitem>
547    <para>"Still reachable". This covers cases 1 and 2 (for the BBB blocks)
548    above.  A start-pointer or chain of start-pointers to the block is
549    found.  Since the block is still pointed at, the programmer could, at
550    least in principle, have freed it before program exit.  "Still reachable"
551    blocks are very common and arguably not a problem. So, by default,
552    Memcheck won't report such blocks individually.</para>
553  </listitem>
554
555  <listitem>
556    <para>"Definitely lost".  This covers case 3 (for the BBB blocks) above.
557    This means that no pointer to the block can be found.  The block is
558    classified as "lost", because the programmer could not possibly have
559    freed it at program exit, since no pointer to it exists.  This is likely
560    a symptom of having lost the pointer at some earlier point in the
561    program.  Such cases should be fixed by the programmer.</para>
562    </listitem>
563
564  <listitem>
565    <para>"Indirectly lost".  This covers cases 4 and 9 (for the BBB blocks)
566    above.  This means that the block is lost, not because there are no
567    pointers to it, but rather because all the blocks that point to it are
568    themselves lost.  For example, if you have a binary tree and the root
569    node is lost, all its children nodes will be indirectly lost.  Because
570    the problem will disappear if the definitely lost block that caused the
571    indirect leak is fixed, Memcheck won't report such blocks individually
572    by default.</para>
573  </listitem>
574
575  <listitem>
576    <para>"Possibly lost".  This covers cases 5--8 (for the BBB blocks)
577    above.  This means that a chain of one or more pointers to the block has
578    been found, but at least one of the pointers is an interior-pointer.
579    This could just be a random value in memory that happens to point into a
580    block, and so you shouldn't consider this ok unless you know you have
581    interior-pointers.</para>
582  </listitem>
583
584</itemizedlist>
585
586<para>(Note: This mapping of the nine possible cases onto four leak kinds is
587not necessarily the best way that leaks could be reported;  in particular,
588interior-pointers are treated inconsistently.  It is possible the
589categorisation may be improved in the future.)</para>
590
591<para>Furthermore, if suppressions exists for a block, it will be reported
592as "suppressed" no matter what which of the above four kinds it belongs
593to.</para>
594
595
596<para>The following is an example leak summary.</para>
597
598<programlisting><![CDATA[
599LEAK SUMMARY:
600   definitely lost: 48 bytes in 3 blocks.
601   indirectly lost: 32 bytes in 2 blocks.
602     possibly lost: 96 bytes in 6 blocks.
603   still reachable: 64 bytes in 4 blocks.
604        suppressed: 0 bytes in 0 blocks.
605]]></programlisting>
606
607<para>If heuristics have been used to consider some blocks as
608reachable, the leak summary details the heuristically reachable subset
609of 'still reachable:' per heuristic. In the below example, of the 95
610bytes still reachable, 87 bytes (56+7+8+16) have been considered
611heuristically reachable.
612</para>
613
614<programlisting><![CDATA[
615LEAK SUMMARY:
616   definitely lost: 4 bytes in 1 blocks
617   indirectly lost: 0 bytes in 0 blocks
618     possibly lost: 0 bytes in 0 blocks
619   still reachable: 95 bytes in 6 blocks
620                      of which reachable via heuristic:
621                        stdstring          : 56 bytes in 2 blocks
622                        length64           : 16 bytes in 1 blocks
623                        newarray           : 7 bytes in 1 blocks
624                        multipleinheritance: 8 bytes in 1 blocks
625        suppressed: 0 bytes in 0 blocks
626]]></programlisting>
627
628<para>If <option>--leak-check=full</option> is specified,
629Memcheck will give details for each definitely lost or possibly lost block,
630including where it was allocated.  (Actually, it merges results for all
631blocks that have the same leak kind and sufficiently similar stack traces
632into a single "loss record".  The
633<option>--leak-resolution</option> lets you control the
634meaning of "sufficiently similar".)  It cannot tell you when or how or why
635the pointer to a leaked block was lost; you have to work that out for
636yourself.  In general, you should attempt to ensure your programs do not
637have any definitely lost or possibly lost blocks at exit.</para>
638
639<para>For example:</para>
640<programlisting><![CDATA[
6418 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 1 of 14
642   at 0x........: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:...)
643   by 0x........: mk (leak-tree.c:11)
644   by 0x........: main (leak-tree.c:39)
645
64688 (8 direct, 80 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 13 of 14
647   at 0x........: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:...)
648   by 0x........: mk (leak-tree.c:11)
649   by 0x........: main (leak-tree.c:25)
650]]></programlisting>
651
652<para>The first message describes a simple case of a single 8 byte block
653that has been definitely lost.  The second case mentions another 8 byte
654block that has been definitely lost;  the difference is that a further 80
655bytes in other blocks are indirectly lost because of this lost block.
656The loss records are not presented in any notable order, so the loss record
657numbers aren't particularly meaningful. The loss record numbers can be used
658in the Valgrind gdbserver to list the addresses of the leaked blocks and/or give
659more details about how a block is still reachable.</para>
660
661<para>The option <option>--show-leak-kinds=&lt;set&gt;</option>
662controls the set of leak kinds to show
663when <option>--leak-check=full</option> is specified. </para>
664
665<para>The <option>&lt;set&gt;</option> of leak kinds is specified
666in one of the following ways:
667
668<itemizedlist>
669  <listitem><para>a comma separated list of one or more of
670    <option>definite indirect possible reachable</option>.</para>
671  </listitem>
672
673  <listitem><para><option>all</option> to specify the complete set (all leak kinds).</para>
674  </listitem>
675
676  <listitem><para><option>none</option> for the empty set.</para>
677  </listitem>
678</itemizedlist>
679
680</para>
681
682<para> The default value for the leak kinds to show is
683  <option>--show-leak-kinds=definite,possible</option>.
684</para>
685
686<para>To also show the reachable and indirectly lost blocks in
687addition to the definitely and possibly lost blocks, you can
688use <option>--show-leak-kinds=all</option>.  To only show the
689reachable and indirectly lost blocks, use
690<option>--show-leak-kinds=indirect,reachable</option>.  The reachable
691and indirectly lost blocks will then be presented as shown in
692the following two examples.</para>
693
694<programlisting><![CDATA[
69564 bytes in 4 blocks are still reachable in loss record 2 of 4
696   at 0x........: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:177)
697   by 0x........: mk (leak-cases.c:52)
698   by 0x........: main (leak-cases.c:74)
699
70032 bytes in 2 blocks are indirectly lost in loss record 1 of 4
701   at 0x........: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:177)
702   by 0x........: mk (leak-cases.c:52)
703   by 0x........: main (leak-cases.c:80)
704]]></programlisting>
705
706<para>Because there are different kinds of leaks with different
707severities, an interesting question is: which leaks should be
708counted as true "errors" and which should not?
709</para>
710
711<para> The answer to this question affects the numbers printed in
712the <computeroutput>ERROR SUMMARY</computeroutput> line, and also the
713effect of the <option>--error-exitcode</option> option.  First, a leak
714is only counted as a true "error"
715if <option>--leak-check=full</option> is specified.  Then, the
716option <option>--errors-for-leak-kinds=&lt;set&gt;</option> controls
717the set of leak kinds to consider as errors.  The default value
718is <option>--errors-for-leak-kinds=definite,possible</option>
719</para>
720
721</sect2>
722
723</sect1>
724
725
726
727<sect1 id="mc-manual.options"
728       xreflabel="Memcheck Command-Line Options">
729<title>Memcheck Command-Line Options</title>
730
731<!-- start of xi:include in the manpage -->
732<variablelist id="mc.opts.list">
733
734  <varlistentry id="opt.leak-check" xreflabel="--leak-check">
735    <term>
736      <option><![CDATA[--leak-check=<no|summary|yes|full> [default: summary] ]]></option>
737    </term>
738    <listitem>
739      <para>When enabled, search for memory leaks when the client
740      program finishes.  If set to <varname>summary</varname>, it says how
741      many leaks occurred.  If set to <varname>full</varname> or
742      <varname>yes</varname>, each individual leak will be shown
743      in detail and/or counted as an error, as specified by the options
744      <option>--show-leak-kinds</option> and
745      <option>--errors-for-leak-kinds</option>. </para>
746    </listitem>
747  </varlistentry>
748
749  <varlistentry id="opt.leak-resolution" xreflabel="--leak-resolution">
750    <term>
751      <option><![CDATA[--leak-resolution=<low|med|high> [default: high] ]]></option>
752    </term>
753    <listitem>
754      <para>When doing leak checking, determines how willing
755      Memcheck is to consider different backtraces to
756      be the same for the purposes of merging multiple leaks into a single
757      leak report.  When set to <varname>low</varname>, only the first
758      two entries need match.  When <varname>med</varname>, four entries
759      have to match.  When <varname>high</varname>, all entries need to
760      match.</para>
761
762      <para>For hardcore leak debugging, you probably want to use
763      <option>--leak-resolution=high</option> together with
764      <option>--num-callers=40</option> or some such large number.
765      </para>
766
767      <para>Note that the <option>--leak-resolution</option> setting
768      does not affect Memcheck's ability to find
769      leaks.  It only changes how the results are presented.</para>
770    </listitem>
771  </varlistentry>
772
773  <varlistentry id="opt.show-leak-kinds" xreflabel="--show-leak-kinds">
774    <term>
775      <option><![CDATA[--show-leak-kinds=<set> [default: definite,possible] ]]></option>
776    </term>
777    <listitem>
778      <para>Specifies the leak kinds to show in a <varname>full</varname>
779      leak search, in one of the following ways: </para>
780
781      <itemizedlist>
782        <listitem><para>a comma separated list of one or more of
783            <option>definite indirect possible reachable</option>.</para>
784        </listitem>
785
786        <listitem><para><option>all</option> to specify the complete set (all leak kinds).
787            It is equivalent to
788            <option>--show-leak-kinds=definite,indirect,possible,reachable</option>.</para>
789        </listitem>
790
791        <listitem><para><option>none</option> for the empty set.</para>
792        </listitem>
793      </itemizedlist>
794    </listitem>
795  </varlistentry>
796
797
798  <varlistentry id="opt.errors-for-leak-kinds" xreflabel="--errors-for-leak-kinds">
799    <term>
800      <option><![CDATA[--errors-for-leak-kinds=<set> [default: definite,possible] ]]></option>
801    </term>
802    <listitem>
803      <para>Specifies the leak kinds to count as errors in a
804        <varname>full</varname> leak search. The
805        <option><![CDATA[<set>]]></option> is specified similarly to
806        <option>--show-leak-kinds</option>
807      </para>
808    </listitem>
809  </varlistentry>
810
811
812  <varlistentry id="opt.leak-check-heuristics" xreflabel="--leak-check-heuristics">
813    <term>
814      <option><![CDATA[--leak-check-heuristics=<set> [default: all] ]]></option>
815    </term>
816    <listitem>
817      <para>Specifies the set of leak check heuristics to be used
818        during leak searches.  The heuristics control which interior pointers
819        to a block cause it to be considered as reachable.
820        The heuristic set is specified in one of the following ways:</para>
821
822      <itemizedlist>
823        <listitem><para>a comma separated list of one or more of
824            <option>stdstring length64 newarray multipleinheritance</option>.</para>
825        </listitem>
826
827        <listitem><para><option>all</option> to activate the complete set of
828            heuristics.
829            It is equivalent to
830            <option>--leak-check-heuristics=stdstring,length64,newarray,multipleinheritance</option>.</para>
831        </listitem>
832
833        <listitem><para><option>none</option> for the empty set.</para>
834        </listitem>
835      </itemizedlist>
836    </listitem>
837
838    <para>Note that these heuristics are dependent on the layout of the objects
839      produced by the C++ compiler. They have been tested with some gcc versions
840      (e.g. 4.4 and 4.7). They might not work properly with other C++ compilers.
841    </para>
842  </varlistentry>
843
844
845  <varlistentry id="opt.show-reachable" xreflabel="--show-reachable">
846    <term>
847      <option><![CDATA[--show-reachable=<yes|no> ]]></option>
848    </term>
849    <term>
850      <option><![CDATA[--show-possibly-lost=<yes|no> ]]></option>
851    </term>
852    <listitem>
853      <para>These options provide an alternative way to specify the leak kinds to show:
854      </para>
855      <itemizedlist>
856        <listitem>
857	  <para>
858            <option>--show-reachable=no --show-possibly-lost=yes</option> is equivalent to
859            <option>--show-leak-kinds=definite,possible</option>.
860	  </para>
861        </listitem>
862        <listitem>
863	  <para>
864            <option>--show-reachable=no --show-possibly-lost=no</option> is equivalent to
865            <option>--show-leak-kinds=definite</option>.
866	  </para>
867        </listitem>
868        <listitem>
869	  <para>
870            <option>--show-reachable=yes</option> is equivalent to
871            <option>--show-leak-kinds=all</option>.
872	  </para>
873        </listitem>
874      </itemizedlist>
875    </listitem>
876    <para> Note that  <option>--show-possibly-lost=no</option> has no effect
877      if <option>--show-reachable=yes</option> is specified.</para>
878  </varlistentry>
879
880  <varlistentry id="opt.undef-value-errors" xreflabel="--undef-value-errors">
881    <term>
882      <option><![CDATA[--undef-value-errors=<yes|no> [default: yes] ]]></option>
883    </term>
884    <listitem>
885      <para>Controls whether Memcheck reports
886      uses of undefined value errors.  Set this to
887      <varname>no</varname> if you don't want to see undefined value
888      errors.  It also has the side effect of speeding up
889      Memcheck somewhat.
890      </para>
891    </listitem>
892  </varlistentry>
893
894  <varlistentry id="opt.track-origins" xreflabel="--track-origins">
895    <term>
896      <option><![CDATA[--track-origins=<yes|no> [default: no] ]]></option>
897    </term>
898      <listitem>
899        <para>Controls whether Memcheck tracks
900        the origin of uninitialised values.  By default, it does not,
901        which means that although it can tell you that an
902        uninitialised value is being used in a dangerous way, it
903        cannot tell you where the uninitialised value came from.  This
904        often makes it difficult to track down the root problem.
905        </para>
906        <para>When set
907        to <varname>yes</varname>, Memcheck keeps
908        track of the origins of all uninitialised values.  Then, when
909        an uninitialised value error is
910        reported, Memcheck will try to show the
911        origin of the value.  An origin can be one of the following
912        four places: a heap block, a stack allocation, a client
913        request, or miscellaneous other sources (eg, a call
914        to <varname>brk</varname>).
915        </para>
916        <para>For uninitialised values originating from a heap
917        block, Memcheck shows where the block was
918        allocated.  For uninitialised values originating from a stack
919        allocation, Memcheck can tell you which
920        function allocated the value, but no more than that -- typically
921        it shows you the source location of the opening brace of the
922        function.  So you should carefully check that all of the
923        function's local variables are initialised properly.
924        </para>
925        <para>Performance overhead: origin tracking is expensive.  It
926        halves Memcheck's speed and increases
927        memory use by a minimum of 100MB, and possibly more.
928        Nevertheless it can drastically reduce the effort required to
929        identify the root cause of uninitialised value errors, and so
930        is often a programmer productivity win, despite running
931        more slowly.
932        </para>
933        <para>Accuracy: Memcheck tracks origins
934        quite accurately.  To avoid very large space and time
935        overheads, some approximations are made.  It is possible,
936        although unlikely, that Memcheck will report an incorrect origin, or
937        not be able to identify any origin.
938        </para>
939        <para>Note that the combination
940        <option>--track-origins=yes</option>
941        and <option>--undef-value-errors=no</option> is
942        nonsensical.  Memcheck checks for and
943        rejects this combination at startup.
944        </para>
945      </listitem>
946  </varlistentry>
947
948  <varlistentry id="opt.partial-loads-ok" xreflabel="--partial-loads-ok">
949    <term>
950      <option><![CDATA[--partial-loads-ok=<yes|no> [default: yes] ]]></option>
951    </term>
952    <listitem>
953      <para>Controls how Memcheck handles 32-, 64-, 128- and 256-bit
954      naturally aligned loads from addresses for which some bytes are
955      addressable and others are not.  When <varname>yes</varname>, such
956      loads do not produce an address error.  Instead, loaded bytes
957      originating from illegal addresses are marked as uninitialised, and
958      those corresponding to legal addresses are handled in the normal
959      way.</para>
960
961      <para>When <varname>no</varname>, loads from partially invalid
962      addresses are treated the same as loads from completely invalid
963      addresses: an illegal-address error is issued, and the resulting
964      bytes are marked as initialised.</para>
965
966      <para>Note that code that behaves in this way is in violation of
967      the ISO C/C++ standards, and should be considered broken.  If
968      at all possible, such code should be fixed.</para>
969    </listitem>
970  </varlistentry>
971
972  <varlistentry id="opt.expensive-definedness-checks" xreflabel="--expensive-definedness-checks">
973    <term>
974      <option><![CDATA[--expensive-definedness-checks=<yes|no> [default: no] ]]></option>
975    </term>
976    <listitem>
977      <para>Controls whether Memcheck should employ more precise but also more
978      expensive (time consuming) algorithms when checking the definedness of a
979      value. The default setting is not to do that and it is usually
980      sufficient. However, for highly optimised code valgrind may sometimes
981      incorrectly complain.
982      Invoking valgrind with <option>--expensive-definedness-checks=yes</option>
983      helps but comes at a performance cost. Runtime degradation of
984      25% have been observed but the extra cost depends a lot on the
985      application at hand.
986      </para>
987    </listitem>
988  </varlistentry>
989
990  <varlistentry id="opt.keep-stacktraces" xreflabel="--keep-stacktraces">
991    <term>
992      <option><![CDATA[--keep-stacktraces=alloc|free|alloc-and-free|alloc-then-free|none [default: alloc-and-free] ]]></option>
993    </term>
994    <listitem>
995      <para>Controls which stack trace(s) to keep for malloc'd and/or
996      free'd blocks.
997      </para>
998
999      <para>With <varname>alloc-then-free</varname>, a stack trace is
1000      recorded at allocation time, and is associated with the block.
1001      When the block is freed, a second stack trace is recorded, and
1002      this replaces the allocation stack trace.  As a result, any "use
1003      after free" errors relating to this block can only show a stack
1004      trace for where the block was freed.
1005      </para>
1006
1007      <para>With <varname>alloc-and-free</varname>, both allocation
1008      and the deallocation stack traces for the block are stored.
1009      Hence a "use after free" error will
1010      show both, which may make the error easier to diagnose.
1011      Compared to <varname>alloc-then-free</varname>, this setting
1012      slightly increases Valgrind's memory use as the block contains two
1013      references instead of one.
1014      </para>
1015
1016      <para>With <varname>alloc</varname>, only the allocation stack
1017      trace is recorded (and reported).  With <varname>free</varname>,
1018      only the deallocation stack trace is recorded (and reported).
1019      These values somewhat decrease Valgrind's memory and cpu usage.
1020      They can be useful depending on the error types you are
1021      searching for and the level of detail you need to analyse
1022      them.  For example, if you are only interested in memory leak
1023      errors, it is sufficient to record the allocation stack traces.
1024      </para>
1025
1026      <para>With <varname>none</varname>, no stack traces are recorded
1027      for malloc and free operations. If your program allocates a lot
1028      of blocks and/or allocates/frees from many different stack
1029      traces, this can significantly decrease cpu and/or memory
1030      required.  Of course, few details will be reported for errors
1031      related to heap blocks.
1032      </para>
1033
1034      <para>Note that once a stack trace is recorded, Valgrind keeps
1035      the stack trace in memory even if it is not referenced by any
1036      block.  Some programs (for example, recursive algorithms) can
1037      generate a huge number of stack traces. If Valgrind uses too
1038      much memory in such circumstances, you can reduce the memory
1039      required with the options <varname>--keep-stacktraces</varname>
1040      and/or by using a smaller value for the
1041      option <varname>--num-callers</varname>.
1042      </para>
1043    </listitem>
1044  </varlistentry>
1045
1046  <varlistentry id="opt.freelist-vol" xreflabel="--freelist-vol">
1047    <term>
1048      <option><![CDATA[--freelist-vol=<number> [default: 20000000] ]]></option>
1049    </term>
1050    <listitem>
1051      <para>When the client program releases memory using
1052      <function>free</function> (in <literal>C</literal>) or
1053      <computeroutput>delete</computeroutput>
1054      (<literal>C++</literal>), that memory is not immediately made
1055      available for re-allocation.  Instead, it is marked inaccessible
1056      and placed in a queue of freed blocks.  The purpose is to defer as
1057      long as possible the point at which freed-up memory comes back
1058      into circulation.  This increases the chance that
1059      Memcheck will be able to detect invalid
1060      accesses to blocks for some significant period of time after they
1061      have been freed.</para>
1062
1063      <para>This option specifies the maximum total size, in bytes, of the
1064      blocks in the queue.  The default value is twenty million bytes.
1065      Increasing this increases the total amount of memory used by
1066      Memcheck but may detect invalid uses of freed
1067      blocks which would otherwise go undetected.</para>
1068    </listitem>
1069  </varlistentry>
1070
1071  <varlistentry id="opt.freelist-big-blocks" xreflabel="--freelist-big-blocks">
1072    <term>
1073      <option><![CDATA[--freelist-big-blocks=<number> [default: 1000000] ]]></option>
1074    </term>
1075    <listitem>
1076      <para>When making blocks from the queue of freed blocks available
1077      for re-allocation, Memcheck will in priority re-circulate the blocks
1078      with a size greater or equal to <option>--freelist-big-blocks</option>.
1079      This ensures that freeing big blocks (in particular freeing blocks bigger than
1080      <option>--freelist-vol</option>) does not immediately lead to a re-circulation
1081      of all (or a lot of) the small blocks in the free list. In other words,
1082      this option increases the likelihood to discover dangling pointers
1083      for the "small" blocks, even when big blocks are freed.</para>
1084      <para>Setting a value of 0 means that all the blocks are re-circulated
1085      in a FIFO order. </para>
1086    </listitem>
1087  </varlistentry>
1088
1089  <varlistentry id="opt.workaround-gcc296-bugs" xreflabel="--workaround-gcc296-bugs">
1090    <term>
1091      <option><![CDATA[--workaround-gcc296-bugs=<yes|no> [default: no] ]]></option>
1092    </term>
1093    <listitem>
1094      <para>When enabled, assume that reads and writes some small
1095      distance below the stack pointer are due to bugs in GCC 2.96, and
1096      does not report them.  The "small distance" is 256 bytes by
1097      default.  Note that GCC 2.96 is the default compiler on some ancient
1098      Linux distributions (RedHat 7.X) and so you may need to use this
1099      option.  Do not use it if you do not have to, as it can cause real
1100      errors to be overlooked.  A better alternative is to use a more
1101      recent GCC in which this bug is fixed.</para>
1102
1103      <para>You may also need to use this option when working with
1104      GCC 3.X or 4.X on 32-bit PowerPC Linux.  This is because
1105      GCC generates code which occasionally accesses below the
1106      stack pointer, particularly for floating-point to/from integer
1107      conversions.  This is in violation of the 32-bit PowerPC ELF
1108      specification, which makes no provision for locations below the
1109      stack pointer to be accessible.</para>
1110    </listitem>
1111  </varlistentry>
1112
1113  <varlistentry id="opt.show-mismatched-frees"
1114                xreflabel="--show-mismatched-frees">
1115    <term>
1116      <option><![CDATA[--show-mismatched-frees=<yes|no> [default: yes] ]]></option>
1117    </term>
1118    <listitem>
1119      <para>When enabled, Memcheck checks that heap blocks are
1120      deallocated using a function that matches the allocating
1121      function.  That is, it expects <varname>free</varname> to be
1122      used to deallocate blocks allocated
1123      by <varname>malloc</varname>, <varname>delete</varname> for
1124      blocks allocated by <varname>new</varname>,
1125      and <varname>delete[]</varname> for blocks allocated
1126      by <varname>new[]</varname>.  If a mismatch is detected, an
1127      error is reported.  This is in general important because in some
1128      environments, freeing with a non-matching function can cause
1129      crashes.</para>
1130
1131      <para>There is however a scenario where such mismatches cannot
1132      be avoided.  That is when the user provides implementations of
1133      <varname>new</varname>/<varname>new[]</varname> that
1134      call <varname>malloc</varname> and
1135      of <varname>delete</varname>/<varname>delete[]</varname> that
1136      call <varname>free</varname>, and these functions are
1137      asymmetrically inlined.  For example, imagine
1138      that <varname>delete[]</varname> is inlined
1139      but <varname>new[]</varname> is not.  The result is that
1140      Memcheck "sees" all <varname>delete[]</varname> calls as direct
1141      calls to <varname>free</varname>, even when the program source
1142      contains no mismatched calls.</para>
1143
1144      <para>This causes a lot of confusing and irrelevant error
1145      reports.  <varname>--show-mismatched-frees=no</varname> disables
1146      these checks.  It is not generally advisable to disable them,
1147      though, because you may miss real errors as a result.</para>
1148    </listitem>
1149  </varlistentry>
1150
1151  <varlistentry id="opt.ignore-ranges" xreflabel="--ignore-ranges">
1152    <term>
1153      <option><![CDATA[--ignore-ranges=0xPP-0xQQ[,0xRR-0xSS] ]]></option>
1154    </term>
1155    <listitem>
1156    <para>Any ranges listed in this option (and multiple ranges can be
1157    specified, separated by commas) will be ignored by Memcheck's
1158    addressability checking.</para>
1159    </listitem>
1160  </varlistentry>
1161
1162  <varlistentry id="opt.malloc-fill" xreflabel="--malloc-fill">
1163    <term>
1164      <option><![CDATA[--malloc-fill=<hexnumber> ]]></option>
1165    </term>
1166    <listitem>
1167      <para>Fills blocks allocated
1168      by <computeroutput>malloc</computeroutput>,
1169         <computeroutput>new</computeroutput>, etc, but not
1170      by <computeroutput>calloc</computeroutput>, with the specified
1171      byte.  This can be useful when trying to shake out obscure
1172      memory corruption problems.  The allocated area is still
1173      regarded by Memcheck as undefined -- this option only affects its
1174      contents. Note that <option>--malloc-fill</option> does not
1175      affect a block of memory when it is used as argument
1176      to client requests VALGRIND_MEMPOOL_ALLOC or
1177      VALGRIND_MALLOCLIKE_BLOCK.
1178      </para>
1179    </listitem>
1180  </varlistentry>
1181
1182  <varlistentry id="opt.free-fill" xreflabel="--free-fill">
1183    <term>
1184      <option><![CDATA[--free-fill=<hexnumber> ]]></option>
1185    </term>
1186    <listitem>
1187      <para>Fills blocks freed
1188      by <computeroutput>free</computeroutput>,
1189         <computeroutput>delete</computeroutput>, etc, with the
1190      specified byte value.  This can be useful when trying to shake out
1191      obscure memory corruption problems.  The freed area is still
1192      regarded by Memcheck as not valid for access -- this option only
1193      affects its contents. Note that <option>--free-fill</option> does not
1194      affect a block of memory when it is used as argument to
1195      client requests VALGRIND_MEMPOOL_FREE or VALGRIND_FREELIKE_BLOCK.
1196      </para>
1197    </listitem>
1198  </varlistentry>
1199
1200</variablelist>
1201<!-- end of xi:include in the manpage -->
1202
1203</sect1>
1204
1205
1206<sect1 id="mc-manual.suppfiles" xreflabel="Writing suppression files">
1207<title>Writing suppression files</title>
1208
1209<para>The basic suppression format is described in
1210<xref linkend="manual-core.suppress"/>.</para>
1211
1212<para>The suppression-type (second) line should have the form:</para>
1213<programlisting><![CDATA[
1214Memcheck:suppression_type]]></programlisting>
1215
1216<para>The Memcheck suppression types are as follows:</para>
1217
1218<itemizedlist>
1219  <listitem>
1220    <para><varname>Value1</varname>,
1221    <varname>Value2</varname>,
1222    <varname>Value4</varname>,
1223    <varname>Value8</varname>,
1224    <varname>Value16</varname>,
1225    meaning an uninitialised-value error when
1226    using a value of 1, 2, 4, 8 or 16 bytes.</para>
1227  </listitem>
1228
1229  <listitem>
1230    <para><varname>Cond</varname> (or its old
1231    name, <varname>Value0</varname>), meaning use
1232    of an uninitialised CPU condition code.</para>
1233  </listitem>
1234
1235  <listitem>
1236    <para><varname>Addr1</varname>,
1237    <varname>Addr2</varname>,
1238    <varname>Addr4</varname>,
1239    <varname>Addr8</varname>,
1240    <varname>Addr16</varname>,
1241    meaning an invalid address during a
1242    memory access of 1, 2, 4, 8 or 16 bytes respectively.</para>
1243  </listitem>
1244
1245  <listitem>
1246    <para><varname>Jump</varname>, meaning an
1247    jump to an unaddressable location error.</para>
1248  </listitem>
1249
1250  <listitem>
1251    <para><varname>Param</varname>, meaning an
1252    invalid system call parameter error.</para>
1253  </listitem>
1254
1255  <listitem>
1256    <para><varname>Free</varname>, meaning an
1257    invalid or mismatching free.</para>
1258  </listitem>
1259
1260  <listitem>
1261    <para><varname>Overlap</varname>, meaning a
1262    <computeroutput>src</computeroutput> /
1263    <computeroutput>dst</computeroutput> overlap in
1264    <function>memcpy</function> or a similar function.</para>
1265  </listitem>
1266
1267  <listitem>
1268    <para><varname>Leak</varname>, meaning
1269    a memory leak.</para>
1270  </listitem>
1271
1272</itemizedlist>
1273
1274<para><computeroutput>Param</computeroutput> errors have a mandatory extra
1275information line at this point, which is the name of the offending
1276system call parameter. </para>
1277
1278<para><computeroutput>Leak</computeroutput> errors have an optional
1279extra information line, with the following format:</para>
1280<programlisting><![CDATA[
1281match-leak-kinds:<set>]]></programlisting>
1282<para>where <computeroutput>&lt;set&gt;</computeroutput> specifies which
1283leak kinds are matched by this suppression entry.
1284<computeroutput>&lt;set&gt;</computeroutput> is specified in the
1285same way as with the option <option>--show-leak-kinds</option>, that is,
1286one of the following:</para>
1287<itemizedlist>
1288  <listitem>a comma separated list of one or more of
1289    <option>definite indirect possible reachable</option>.
1290  </listitem>
1291
1292  <listitem><option>all</option> to specify the complete set (all leak kinds).
1293  </listitem>
1294
1295  <listitem><option>none</option> for the empty set.
1296  </listitem>
1297</itemizedlist>
1298<para>If this optional extra line is not present, the suppression
1299entry will match all leak kinds.</para>
1300
1301<para>Be aware that leak suppressions that are created using
1302<option>--gen-suppressions</option> will contain this optional extra
1303line, and therefore may match fewer leaks than you expect.  You may
1304want to remove the line before using the generated
1305suppressions.</para>
1306
1307<para>The other Memcheck error kinds do not have extra lines.</para>
1308
1309<para>
1310If you give the <option>-v</option> option, Valgrind will print
1311the list of used suppressions at the end of execution.
1312For a leak suppression, this output gives the number of different
1313loss records that match the suppression, and the number of bytes
1314and blocks suppressed by the suppression.
1315If the run contains multiple leak checks, the number of bytes and blocks
1316are reset to zero before each new leak check. Note that the number of different
1317loss records is not reset to zero.</para>
1318<para>In the example below, in the last leak search, 7 blocks and 96 bytes have
1319been suppressed by a suppression with the name
1320<option>some_leak_suppression</option>:</para>
1321<programlisting><![CDATA[
1322--21041-- used_suppression:     10 some_other_leak_suppression s.supp:14 suppressed: 12,400 bytes in 1 blocks
1323--21041-- used_suppression:     39 some_leak_suppression s.supp:2 suppressed: 96 bytes in 7 blocks
1324]]></programlisting>
1325
1326<para>For <varname>ValueN</varname> and <varname>AddrN</varname>
1327errors, the first line of the calling context is either the name of
1328the function in which the error occurred, or, failing that, the full
1329path of the <filename>.so</filename> file or executable containing the
1330error location.  For <varname>Free</varname> errors, the first line is
1331the name of the function doing the freeing (eg,
1332<function>free</function>, <function>__builtin_vec_delete</function>,
1333etc).  For <varname>Overlap</varname> errors, the first line is the name of the
1334function with the overlapping arguments (eg.
1335<function>memcpy</function>, <function>strcpy</function>, etc).</para>
1336
1337<para>The last part of any suppression specifies the rest of the
1338calling context that needs to be matched.</para>
1339
1340</sect1>
1341
1342
1343
1344<sect1 id="mc-manual.machine"
1345       xreflabel="Details of Memcheck's checking machinery">
1346<title>Details of Memcheck's checking machinery</title>
1347
1348<para>Read this section if you want to know, in detail, exactly
1349what and how Memcheck is checking.</para>
1350
1351
1352<sect2 id="mc-manual.value" xreflabel="Valid-value (V) bit">
1353<title>Valid-value (V) bits</title>
1354
1355<para>It is simplest to think of Memcheck implementing a synthetic CPU
1356which is identical to a real CPU, except for one crucial detail.  Every
1357bit (literally) of data processed, stored and handled by the real CPU
1358has, in the synthetic CPU, an associated "valid-value" bit, which says
1359whether or not the accompanying bit has a legitimate value.  In the
1360discussions which follow, this bit is referred to as the V (valid-value)
1361bit.</para>
1362
1363<para>Each byte in the system therefore has a 8 V bits which follow it
1364wherever it goes.  For example, when the CPU loads a word-size item (4
1365bytes) from memory, it also loads the corresponding 32 V bits from a
1366bitmap which stores the V bits for the process' entire address space.
1367If the CPU should later write the whole or some part of that value to
1368memory at a different address, the relevant V bits will be stored back
1369in the V-bit bitmap.</para>
1370
1371<para>In short, each bit in the system has (conceptually) an associated V
1372bit, which follows it around everywhere, even inside the CPU.  Yes, all the
1373CPU's registers (integer, floating point, vector and condition registers)
1374have their own V bit vectors.  For this to work, Memcheck uses a great deal
1375of compression to represent the V bits compactly.</para>
1376
1377<para>Copying values around does not cause Memcheck to check for, or
1378report on, errors.  However, when a value is used in a way which might
1379conceivably affect your program's externally-visible behaviour,
1380the associated V bits are immediately checked.  If any of these indicate
1381that the value is undefined (even partially), an error is reported.</para>
1382
1383<para>Here's an (admittedly nonsensical) example:</para>
1384<programlisting><![CDATA[
1385int i, j;
1386int a[10], b[10];
1387for ( i = 0; i < 10; i++ ) {
1388  j = a[i];
1389  b[i] = j;
1390}]]></programlisting>
1391
1392<para>Memcheck emits no complaints about this, since it merely copies
1393uninitialised values from <varname>a[]</varname> into
1394<varname>b[]</varname>, and doesn't use them in a way which could
1395affect the behaviour of the program.  However, if
1396the loop is changed to:</para>
1397<programlisting><![CDATA[
1398for ( i = 0; i < 10; i++ ) {
1399  j += a[i];
1400}
1401if ( j == 77 )
1402  printf("hello there\n");
1403]]></programlisting>
1404
1405<para>then Memcheck will complain, at the
1406<computeroutput>if</computeroutput>, that the condition depends on
1407uninitialised values.  Note that it <command>doesn't</command> complain
1408at the <varname>j += a[i];</varname>, since at that point the
1409undefinedness is not "observable".  It's only when a decision has to be
1410made as to whether or not to do the <function>printf</function> -- an
1411observable action of your program -- that Memcheck complains.</para>
1412
1413<para>Most low level operations, such as adds, cause Memcheck to use the
1414V bits for the operands to calculate the V bits for the result.  Even if
1415the result is partially or wholly undefined, it does not
1416complain.</para>
1417
1418<para>Checks on definedness only occur in three places: when a value is
1419used to generate a memory address, when control flow decision needs to
1420be made, and when a system call is detected, Memcheck checks definedness
1421of parameters as required.</para>
1422
1423<para>If a check should detect undefinedness, an error message is
1424issued.  The resulting value is subsequently regarded as well-defined.
1425To do otherwise would give long chains of error messages.  In other
1426words, once Memcheck reports an undefined value error, it tries to
1427avoid reporting further errors derived from that same undefined
1428value.</para>
1429
1430<para>This sounds overcomplicated.  Why not just check all reads from
1431memory, and complain if an undefined value is loaded into a CPU
1432register?  Well, that doesn't work well, because perfectly legitimate C
1433programs routinely copy uninitialised values around in memory, and we
1434don't want endless complaints about that.  Here's the canonical example.
1435Consider a struct like this:</para>
1436<programlisting><![CDATA[
1437struct S { int x; char c; };
1438struct S s1, s2;
1439s1.x = 42;
1440s1.c = 'z';
1441s2 = s1;
1442]]></programlisting>
1443
1444<para>The question to ask is: how large is <varname>struct S</varname>,
1445in bytes?  An <varname>int</varname> is 4 bytes and a
1446<varname>char</varname> one byte, so perhaps a <varname>struct
1447S</varname> occupies 5 bytes?  Wrong.  All non-toy compilers we know
1448of will round the size of <varname>struct S</varname> up to a whole
1449number of words, in this case 8 bytes.  Not doing this forces compilers
1450to generate truly appalling code for accessing arrays of
1451<varname>struct S</varname>'s on some architectures.</para>
1452
1453<para>So <varname>s1</varname> occupies 8 bytes, yet only 5 of them will
1454be initialised.  For the assignment <varname>s2 = s1</varname>, GCC
1455generates code to copy all 8 bytes wholesale into <varname>s2</varname>
1456without regard for their meaning.  If Memcheck simply checked values as
1457they came out of memory, it would yelp every time a structure assignment
1458like this happened.  So the more complicated behaviour described above
1459is necessary.  This allows GCC to copy
1460<varname>s1</varname> into <varname>s2</varname> any way it likes, and a
1461warning will only be emitted if the uninitialised values are later
1462used.</para>
1463
1464</sect2>
1465
1466
1467<sect2 id="mc-manual.vaddress" xreflabel=" Valid-address (A) bits">
1468<title>Valid-address (A) bits</title>
1469
1470<para>Notice that the previous subsection describes how the validity of
1471values is established and maintained without having to say whether the
1472program does or does not have the right to access any particular memory
1473location.  We now consider the latter question.</para>
1474
1475<para>As described above, every bit in memory or in the CPU has an
1476associated valid-value (V) bit.  In addition, all bytes in memory, but
1477not in the CPU, have an associated valid-address (A) bit.  This
1478indicates whether or not the program can legitimately read or write that
1479location.  It does not give any indication of the validity of the data
1480at that location -- that's the job of the V bits -- only whether or not
1481the location may be accessed.</para>
1482
1483<para>Every time your program reads or writes memory, Memcheck checks
1484the A bits associated with the address.  If any of them indicate an
1485invalid address, an error is emitted.  Note that the reads and writes
1486themselves do not change the A bits, only consult them.</para>
1487
1488<para>So how do the A bits get set/cleared?  Like this:</para>
1489
1490<itemizedlist>
1491  <listitem>
1492    <para>When the program starts, all the global data areas are
1493    marked as accessible.</para>
1494  </listitem>
1495
1496  <listitem>
1497    <para>When the program does
1498    <function>malloc</function>/<computeroutput>new</computeroutput>,
1499    the A bits for exactly the area allocated, and not a byte more,
1500    are marked as accessible.  Upon freeing the area the A bits are
1501    changed to indicate inaccessibility.</para>
1502  </listitem>
1503
1504  <listitem>
1505    <para>When the stack pointer register (<literal>SP</literal>) moves
1506    up or down, A bits are set.  The rule is that the area from
1507    <literal>SP</literal> up to the base of the stack is marked as
1508    accessible, and below <literal>SP</literal> is inaccessible.  (If
1509    that sounds illogical, bear in mind that the stack grows down, not
1510    up, on almost all Unix systems, including GNU/Linux.)  Tracking
1511    <literal>SP</literal> like this has the useful side-effect that the
1512    section of stack used by a function for local variables etc is
1513    automatically marked accessible on function entry and inaccessible
1514    on exit.</para>
1515  </listitem>
1516
1517  <listitem>
1518    <para>When doing system calls, A bits are changed appropriately.
1519    For example, <literal>mmap</literal>
1520    magically makes files appear in the process'
1521    address space, so the A bits must be updated if <literal>mmap</literal>
1522    succeeds.</para>
1523  </listitem>
1524
1525  <listitem>
1526    <para>Optionally, your program can tell Memcheck about such changes
1527    explicitly, using the client request mechanism described
1528    above.</para>
1529  </listitem>
1530
1531</itemizedlist>
1532
1533</sect2>
1534
1535
1536<sect2 id="mc-manual.together" xreflabel="Putting it all together">
1537<title>Putting it all together</title>
1538
1539<para>Memcheck's checking machinery can be summarised as
1540follows:</para>
1541
1542<itemizedlist>
1543  <listitem>
1544    <para>Each byte in memory has 8 associated V (valid-value) bits,
1545    saying whether or not the byte has a defined value, and a single A
1546    (valid-address) bit, saying whether or not the program currently has
1547    the right to read/write that address.  As mentioned above, heavy
1548    use of compression means the overhead is typically around 25%.</para>
1549  </listitem>
1550
1551  <listitem>
1552    <para>When memory is read or written, the relevant A bits are
1553    consulted.  If they indicate an invalid address, Memcheck emits an
1554    Invalid read or Invalid write error.</para>
1555  </listitem>
1556
1557  <listitem>
1558    <para>When memory is read into the CPU's registers, the relevant V
1559    bits are fetched from memory and stored in the simulated CPU.  They
1560    are not consulted.</para>
1561  </listitem>
1562
1563  <listitem>
1564    <para>When a register is written out to memory, the V bits for that
1565    register are written back to memory too.</para>
1566  </listitem>
1567
1568  <listitem>
1569    <para>When values in CPU registers are used to generate a memory
1570    address, or to determine the outcome of a conditional branch, the V
1571    bits for those values are checked, and an error emitted if any of
1572    them are undefined.</para>
1573  </listitem>
1574
1575  <listitem>
1576    <para>When values in CPU registers are used for any other purpose,
1577    Memcheck computes the V bits for the result, but does not check
1578    them.</para>
1579  </listitem>
1580
1581  <listitem>
1582    <para>Once the V bits for a value in the CPU have been checked, they
1583    are then set to indicate validity.  This avoids long chains of
1584    errors.</para>
1585  </listitem>
1586
1587  <listitem>
1588    <para>When values are loaded from memory, Memcheck checks the A bits
1589    for that location and issues an illegal-address warning if needed.
1590    In that case, the V bits loaded are forced to indicate Valid,
1591    despite the location being invalid.</para>
1592
1593    <para>This apparently strange choice reduces the amount of confusing
1594    information presented to the user.  It avoids the unpleasant
1595    phenomenon in which memory is read from a place which is both
1596    unaddressable and contains invalid values, and, as a result, you get
1597    not only an invalid-address (read/write) error, but also a
1598    potentially large set of uninitialised-value errors, one for every
1599    time the value is used.</para>
1600
1601    <para>There is a hazy boundary case to do with multi-byte loads from
1602    addresses which are partially valid and partially invalid.  See
1603    details of the option <option>--partial-loads-ok</option> for details.
1604    </para>
1605  </listitem>
1606
1607</itemizedlist>
1608
1609
1610<para>Memcheck intercepts calls to <function>malloc</function>,
1611<function>calloc</function>, <function>realloc</function>,
1612<function>valloc</function>, <function>memalign</function>,
1613<function>free</function>, <computeroutput>new</computeroutput>,
1614<computeroutput>new[]</computeroutput>,
1615<computeroutput>delete</computeroutput> and
1616<computeroutput>delete[]</computeroutput>.  The behaviour you get
1617is:</para>
1618
1619<itemizedlist>
1620
1621  <listitem>
1622    <para><function>malloc</function>/<function>new</function>/<computeroutput>new[]</computeroutput>:
1623    the returned memory is marked as addressable but not having valid
1624    values.  This means you have to write to it before you can read
1625    it.</para>
1626  </listitem>
1627
1628  <listitem>
1629    <para><function>calloc</function>: returned memory is marked both
1630    addressable and valid, since <function>calloc</function> clears
1631    the area to zero.</para>
1632  </listitem>
1633
1634  <listitem>
1635    <para><function>realloc</function>: if the new size is larger than
1636    the old, the new section is addressable but invalid, as with
1637    <function>malloc</function>.  If the new size is smaller, the
1638    dropped-off section is marked as unaddressable.  You may only pass to
1639    <function>realloc</function> a pointer previously issued to you by
1640    <function>malloc</function>/<function>calloc</function>/<function>realloc</function>.</para>
1641  </listitem>
1642
1643  <listitem>
1644    <para><function>free</function>/<computeroutput>delete</computeroutput>/<computeroutput>delete[]</computeroutput>:
1645    you may only pass to these functions a pointer previously issued
1646    to you by the corresponding allocation function.  Otherwise,
1647    Memcheck complains.  If the pointer is indeed valid, Memcheck
1648    marks the entire area it points at as unaddressable, and places
1649    the block in the freed-blocks-queue.  The aim is to defer as long
1650    as possible reallocation of this block.  Until that happens, all
1651    attempts to access it will elicit an invalid-address error, as you
1652    would hope.</para>
1653  </listitem>
1654
1655</itemizedlist>
1656
1657</sect2>
1658</sect1>
1659
1660<sect1 id="mc-manual.monitor-commands" xreflabel="Memcheck Monitor Commands">
1661<title>Memcheck Monitor Commands</title>
1662<para>The Memcheck tool provides monitor commands handled by Valgrind's
1663built-in gdbserver (see <xref linkend="manual-core-adv.gdbserver-commandhandling"/>).
1664</para>
1665
1666<itemizedlist>
1667  <listitem>
1668    <para><varname>xb &lt;addr&gt; [&lt;len&gt;]</varname>
1669      shows the definedness (V) bits and values for &lt;len&gt; (default 1)
1670      bytes starting at &lt;addr&gt;.
1671      For each 8 bytes, two lines are output.
1672    </para>
1673    <para>
1674      The first line shows the validity bits for 8 bytes.
1675      The definedness of each byte in the range is given using two hexadecimal
1676      digits.  These hexadecimal digits encode the validity of each bit of the
1677      corresponding byte,
1678      using 0 if the bit is defined and 1 if the bit is undefined.
1679      If a byte is not addressable, its validity bits are replaced
1680      by <varname>__</varname> (a double underscore).
1681    </para>
1682    <para>
1683      The second line shows the values of the bytes below the corresponding
1684      validity bits. The format used to show the bytes data is similar to the
1685      GDB command 'x /&lt;len&gt;xb &lt;addr&gt;'. The value for a non
1686      addressable bytes is shown as ?? (two question marks).
1687    </para>
1688    <para>
1689      In the following example, <varname>string10</varname> is an array
1690      of 10 characters, in which the even numbered bytes are
1691      undefined. In the below example, the byte corresponding
1692      to <varname>string10[5]</varname> is not addressable.
1693    </para>
1694<programlisting><![CDATA[
1695(gdb) p &string10
1696$4 = (char (*)[10]) 0x804a2f0
1697(gdb) mo xb 0x804a2f0 10
1698                  ff      00      ff      00      ff      __      ff      00
16990x804A2F0:      0x3f    0x6e    0x3f    0x65    0x3f    0x??     0x3f    0x65
1700                  ff      00
17010x804A2F8:      0x3f    0x00
1702Address 0x804A2F0 len 10 has 1 bytes unaddressable
1703(gdb)
1704]]></programlisting>
1705
1706    <para> The command xb cannot be used with registers. To get
1707      the validity bits of a register, you must start Valgrind with the
1708      option <option>--vgdb-shadow-registers=yes</option>. The validity
1709      bits of a register can then be obtained by printing the 'shadow 1'
1710      corresponding register.  In the below x86 example, the register
1711      eax has all its bits undefined, while the register ebx is fully
1712      defined.
1713    </para>
1714<programlisting><![CDATA[
1715(gdb) p /x $eaxs1
1716$9 = 0xffffffff
1717(gdb) p /x $ebxs1
1718$10 = 0x0
1719(gdb)
1720]]></programlisting>
1721
1722  </listitem>
1723
1724  <listitem>
1725    <para><varname>get_vbits &lt;addr&gt; [&lt;len&gt;]</varname>
1726    shows the definedness (V) bits for &lt;len&gt; (default 1) bytes
1727    starting at &lt;addr&gt; using the same convention as the
1728    <varname>xb</varname> command. <varname>get_vbits</varname> only
1729    shows the V bits (grouped by 4 bytes). It does not show the values.
1730    If you want to associate V bits with the corresponding byte values, the
1731    <varname>xb</varname> command will be easier to use, in particular
1732    on little endian computers when associating undefined parts of an integer
1733    with their V bits values.
1734    </para>
1735    <para>
1736    The following example shows the result of <varname>get_vibts</varname>
1737    on the <varname>string10</varname> used in the  <varname>xb</varname>
1738    command explanation.
1739    </para>
1740<programlisting><![CDATA[
1741(gdb) monitor get_vbits 0x804a2f0 10
1742ff00ff00 ff__ff00 ff00
1743Address 0x804A2F0 len 10 has 1 bytes unaddressable
1744(gdb)
1745]]></programlisting>
1746
1747  </listitem>
1748
1749  <listitem>
1750    <para><varname>make_memory
1751    [noaccess|undefined|defined|Definedifaddressable] &lt;addr&gt;
1752    [&lt;len&gt;]</varname> marks the range of &lt;len&gt; (default 1)
1753    bytes at &lt;addr&gt; as having the given status. Parameter
1754    <varname>noaccess</varname> marks the range as non-accessible, so
1755    Memcheck will report an error on any access to it.
1756    <varname>undefined</varname> or <varname>defined</varname> mark
1757    the area as accessible, but Memcheck regards the bytes in it
1758    respectively as having undefined or defined values.
1759    <varname>Definedifaddressable</varname> marks as defined, bytes in
1760    the range which are already addressible, but makes no change to
1761    the status of bytes in the range which are not addressible. Note
1762    that the first letter of <varname>Definedifaddressable</varname>
1763    is an uppercase D to avoid confusion with <varname>defined</varname>.
1764    </para>
1765
1766    <para>
1767    In the following example, the first byte of the
1768    <varname>string10</varname> is marked as defined:
1769    </para>
1770<programlisting><![CDATA[
1771(gdb) monitor make_memory defined 0x8049e28  1
1772(gdb) monitor get_vbits 0x8049e28 10
17730000ff00 ff00ff00 ff00
1774(gdb)
1775]]></programlisting>
1776  </listitem>
1777
1778  <listitem>
1779    <para><varname>check_memory [addressable|defined] &lt;addr&gt;
1780    [&lt;len&gt;]</varname> checks that the range of &lt;len&gt;
1781    (default 1) bytes at &lt;addr&gt; has the specified accessibility.
1782    It then outputs a description of &lt;addr&gt;. In the following
1783    example, a detailed description is available because the
1784    option <option>--read-var-info=yes</option> was given at Valgrind
1785    startup:
1786    </para>
1787<programlisting><![CDATA[
1788(gdb) monitor check_memory defined 0x8049e28  1
1789Address 0x8049E28 len 1 defined
1790==14698==  Location 0x8049e28 is 0 bytes inside string10[0],
1791==14698==  declared at prog.c:10, in frame #0 of thread 1
1792(gdb)
1793]]></programlisting>
1794  </listitem>
1795
1796  <listitem>
1797    <para><varname>leak_check [full*|summary]
1798                              [kinds &lt;set&gt;|reachable|possibleleak*|definiteleak]
1799                              [heuristics heur1,heur2,...]
1800                              [increased*|changed|any]
1801                              [unlimited*|limited &lt;max_loss_records_output&gt;]
1802          </varname>
1803    performs a leak check. The <varname>*</varname> in the arguments
1804    indicates the default values. </para>
1805
1806    <para> If the <varname>[full*|summary]</varname> argument is
1807    <varname>summary</varname>, only a summary of the leak search is given;
1808    otherwise a full leak report is produced.  A full leak report gives
1809    detailed information for each leak: the stack trace where the leaked blocks
1810    were allocated, the number of blocks leaked and their total size.  When a
1811    full report is requested, the next two arguments further specify what
1812    kind of leaks to report.  A leak's details are shown if they match
1813    both the second and third argument. A full leak report might
1814    output detailed information for many leaks. The nr of leaks for
1815    which information is output can be controlled using
1816    the <varname>limited</varname> argument followed by the maximum nr
1817    of leak records to output. If this maximum is reached, the leak
1818    search  outputs the records with the biggest number of bytes.
1819    </para>
1820
1821    <para>The <varname>kinds</varname> argument controls what kind of blocks
1822    are shown for a <varname>full</varname> leak search.  The set of leak kinds
1823    to show can be specified using a <varname>&lt;set&gt;</varname> similarly
1824    to the command line option <option>--show-leak-kinds</option>.
1825    Alternatively, the  value <varname>definiteleak</varname>
1826    is equivalent to <varname>kinds definite</varname>, the
1827    value <varname>possibleleak</varname> is equivalent to
1828    <varname>kinds definite,possible</varname> : it will also show
1829    possibly leaked blocks, .i.e those for which only an interior
1830    pointer was found.  The value <varname>reachable</varname> will
1831    show all block categories (i.e. is equivalent to <varname>kinds
1832    all</varname>).
1833    </para>
1834
1835    <para>The <varname>heuristics</varname> argument controls the heuristics
1836    used during the leak search. The set of heuristics to use can be specified
1837    using a <varname>&lt;set&gt;</varname> similarly
1838    to the command line option <option>--leak-check-heuristics</option>.
1839    The default value for the <varname>heuristics</varname> argument is
1840    <varname>heuristics none</varname>.
1841    </para>
1842
1843    <para>The <varname>[increased*|changed|any]</varname> argument controls what
1844    kinds of changes are shown for a <varname>full</varname> leak search. The
1845    value <varname>increased</varname> specifies that only block
1846    allocation stacks with an increased number of leaked bytes or
1847    blocks since the previous leak check should be shown.  The
1848    value <varname>changed</varname> specifies that allocation stacks
1849    with any change since the previous leak check should be shown.
1850    The value <varname>any</varname> specifies that all leak entries
1851    should be shown, regardless of any increase or decrease.  When
1852    If <varname>increased</varname> or <varname>changed</varname> are
1853    specified, the leak report entries will show the delta relative to
1854    the previous leak report.
1855    </para>
1856
1857    <para>The following example shows usage of the
1858    <varname>leak_check</varname> monitor command on
1859    the <varname>memcheck/tests/leak-cases.c</varname> regression
1860    test. The first command outputs one entry having an increase in
1861    the leaked bytes.  The second command is the same as the first
1862    command, but uses the abbreviated forms accepted by GDB and the
1863    Valgrind gdbserver. It only outputs the summary information, as
1864    there was no increase since the previous leak search.</para>
1865<programlisting><![CDATA[
1866(gdb) monitor leak_check full possibleleak increased
1867==19520== 16 (+16) bytes in 1 (+1) blocks are possibly lost in loss record 9 of 12
1868==19520==    at 0x40070B4: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:263)
1869==19520==    by 0x80484D5: mk (leak-cases.c:52)
1870==19520==    by 0x804855F: f (leak-cases.c:81)
1871==19520==    by 0x80488E0: main (leak-cases.c:107)
1872==19520==
1873==19520== LEAK SUMMARY:
1874==19520==    definitely lost: 32 (+0) bytes in 2 (+0) blocks
1875==19520==    indirectly lost: 16 (+0) bytes in 1 (+0) blocks
1876==19520==      possibly lost: 32 (+16) bytes in 2 (+1) blocks
1877==19520==    still reachable: 96 (+16) bytes in 6 (+1) blocks
1878==19520==         suppressed: 0 (+0) bytes in 0 (+0) blocks
1879==19520== Reachable blocks (those to which a pointer was found) are not shown.
1880==19520== To see them, add 'reachable any' args to leak_check
1881==19520==
1882(gdb) mo l
1883==19520== LEAK SUMMARY:
1884==19520==    definitely lost: 32 (+0) bytes in 2 (+0) blocks
1885==19520==    indirectly lost: 16 (+0) bytes in 1 (+0) blocks
1886==19520==      possibly lost: 32 (+0) bytes in 2 (+0) blocks
1887==19520==    still reachable: 96 (+0) bytes in 6 (+0) blocks
1888==19520==         suppressed: 0 (+0) bytes in 0 (+0) blocks
1889==19520== Reachable blocks (those to which a pointer was found) are not shown.
1890==19520== To see them, add 'reachable any' args to leak_check
1891==19520==
1892(gdb)
1893]]></programlisting>
1894    <para>Note that when using Valgrind's gdbserver, it is not
1895    necessary to rerun
1896    with <option>--leak-check=full</option>
1897    <option>--show-reachable=yes</option> to see the reachable
1898    blocks. You can obtain the same information without rerunning by
1899    using the GDB command <computeroutput>monitor leak_check full
1900    reachable any</computeroutput> (or, using
1901    abbreviation: <computeroutput>mo l f r a</computeroutput>).
1902    </para>
1903  </listitem>
1904
1905  <listitem>
1906    <para><varname>block_list &lt;loss_record_nr&gt;|&lt;loss_record_nr_from&gt;..&lt;loss_record_nr_to&gt;
1907        [unlimited*|limited &lt;max_blocks&gt;]
1908        [heuristics heur1,heur2,...]
1909      </varname>
1910      shows the list of blocks belonging to
1911      <varname>&lt;loss_record_nr&gt;</varname> (or to the loss records range
1912      <varname>&lt;loss_record_nr_from&gt;..&lt;loss_record_nr_to&gt;</varname>).
1913      The nr of blocks to print can be controlled using the
1914      <varname>limited</varname> argument followed by the maximum nr
1915      of blocks to output.
1916      If one or more heuristics are given, only prints the loss records
1917      and blocks found via one of the given <varname>heur1,heur2,...</varname>
1918      heuristics.
1919    </para>
1920
1921    <para> A leak search merges the allocated blocks in loss records :
1922    a loss record re-groups all blocks having the same state (for
1923    example, Definitely Lost) and the same allocation backtrace.
1924    Each loss record is identified in the leak search result
1925    by a loss record number.
1926    The <varname>block_list</varname> command shows the loss record information
1927    followed by the addresses and sizes of the blocks which have been
1928    merged in the loss record. If a block was found using an heuristic, the block size
1929    is followed by the heuristic.
1930    </para>
1931
1932    <para> If a directly lost block causes some other blocks to be indirectly
1933    lost, the block_list command will also show these indirectly lost blocks.
1934    The indirectly lost blocks will be indented according to the level of indirection
1935    between the directly lost block and the indirectly lost block(s).
1936    Each indirectly lost block is followed by the reference of its loss record.
1937    </para>
1938
1939    <para> The block_list command can be used on the results of a leak search as long
1940    as no block has been freed after this leak search: as soon as the program frees
1941    a block, a new leak search is needed before block_list can be used again.
1942    </para>
1943
1944    <para>
1945    In the below example, the program leaks a tree structure by losing the pointer to
1946    the block A (top of the tree).
1947    So, the block A is directly lost, causing an indirect
1948    loss of blocks B to G. The first block_list command shows the loss record of A
1949    (a definitely lost block with address 0x4028028, size 16). The addresses and sizes
1950    of the indirectly lost blocks due to block A are shown below the block A.
1951    The second command shows the details of one of the indirect loss records output
1952    by the first command.
1953    </para>
1954<programlisting><![CDATA[
1955           A
1956         /   \
1957        B     C
1958       / \   / \
1959      D   E F   G
1960]]></programlisting>
1961
1962<programlisting><![CDATA[
1963(gdb) bt
1964#0  main () at leak-tree.c:69
1965(gdb) monitor leak_check full any
1966==19552== 112 (16 direct, 96 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 7 of 7
1967==19552==    at 0x40070B4: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:263)
1968==19552==    by 0x80484D5: mk (leak-tree.c:28)
1969==19552==    by 0x80484FC: f (leak-tree.c:41)
1970==19552==    by 0x8048856: main (leak-tree.c:63)
1971==19552==
1972==19552== LEAK SUMMARY:
1973==19552==    definitely lost: 16 bytes in 1 blocks
1974==19552==    indirectly lost: 96 bytes in 6 blocks
1975==19552==      possibly lost: 0 bytes in 0 blocks
1976==19552==    still reachable: 0 bytes in 0 blocks
1977==19552==         suppressed: 0 bytes in 0 blocks
1978==19552==
1979(gdb) monitor block_list 7
1980==19552== 112 (16 direct, 96 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 7 of 7
1981==19552==    at 0x40070B4: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:263)
1982==19552==    by 0x80484D5: mk (leak-tree.c:28)
1983==19552==    by 0x80484FC: f (leak-tree.c:41)
1984==19552==    by 0x8048856: main (leak-tree.c:63)
1985==19552== 0x4028028[16]
1986==19552==   0x4028068[16] indirect loss record 1
1987==19552==      0x40280E8[16] indirect loss record 3
1988==19552==      0x4028128[16] indirect loss record 4
1989==19552==   0x40280A8[16] indirect loss record 2
1990==19552==      0x4028168[16] indirect loss record 5
1991==19552==      0x40281A8[16] indirect loss record 6
1992(gdb) mo b 2
1993==19552== 16 bytes in 1 blocks are indirectly lost in loss record 2 of 7
1994==19552==    at 0x40070B4: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:263)
1995==19552==    by 0x80484D5: mk (leak-tree.c:28)
1996==19552==    by 0x8048519: f (leak-tree.c:43)
1997==19552==    by 0x8048856: main (leak-tree.c:63)
1998==19552== 0x40280A8[16]
1999==19552==   0x4028168[16] indirect loss record 5
2000==19552==   0x40281A8[16] indirect loss record 6
2001(gdb)
2002
2003]]></programlisting>
2004
2005  </listitem>
2006
2007  <listitem>
2008    <para><varname>who_points_at &lt;addr&gt; [&lt;len&gt;]</varname>
2009    shows all the locations where a pointer to addr is found.
2010    If len is equal to 1, the command only shows the locations pointing
2011    exactly at addr (i.e. the "start pointers" to addr).
2012    If len is &gt; 1, "interior pointers" pointing at the len first bytes
2013    will also be shown.
2014    </para>
2015
2016    <para>The locations searched for are the same as the locations
2017    used in the leak search. So, <varname>who_points_at</varname> can a.o.
2018    be used to show why the leak search still can reach a block, or can
2019    search for dangling pointers to a freed block.
2020    Each location pointing at addr (or pointing inside addr if interior pointers
2021    are being searched for) will be described.
2022    </para>
2023
2024    <para>In the below example, the pointers to the 'tree block A' (see example
2025    in command <varname>block_list</varname>) is shown before the tree was leaked.
2026    The descriptions are detailed as the option <option>--read-var-info=yes</option>
2027    was given at Valgrind startup. The second call shows the pointers (start and interior
2028    pointers) to block G. The block G (0x40281A8) is reachable via block C (0x40280a8)
2029    and register ECX of tid 1 (tid is the Valgrind thread id).
2030    It is "interior reachable" via the register EBX.
2031    </para>
2032
2033<programlisting><![CDATA[
2034(gdb) monitor who_points_at 0x4028028
2035==20852== Searching for pointers to 0x4028028
2036==20852== *0x8049e20 points at 0x4028028
2037==20852==  Location 0x8049e20 is 0 bytes inside global var "t"
2038==20852==  declared at leak-tree.c:35
2039(gdb) monitor who_points_at 0x40281A8 16
2040==20852== Searching for pointers pointing in 16 bytes from 0x40281a8
2041==20852== *0x40280ac points at 0x40281a8
2042==20852==  Address 0x40280ac is 4 bytes inside a block of size 16 alloc'd
2043==20852==    at 0x40070B4: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:263)
2044==20852==    by 0x80484D5: mk (leak-tree.c:28)
2045==20852==    by 0x8048519: f (leak-tree.c:43)
2046==20852==    by 0x8048856: main (leak-tree.c:63)
2047==20852== tid 1 register ECX points at 0x40281a8
2048==20852== tid 1 register EBX interior points at 2 bytes inside 0x40281a8
2049(gdb)
2050]]></programlisting>
2051
2052  <para> When <varname>who_points_at</varname> finds an interior pointer,
2053  it will report the heuristic(s) with which this interior pointer
2054  will be considered as reachable. Note that this is done independently
2055  of the value of the option <option>--leak-check-heuristics</option>.
2056  In the below example, the loss record 6 indicates a possibly lost
2057  block. <varname>who_points_at</varname> reports that there is an interior
2058  pointer pointing in this block, and that the block can be considered
2059  reachable using the heuristic
2060  <computeroutput>multipleinheritance</computeroutput>.
2061  </para>
2062
2063<programlisting><![CDATA[
2064(gdb) monitor block_list 6
2065==3748== 8 bytes in 1 blocks are possibly lost in loss record 6 of 7
2066==3748==    at 0x4007D77: operator new(unsigned int) (vg_replace_malloc.c:313)
2067==3748==    by 0x8048954: main (leak_cpp_interior.cpp:43)
2068==3748== 0x402A0E0[8]
2069(gdb) monitor who_points_at 0x402A0E0 8
2070==3748== Searching for pointers pointing in 8 bytes from 0x402a0e0
2071==3748== *0xbe8ee078 interior points at 4 bytes inside 0x402a0e0
2072==3748==  Address 0xbe8ee078 is on thread 1's stack
2073==3748== block at 0x402a0e0 considered reachable by ptr 0x402a0e4 using multipleinheritance heuristic
2074(gdb)
2075]]></programlisting>
2076
2077  </listitem>
2078
2079</itemizedlist>
2080
2081</sect1>
2082
2083<sect1 id="mc-manual.clientreqs" xreflabel="Client requests">
2084<title>Client Requests</title>
2085
2086<para>The following client requests are defined in
2087<filename>memcheck.h</filename>.
2088See <filename>memcheck.h</filename> for exact details of their
2089arguments.</para>
2090
2091<itemizedlist>
2092
2093  <listitem>
2094    <para><varname>VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_NOACCESS</varname>,
2095    <varname>VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_UNDEFINED</varname> and
2096    <varname>VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_DEFINED</varname>.
2097    These mark address ranges as completely inaccessible,
2098    accessible but containing undefined data, and accessible and
2099    containing defined data, respectively. They return -1, when
2100    run on Valgrind and 0 otherwise.</para>
2101  </listitem>
2102
2103  <listitem>
2104    <para><varname>VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_DEFINED_IF_ADDRESSABLE</varname>.
2105    This is just like <varname>VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_DEFINED</varname> but only
2106    affects those bytes that are already addressable.</para>
2107  </listitem>
2108
2109  <listitem>
2110    <para><varname>VALGRIND_CHECK_MEM_IS_ADDRESSABLE</varname> and
2111    <varname>VALGRIND_CHECK_MEM_IS_DEFINED</varname>: check immediately
2112    whether or not the given address range has the relevant property,
2113    and if not, print an error message.  Also, for the convenience of
2114    the client, returns zero if the relevant property holds; otherwise,
2115    the returned value is the address of the first byte for which the
2116    property is not true.  Always returns 0 when not run on
2117    Valgrind.</para>
2118  </listitem>
2119
2120  <listitem>
2121    <para><varname>VALGRIND_CHECK_VALUE_IS_DEFINED</varname>: a quick and easy
2122    way to find out whether Valgrind thinks a particular value
2123    (lvalue, to be precise) is addressable and defined.  Prints an error
2124    message if not.  It has no return value.</para>
2125  </listitem>
2126
2127  <listitem>
2128    <para><varname>VALGRIND_DO_LEAK_CHECK</varname>: does a full memory leak
2129    check (like <option>--leak-check=full</option>) right now.
2130    This is useful for incrementally checking for leaks between arbitrary
2131    places in the program's execution.  It has no return value.</para>
2132  </listitem>
2133
2134  <listitem>
2135    <para><varname>VALGRIND_DO_ADDED_LEAK_CHECK</varname>: same as
2136   <varname> VALGRIND_DO_LEAK_CHECK</varname> but only shows the
2137    entries for which there was an increase in leaked bytes or leaked
2138    number of blocks since the previous leak search.  It has no return
2139    value.</para>
2140  </listitem>
2141
2142  <listitem>
2143    <para><varname>VALGRIND_DO_CHANGED_LEAK_CHECK</varname>: same as
2144    <varname>VALGRIND_DO_LEAK_CHECK</varname> but only shows the
2145    entries for which there was an increase or decrease in leaked
2146    bytes or leaked number of blocks since the previous leak search. It
2147    has no return value.</para>
2148  </listitem>
2149
2150  <listitem>
2151    <para><varname>VALGRIND_DO_QUICK_LEAK_CHECK</varname>: like
2152    <varname>VALGRIND_DO_LEAK_CHECK</varname>, except it produces only a leak
2153    summary (like <option>--leak-check=summary</option>).
2154    It has no return value.</para>
2155  </listitem>
2156
2157  <listitem>
2158    <para><varname>VALGRIND_COUNT_LEAKS</varname>: fills in the four
2159    arguments with the number of bytes of memory found by the previous
2160    leak check to be leaked (i.e. the sum of direct leaks and indirect leaks),
2161    dubious, reachable and suppressed.  This is useful in test harness code,
2162    after calling <varname>VALGRIND_DO_LEAK_CHECK</varname> or
2163    <varname>VALGRIND_DO_QUICK_LEAK_CHECK</varname>.</para>
2164  </listitem>
2165
2166  <listitem>
2167    <para><varname>VALGRIND_COUNT_LEAK_BLOCKS</varname>: identical to
2168    <varname>VALGRIND_COUNT_LEAKS</varname> except that it returns the
2169    number of blocks rather than the number of bytes in each
2170    category.</para>
2171  </listitem>
2172
2173  <listitem>
2174    <para><varname>VALGRIND_GET_VBITS</varname> and
2175    <varname>VALGRIND_SET_VBITS</varname>: allow you to get and set the
2176    V (validity) bits for an address range.  You should probably only
2177    set V bits that you have got with
2178    <varname>VALGRIND_GET_VBITS</varname>.  Only for those who really
2179    know what they are doing.</para>
2180  </listitem>
2181
2182  <listitem>
2183    <para><varname>VALGRIND_CREATE_BLOCK</varname> and
2184    <varname>VALGRIND_DISCARD</varname>.  <varname>VALGRIND_CREATE_BLOCK</varname>
2185    takes an address, a number of bytes and a character string.  The
2186    specified address range is then associated with that string.  When
2187    Memcheck reports an invalid access to an address in the range, it
2188    will describe it in terms of this block rather than in terms of
2189    any other block it knows about.  Note that the use of this macro
2190    does not actually change the state of memory in any way -- it
2191    merely gives a name for the range.
2192    </para>
2193
2194    <para>At some point you may want Memcheck to stop reporting errors
2195    in terms of the block named
2196    by <varname>VALGRIND_CREATE_BLOCK</varname>.  To make this
2197    possible, <varname>VALGRIND_CREATE_BLOCK</varname> returns a
2198    "block handle", which is a C <varname>int</varname> value.  You
2199    can pass this block handle to <varname>VALGRIND_DISCARD</varname>.
2200    After doing so, Valgrind will no longer relate addressing errors
2201    in the specified range to the block.  Passing invalid handles to
2202    <varname>VALGRIND_DISCARD</varname> is harmless.
2203   </para>
2204  </listitem>
2205
2206</itemizedlist>
2207
2208</sect1>
2209
2210
2211
2212
2213<sect1 id="mc-manual.mempools" xreflabel="Memory Pools">
2214<title>Memory Pools: describing and working with custom allocators</title>
2215
2216<para>Some programs use custom memory allocators, often for performance
2217reasons.  Left to itself, Memcheck is unable to understand the
2218behaviour of custom allocation schemes as well as it understands the
2219standard allocators, and so may miss errors and leaks in your program.  What
2220this section describes is a way to give Memcheck enough of a description of
2221your custom allocator that it can make at least some sense of what is
2222happening.</para>
2223
2224<para>There are many different sorts of custom allocator, so Memcheck
2225attempts to reason about them using a loose, abstract model.  We
2226use the following terminology when describing custom allocation
2227systems:</para>
2228
2229<itemizedlist>
2230  <listitem>
2231    <para>Custom allocation involves a set of independent "memory pools".
2232    </para>
2233  </listitem>
2234  <listitem>
2235    <para>Memcheck's notion of a a memory pool consists of a single "anchor
2236    address" and a set of non-overlapping "chunks" associated with the
2237    anchor address.</para>
2238  </listitem>
2239  <listitem>
2240    <para>Typically a pool's anchor address is the address of a
2241    book-keeping "header" structure.</para>
2242  </listitem>
2243  <listitem>
2244    <para>Typically the pool's chunks are drawn from a contiguous
2245    "superblock" acquired through the system
2246    <function>malloc</function> or
2247    <function>mmap</function>.</para>
2248  </listitem>
2249
2250</itemizedlist>
2251
2252<para>Keep in mind that the last two points above say "typically": the
2253Valgrind mempool client request API is intentionally vague about the
2254exact structure of a mempool. There is no specific mention made of
2255headers or superblocks. Nevertheless, the following picture may help
2256elucidate the intention of the terms in the API:</para>
2257
2258<programlisting><![CDATA[
2259   "pool"
2260   (anchor address)
2261   |
2262   v
2263   +--------+---+
2264   | header | o |
2265   +--------+-|-+
2266              |
2267              v                  superblock
2268              +------+---+--------------+---+------------------+
2269              |      |rzB|  allocation  |rzB|                  |
2270              +------+---+--------------+---+------------------+
2271                         ^              ^
2272                         |              |
2273                       "addr"     "addr"+"size"
2274]]></programlisting>
2275
2276<para>
2277Note that the header and the superblock may be contiguous or
2278discontiguous, and there may be multiple superblocks associated with a
2279single header; such variations are opaque to Memcheck. The API
2280only requires that your allocation scheme can present sensible values
2281of "pool", "addr" and "size".</para>
2282
2283<para>
2284Typically, before making client requests related to mempools, a client
2285program will have allocated such a header and superblock for their
2286mempool, and marked the superblock NOACCESS using the
2287<varname>VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_NOACCESS</varname> client request.</para>
2288
2289<para>
2290When dealing with mempools, the goal is to maintain a particular
2291invariant condition: that Memcheck believes the unallocated portions
2292of the pool's superblock (including redzones) are NOACCESS. To
2293maintain this invariant, the client program must ensure that the
2294superblock starts out in that state; Memcheck cannot make it so, since
2295Memcheck never explicitly learns about the superblock of a pool, only
2296the allocated chunks within the pool.</para>
2297
2298<para>
2299Once the header and superblock for a pool are established and properly
2300marked, there are a number of client requests programs can use to
2301inform Memcheck about changes to the state of a mempool:</para>
2302
2303<itemizedlist>
2304
2305  <listitem>
2306    <para>
2307    <varname>VALGRIND_CREATE_MEMPOOL(pool, rzB, is_zeroed)</varname>:
2308    This request registers the address <varname>pool</varname> as the anchor
2309    address for a memory pool. It also provides a size
2310    <varname>rzB</varname>, specifying how large the redzones placed around
2311    chunks allocated from the pool should be. Finally, it provides an
2312    <varname>is_zeroed</varname> argument that specifies whether the pool's
2313    chunks are zeroed (more precisely: defined) when allocated.
2314    </para>
2315    <para>
2316    Upon completion of this request, no chunks are associated with the
2317    pool.  The request simply tells Memcheck that the pool exists, so that
2318    subsequent calls can refer to it as a pool.
2319    </para>
2320  </listitem>
2321
2322  <listitem>
2323    <para><varname>VALGRIND_DESTROY_MEMPOOL(pool)</varname>:
2324    This request tells Memcheck that a pool is being torn down. Memcheck
2325    then removes all records of chunks associated with the pool, as well
2326    as its record of the pool's existence. While destroying its records of
2327    a mempool, Memcheck resets the redzones of any live chunks in the pool
2328    to NOACCESS.
2329    </para>
2330  </listitem>
2331
2332  <listitem>
2333    <para><varname>VALGRIND_MEMPOOL_ALLOC(pool, addr, size)</varname>:
2334    This request informs Memcheck that a <varname>size</varname>-byte chunk
2335    has been allocated at <varname>addr</varname>, and associates the chunk with the
2336    specified
2337    <varname>pool</varname>. If the pool was created with nonzero
2338    <varname>rzB</varname> redzones, Memcheck will mark the
2339    <varname>rzB</varname> bytes before and after the chunk as NOACCESS. If
2340    the pool was created with the <varname>is_zeroed</varname> argument set,
2341    Memcheck will mark the chunk as DEFINED, otherwise Memcheck will mark
2342    the chunk as UNDEFINED.
2343    </para>
2344  </listitem>
2345
2346  <listitem>
2347    <para><varname>VALGRIND_MEMPOOL_FREE(pool, addr)</varname>:
2348    This request informs Memcheck that the chunk at <varname>addr</varname>
2349    should no longer be considered allocated. Memcheck will mark the chunk
2350    associated with <varname>addr</varname> as NOACCESS, and delete its
2351    record of the chunk's existence.
2352    </para>
2353  </listitem>
2354
2355  <listitem>
2356    <para><varname>VALGRIND_MEMPOOL_TRIM(pool, addr, size)</varname>:
2357    This request trims the chunks associated with <varname>pool</varname>.
2358    The request only operates on chunks associated with
2359    <varname>pool</varname>. Trimming is formally defined as:</para>
2360    <itemizedlist>
2361      <listitem>
2362        <para> All chunks entirely inside the range
2363        <varname>addr..(addr+size-1)</varname> are preserved.</para>
2364      </listitem>
2365      <listitem>
2366        <para>All chunks entirely outside the range
2367        <varname>addr..(addr+size-1)</varname> are discarded, as though
2368        <varname>VALGRIND_MEMPOOL_FREE</varname> was called on them. </para>
2369      </listitem>
2370      <listitem>
2371        <para>All other chunks must intersect with the range
2372        <varname>addr..(addr+size-1)</varname>; areas outside the
2373        intersection are marked as NOACCESS, as though they had been
2374        independently freed with
2375        <varname>VALGRIND_MEMPOOL_FREE</varname>.</para>
2376      </listitem>
2377    </itemizedlist>
2378    <para>This is a somewhat rare request, but can be useful in
2379    implementing the type of mass-free operations common in custom
2380    LIFO allocators.</para>
2381  </listitem>
2382
2383  <listitem>
2384    <para><varname>VALGRIND_MOVE_MEMPOOL(poolA, poolB)</varname>: This
2385    request informs Memcheck that the pool previously anchored at
2386    address <varname>poolA</varname> has moved to anchor address
2387    <varname>poolB</varname>.  This is a rare request, typically only needed
2388    if you <function>realloc</function> the header of a mempool.</para>
2389    <para>No memory-status bits are altered by this request.</para>
2390  </listitem>
2391
2392  <listitem>
2393    <para>
2394    <varname>VALGRIND_MEMPOOL_CHANGE(pool, addrA, addrB,
2395    size)</varname>: This request informs Memcheck that the chunk
2396    previously allocated at address <varname>addrA</varname> within
2397    <varname>pool</varname> has been moved and/or resized, and should be
2398    changed to cover the region <varname>addrB..(addrB+size-1)</varname>. This
2399    is a rare request, typically only needed if you
2400    <function>realloc</function> a superblock or wish to extend a chunk
2401    without changing its memory-status bits.
2402    </para>
2403    <para>No memory-status bits are altered by this request.
2404    </para>
2405  </listitem>
2406
2407  <listitem>
2408    <para><varname>VALGRIND_MEMPOOL_EXISTS(pool)</varname>:
2409    This request informs the caller whether or not Memcheck is currently
2410    tracking a mempool at anchor address <varname>pool</varname>. It
2411    evaluates to 1 when there is a mempool associated with that address, 0
2412    otherwise. This is a rare request, only useful in circumstances when
2413    client code might have lost track of the set of active mempools.
2414    </para>
2415  </listitem>
2416
2417</itemizedlist>
2418
2419</sect1>
2420
2421
2422
2423
2424
2425
2426
2427<sect1 id="mc-manual.mpiwrap" xreflabel="MPI Wrappers">
2428<title>Debugging MPI Parallel Programs with Valgrind</title>
2429
2430<para>Memcheck supports debugging of distributed-memory applications
2431which use the MPI message passing standard.  This support consists of a
2432library of wrapper functions for the
2433<computeroutput>PMPI_*</computeroutput> interface.  When incorporated
2434into the application's address space, either by direct linking or by
2435<computeroutput>LD_PRELOAD</computeroutput>, the wrappers intercept
2436calls to <computeroutput>PMPI_Send</computeroutput>,
2437<computeroutput>PMPI_Recv</computeroutput>, etc.  They then
2438use client requests to inform Memcheck of memory state changes caused
2439by the function being wrapped.  This reduces the number of false
2440positives that Memcheck otherwise typically reports for MPI
2441applications.</para>
2442
2443<para>The wrappers also take the opportunity to carefully check
2444size and definedness of buffers passed as arguments to MPI functions, hence
2445detecting errors such as passing undefined data to
2446<computeroutput>PMPI_Send</computeroutput>, or receiving data into a
2447buffer which is too small.</para>
2448
2449<para>Unlike most of the rest of Valgrind, the wrapper library is subject to a
2450BSD-style license, so you can link it into any code base you like.
2451See the top of <computeroutput>mpi/libmpiwrap.c</computeroutput>
2452for license details.</para>
2453
2454
2455<sect2 id="mc-manual.mpiwrap.build" xreflabel="Building MPI Wrappers">
2456<title>Building and installing the wrappers</title>
2457
2458<para> The wrapper library will be built automatically if possible.
2459Valgrind's configure script will look for a suitable
2460<computeroutput>mpicc</computeroutput> to build it with.  This must be
2461the same <computeroutput>mpicc</computeroutput> you use to build the
2462MPI application you want to debug.  By default, Valgrind tries
2463<computeroutput>mpicc</computeroutput>, but you can specify a
2464different one by using the configure-time option
2465<option>--with-mpicc</option>.  Currently the
2466wrappers are only buildable with
2467<computeroutput>mpicc</computeroutput>s which are based on GNU
2468GCC or Intel's C++ Compiler.</para>
2469
2470<para>Check that the configure script prints a line like this:</para>
2471
2472<programlisting><![CDATA[
2473checking for usable MPI2-compliant mpicc and mpi.h... yes, mpicc
2474]]></programlisting>
2475
2476<para>If it says <computeroutput>... no</computeroutput>, your
2477<computeroutput>mpicc</computeroutput> has failed to compile and link
2478a test MPI2 program.</para>
2479
2480<para>If the configure test succeeds, continue in the usual way with
2481<computeroutput>make</computeroutput> and <computeroutput>make
2482install</computeroutput>.  The final install tree should then contain
2483<computeroutput>libmpiwrap-&lt;platform&gt;.so</computeroutput>.
2484</para>
2485
2486<para>Compile up a test MPI program (eg, MPI hello-world) and try
2487this:</para>
2488
2489<programlisting><![CDATA[
2490LD_PRELOAD=$prefix/lib/valgrind/libmpiwrap-<platform>.so   \
2491           mpirun [args] $prefix/bin/valgrind ./hello
2492]]></programlisting>
2493
2494<para>You should see something similar to the following</para>
2495
2496<programlisting><![CDATA[
2497valgrind MPI wrappers 31901: Active for pid 31901
2498valgrind MPI wrappers 31901: Try MPIWRAP_DEBUG=help for possible options
2499]]></programlisting>
2500
2501<para>repeated for every process in the group.  If you do not see
2502these, there is an build/installation problem of some kind.</para>
2503
2504<para> The MPI functions to be wrapped are assumed to be in an ELF
2505shared object with soname matching
2506<computeroutput>libmpi.so*</computeroutput>.  This is known to be
2507correct at least for Open MPI and Quadrics MPI, and can easily be
2508changed if required.</para>
2509</sect2>
2510
2511
2512<sect2 id="mc-manual.mpiwrap.gettingstarted"
2513       xreflabel="Getting started with MPI Wrappers">
2514<title>Getting started</title>
2515
2516<para>Compile your MPI application as usual, taking care to link it
2517using the same <computeroutput>mpicc</computeroutput> that your
2518Valgrind build was configured with.</para>
2519
2520<para>
2521Use the following basic scheme to run your application on Valgrind with
2522the wrappers engaged:</para>
2523
2524<programlisting><![CDATA[
2525MPIWRAP_DEBUG=[wrapper-args]                                  \
2526   LD_PRELOAD=$prefix/lib/valgrind/libmpiwrap-<platform>.so   \
2527   mpirun [mpirun-args]                                       \
2528   $prefix/bin/valgrind [valgrind-args]                       \
2529   [application] [app-args]
2530]]></programlisting>
2531
2532<para>As an alternative to
2533<computeroutput>LD_PRELOAD</computeroutput>ing
2534<computeroutput>libmpiwrap-&lt;platform&gt;.so</computeroutput>, you can
2535simply link it to your application if desired.  This should not disturb
2536native behaviour of your application in any way.</para>
2537</sect2>
2538
2539
2540<sect2 id="mc-manual.mpiwrap.controlling"
2541       xreflabel="Controlling the MPI Wrappers">
2542<title>Controlling the wrapper library</title>
2543
2544<para>Environment variable
2545<computeroutput>MPIWRAP_DEBUG</computeroutput> is consulted at
2546startup.  The default behaviour is to print a starting banner</para>
2547
2548<programlisting><![CDATA[
2549valgrind MPI wrappers 16386: Active for pid 16386
2550valgrind MPI wrappers 16386: Try MPIWRAP_DEBUG=help for possible options
2551]]></programlisting>
2552
2553<para> and then be relatively quiet.</para>
2554
2555<para>You can give a list of comma-separated options in
2556<computeroutput>MPIWRAP_DEBUG</computeroutput>.  These are</para>
2557
2558<itemizedlist>
2559  <listitem>
2560    <para><computeroutput>verbose</computeroutput>:
2561    show entries/exits of all wrappers.  Also show extra
2562    debugging info, such as the status of outstanding
2563    <computeroutput>MPI_Request</computeroutput>s resulting
2564    from uncompleted <computeroutput>MPI_Irecv</computeroutput>s.</para>
2565  </listitem>
2566  <listitem>
2567    <para><computeroutput>quiet</computeroutput>:
2568    opposite of <computeroutput>verbose</computeroutput>, only print
2569    anything when the wrappers want
2570    to report a detected programming error, or in case of catastrophic
2571    failure of the wrappers.</para>
2572  </listitem>
2573  <listitem>
2574    <para><computeroutput>warn</computeroutput>:
2575    by default, functions which lack proper wrappers
2576    are not commented on, just silently
2577    ignored.  This causes a warning to be printed for each unwrapped
2578    function used, up to a maximum of three warnings per function.</para>
2579  </listitem>
2580  <listitem>
2581    <para><computeroutput>strict</computeroutput>:
2582    print an error message and abort the program if
2583    a function lacking a wrapper is used.</para>
2584  </listitem>
2585</itemizedlist>
2586
2587<para> If you want to use Valgrind's XML output facility
2588(<option>--xml=yes</option>), you should pass
2589<computeroutput>quiet</computeroutput> in
2590<computeroutput>MPIWRAP_DEBUG</computeroutput> so as to get rid of any
2591extraneous printing from the wrappers.</para>
2592
2593</sect2>
2594
2595
2596<sect2 id="mc-manual.mpiwrap.limitations.functions"
2597       xreflabel="Functions: Abilities and Limitations">
2598<title>Functions</title>
2599
2600<para>All MPI2 functions except
2601<computeroutput>MPI_Wtick</computeroutput>,
2602<computeroutput>MPI_Wtime</computeroutput> and
2603<computeroutput>MPI_Pcontrol</computeroutput> have wrappers.  The
2604first two are not wrapped because they return a
2605<computeroutput>double</computeroutput>, which Valgrind's
2606function-wrap mechanism cannot handle (but it could easily be
2607extended to do so).  <computeroutput>MPI_Pcontrol</computeroutput> cannot be
2608wrapped as it has variable arity:
2609<computeroutput>int MPI_Pcontrol(const int level, ...)</computeroutput></para>
2610
2611<para>Most functions are wrapped with a default wrapper which does
2612nothing except complain or abort if it is called, depending on
2613settings in <computeroutput>MPIWRAP_DEBUG</computeroutput> listed
2614above.  The following functions have "real", do-something-useful
2615wrappers:</para>
2616
2617<programlisting><![CDATA[
2618PMPI_Send PMPI_Bsend PMPI_Ssend PMPI_Rsend
2619
2620PMPI_Recv PMPI_Get_count
2621
2622PMPI_Isend PMPI_Ibsend PMPI_Issend PMPI_Irsend
2623
2624PMPI_Irecv
2625PMPI_Wait PMPI_Waitall
2626PMPI_Test PMPI_Testall
2627
2628PMPI_Iprobe PMPI_Probe
2629
2630PMPI_Cancel
2631
2632PMPI_Sendrecv
2633
2634PMPI_Type_commit PMPI_Type_free
2635
2636PMPI_Pack PMPI_Unpack
2637
2638PMPI_Bcast PMPI_Gather PMPI_Scatter PMPI_Alltoall
2639PMPI_Reduce PMPI_Allreduce PMPI_Op_create
2640
2641PMPI_Comm_create PMPI_Comm_dup PMPI_Comm_free PMPI_Comm_rank PMPI_Comm_size
2642
2643PMPI_Error_string
2644PMPI_Init PMPI_Initialized PMPI_Finalize
2645]]></programlisting>
2646
2647<para> A few functions such as
2648<computeroutput>PMPI_Address</computeroutput> are listed as
2649<computeroutput>HAS_NO_WRAPPER</computeroutput>.  They have no wrapper
2650at all as there is nothing worth checking, and giving a no-op wrapper
2651would reduce performance for no reason.</para>
2652
2653<para> Note that the wrapper library itself can itself generate large
2654numbers of calls to the MPI implementation, especially when walking
2655complex types.  The most common functions called are
2656<computeroutput>PMPI_Extent</computeroutput>,
2657<computeroutput>PMPI_Type_get_envelope</computeroutput>,
2658<computeroutput>PMPI_Type_get_contents</computeroutput>, and
2659<computeroutput>PMPI_Type_free</computeroutput>.  </para>
2660</sect2>
2661
2662<sect2 id="mc-manual.mpiwrap.limitations.types"
2663       xreflabel="Types: Abilities and Limitations">
2664<title>Types</title>
2665
2666<para> MPI-1.1 structured types are supported, and walked exactly.
2667The currently supported combiners are
2668<computeroutput>MPI_COMBINER_NAMED</computeroutput>,
2669<computeroutput>MPI_COMBINER_CONTIGUOUS</computeroutput>,
2670<computeroutput>MPI_COMBINER_VECTOR</computeroutput>,
2671<computeroutput>MPI_COMBINER_HVECTOR</computeroutput>
2672<computeroutput>MPI_COMBINER_INDEXED</computeroutput>,
2673<computeroutput>MPI_COMBINER_HINDEXED</computeroutput> and
2674<computeroutput>MPI_COMBINER_STRUCT</computeroutput>.  This should
2675cover all MPI-1.1 types.  The mechanism (function
2676<computeroutput>walk_type</computeroutput>) should extend easily to
2677cover MPI2 combiners.</para>
2678
2679<para>MPI defines some named structured types
2680(<computeroutput>MPI_FLOAT_INT</computeroutput>,
2681<computeroutput>MPI_DOUBLE_INT</computeroutput>,
2682<computeroutput>MPI_LONG_INT</computeroutput>,
2683<computeroutput>MPI_2INT</computeroutput>,
2684<computeroutput>MPI_SHORT_INT</computeroutput>,
2685<computeroutput>MPI_LONG_DOUBLE_INT</computeroutput>) which are pairs
2686of some basic type and a C <computeroutput>int</computeroutput>.
2687Unfortunately the MPI specification makes it impossible to look inside
2688these types and see where the fields are.  Therefore these wrappers
2689assume the types are laid out as <computeroutput>struct { float val;
2690int loc; }</computeroutput> (for
2691<computeroutput>MPI_FLOAT_INT</computeroutput>), etc, and act
2692accordingly.  This appears to be correct at least for Open MPI 1.0.2
2693and for Quadrics MPI.</para>
2694
2695<para>If <computeroutput>strict</computeroutput> is an option specified
2696in <computeroutput>MPIWRAP_DEBUG</computeroutput>, the application
2697will abort if an unhandled type is encountered.  Otherwise, the
2698application will print a warning message and continue.</para>
2699
2700<para>Some effort is made to mark/check memory ranges corresponding to
2701arrays of values in a single pass.  This is important for performance
2702since asking Valgrind to mark/check any range, no matter how small,
2703carries quite a large constant cost.  This optimisation is applied to
2704arrays of primitive types (<computeroutput>double</computeroutput>,
2705<computeroutput>float</computeroutput>,
2706<computeroutput>int</computeroutput>,
2707<computeroutput>long</computeroutput>, <computeroutput>long
2708long</computeroutput>, <computeroutput>short</computeroutput>,
2709<computeroutput>char</computeroutput>, and <computeroutput>long
2710double</computeroutput> on platforms where <computeroutput>sizeof(long
2711double) == 8</computeroutput>).  For arrays of all other types, the
2712wrappers handle each element individually and so there can be a very
2713large performance cost.</para>
2714
2715</sect2>
2716
2717
2718<sect2 id="mc-manual.mpiwrap.writingwrappers"
2719       xreflabel="Writing new MPI Wrappers">
2720<title>Writing new wrappers</title>
2721
2722<para>
2723For the most part the wrappers are straightforward.  The only
2724significant complexity arises with nonblocking receives.</para>
2725
2726<para>The issue is that <computeroutput>MPI_Irecv</computeroutput>
2727states the recv buffer and returns immediately, giving a handle
2728(<computeroutput>MPI_Request</computeroutput>) for the transaction.
2729Later the user will have to poll for completion with
2730<computeroutput>MPI_Wait</computeroutput> etc, and when the
2731transaction completes successfully, the wrappers have to paint the
2732recv buffer.  But the recv buffer details are not presented to
2733<computeroutput>MPI_Wait</computeroutput> -- only the handle is.  The
2734library therefore maintains a shadow table which associates
2735uncompleted <computeroutput>MPI_Request</computeroutput>s with the
2736corresponding buffer address/count/type.  When an operation completes,
2737the table is searched for the associated address/count/type info, and
2738memory is marked accordingly.</para>
2739
2740<para>Access to the table is guarded by a (POSIX pthreads) lock, so as
2741to make the library thread-safe.</para>
2742
2743<para>The table is allocated with
2744<computeroutput>malloc</computeroutput> and never
2745<computeroutput>free</computeroutput>d, so it will show up in leak
2746checks.</para>
2747
2748<para>Writing new wrappers should be fairly easy.  The source file is
2749<computeroutput>mpi/libmpiwrap.c</computeroutput>.  If possible,
2750find an existing wrapper for a function of similar behaviour to the
2751one you want to wrap, and use it as a starting point.  The wrappers
2752are organised in sections in the same order as the MPI 1.1 spec, to
2753aid navigation.  When adding a wrapper, remember to comment out the
2754definition of the default wrapper in the long list of defaults at the
2755bottom of the file (do not remove it, just comment it out).</para>
2756</sect2>
2757
2758<sect2 id="mc-manual.mpiwrap.whattoexpect"
2759       xreflabel="What to expect with MPI Wrappers">
2760<title>What to expect when using the wrappers</title>
2761
2762<para>The wrappers should reduce Memcheck's false-error rate on MPI
2763applications.  Because the wrapping is done at the MPI interface,
2764there will still potentially be a large number of errors reported in
2765the MPI implementation below the interface.  The best you can do is
2766try to suppress them.</para>
2767
2768<para>You may also find that the input-side (buffer
2769length/definedness) checks find errors in your MPI use, for example
2770passing too short a buffer to
2771<computeroutput>MPI_Recv</computeroutput>.</para>
2772
2773<para>Functions which are not wrapped may increase the false
2774error rate.  A possible approach is to run with
2775<computeroutput>MPI_DEBUG</computeroutput> containing
2776<computeroutput>warn</computeroutput>.  This will show you functions
2777which lack proper wrappers but which are nevertheless used.  You can
2778then write wrappers for them.
2779</para>
2780
2781<para>A known source of potential false errors are the
2782<computeroutput>PMPI_Reduce</computeroutput> family of functions, when
2783using a custom (user-defined) reduction function.  In a reduction
2784operation, each node notionally sends data to a "central point" which
2785uses the specified reduction function to merge the data items into a
2786single item.  Hence, in general, data is passed between nodes and fed
2787to the reduction function, but the wrapper library cannot mark the
2788transferred data as initialised before it is handed to the reduction
2789function, because all that happens "inside" the
2790<computeroutput>PMPI_Reduce</computeroutput> call.  As a result you
2791may see false positives reported in your reduction function.</para>
2792
2793</sect2>
2794
2795</sect1>
2796
2797
2798
2799
2800
2801</chapter>
2802