reported in error messages were not correct. As an example, the following
output was produced before this patch (not correct):
$ ./vg-in-place --tool=helgrind --num-callers=1 /bin/true
...
FATAL: in suppressions file ".in_place/default.supp" near line 893:
suppression must contain at least one location line which is not "..."
exiting now.
$ ./vg-in-place --tool=drd --num-callers=1 /bin/true
FATAL: in suppressions file ".in_place/default.supp" near line 475:
suppression must contain at least one location line which is not "..."
exiting now.
After having applied this patch the above commands display line numbers
1104 and 619, referring to the first suppression pattern containing
three dots for the topmost stack frame, as expected.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@10632
were longer than 200 chars. Now dynamic memory is used and so they can be
arbitrarily long in theory, although in practice it bombs out at 100,000 for
sanity purposes. This required adjusting the core/tool interface for
read_extra_suppression_info().
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@10581
now has its own copy of custom_alloc.c which is a little different to
Memcheck's; making them both work with the same version was too difficult.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@10455
This branch adds proper support for atomic instructions, proper in the
sense that the atomicity is preserved through the compilation
pipeline, and thus in the instrumented code.
These changes track the IR changes added by vex r1901. They primarily
update the instrumentation functions in all tools to handle the
changes, with the exception of exp-ptrcheck, which needs some further
work in order to be able to run threaded code.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@10392
following improvements:
- Arch/OS/platform-specific files are now included/excluded via the
preprocessor, rather than via the build system. This is more consistent
(we use the pre-processor for small arch/OS/platform-specific chunks
within files) and makes the build system much simpler, as the sources for
all programs are the same on all platforms.
- Vast amounts of cut+paste Makefile.am code has been factored out. If a
new platform is implemented, you need to add 11 extra Makefile.am lines.
Previously it was over 100 lines.
- Vex has been autotoolised. Dependency checking now works in Vex (no more
incomplete builds). Parallel builds now also work. --with-vex no longer
works; it's little use and a pain to support. VEX/Makefile is still in
the Vex repository and gets overwritten at configure-time; it should
probably be renamed Makefile-gcc to avoid possible problems, such as
accidentally committing a generated Makefile. There's a bunch of hacky
copying to deal with the fact that autotools don't handle same-named files
in different directories. Julian plans to rename the files to avoid this
problem.
- Various small Makefile.am things have been made more standard automake
style, eg. the use of pkginclude/pkglib prefixes instead of rolling our
own.
- The existing five top-level Makefile.am include files have been
consolidated into three.
- Most Makefile.am files now are structured more clearly, with comment
headers separating sections, declarations relating to the same things next
to each other, better spacing and layout, etc.
- Removed the unused exp-ptrcheck/tests/x86 directory.
- Renamed some XML files.
- Factored out some duplicated dSYM handling code.
- Split auxprogs/ into auxprogs/ and mpi/, which allowed the resulting
Makefile.am files to be much more standard.
- Cleaned up m_coredump by merging a bunch of files that had been
overzealously separated.
The net result is 630 fewer lines of Makefile.am code, or 897 if you exclude
the added Makefile.vex.am, or 997 once the hacky file copying for Vex is
removed. And the build system is much simpler.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@10364
- Put Darwin syscall DECL_TEMPLATEs in syscall order.
- Removed the "sys_" prefix from Darwin-specific wrappers, it's not
necessary. Renamed a couple of other wrappers similarly.
- Removed the sys_fcntl64 Darwin wrapper, it was unused.
- Improved some code layout.
Overall this removes 6 "DDD"/"GrP" fixme comments.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@10290
- Introduced VG_SYSNUM_STRING and VG_SYSNUM_STRING_EXTRA which factor out
differences in the way syscall numbers are printed on different platforms.
This gets rid of seven "DDD" fixme-style comments.
- This also meant that Darwin syscall numbers are now printed in a
non-ambiguous way -- previously Unix, machine-dependent and diagnostic
syscalls were all printed the same way, even though their numbers overlap.
Now each number is prefixed with "unix", "mdep", etc. And Mach trap
numbers aren't printed as negative numbers now that they have a "mach"
prefix.
- Split each of pub_core_vkiscnums.h and pub_tool_vkiscnums.h into two
parts, one suitable for inclusion in asm files, one suitable for inclusion
in C files; in both cases the latter includes the former. This makes
this module more like other modules that have asm-only components (eg.
m_transtab); it also allows the hacky VG_IN_ASSEMBLY_SOURCE macros and
tests to be removed.
- Removed some of the VG_DARWIN_SYSNO_* macros that were no longer needed,
and renamed some of the existing ones to make their meanings clearer.
- Added comments on the encoding of Darwin syscall numbers so it's
possible for mortals to understand without reading the kernel code..
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@10218
I tried using 'svn merge' to do the merge but it did a terrible job and
there were bazillions of conflicts. So instead I just took the diff between
the branch and trunk at r10155, applied the diff to the trunk, 'svn add'ed
the added files (no files needed to be 'svn remove'd) and committed.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@10156
DARWIN branch. A big ugly DARWIN/trunk sync commit, mostly to do with
changing the representation of SysRes and vki_sigset_t. Functionality of
the trunk shouldn't be changed by it.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@9876
there were a lot of loss records.
The fix was:
- Avoid the O(m * n) looping over the chunks when creating the loss
records, by putting loss records into an OSet instead of a list, which
makes duplicate detection for each chunk an O(log n) operation instead of
an O(n) operation.
- Avoid the looping over loss records which was used to do a poor
man's sort, but was O(n^2). Instead copy pointers to the loss records
from the OSet into an array and sort it normally with VG_(ssort) (n log n,
usually) before printing.
This approach was similar to that used in the patch Philippe attached to the
bug report.
Other changes:
- Added Philippe's test programs in the new memcheck/perf directory. It
used to take 57s on my machine, now it takes 1.6s.
- Cleaned up massif/perf/Makefile.am to be consistent with other Makefiles.
- Improved some comments relating to VgHashTable and OSet.
- Avoided a redundant traversal of the hash table in VG_(HT_to_array), also
identified by Philippe..
- Made memcheck/tests/mempool's results independent of the pointer size, and
thus was able to remove its .stderr.exp64 file.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@9781
numbers) when Valgrind is running Wine. Modified version of a
patch by John Reiser (vgsvn+wine-load-pdb-debuginfo.patch) with
extensions to read a second format of line number tables.
Wine uses a new client request, VG_USERREQ__LOAD_PDB_DEBUGINFO,
to tell Valgrind when to read PDB info. Wine's implementation
of module loading is vastly different from that used by
ld-linux.so, and it is too difficult to recognize what is going
on just by observing the calls to mmap and mprotect.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@9580
Remove VG_(strcmp_ws) and VG_(strncmp_ws); they're no longer needed by CLO
handling, and they're not much use elsewhere.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@9270
Some of our option processing code uses it. This means that eg.
'--log-fd=9xxx' logs to fd 9, and '--log-fd=blahblahblah' logs to 0 (because
atoll() returns 0 if the string doesn't contain a number!)
It turns out that most of our option processing uses VG_(strtoll*) instead
of VG_(atoll). The reason that not all of it does is that the
option-processing macros are underpowered -- they currently work well if you
just want to assign the value to a variable, eg:
VG_BOOL_CLO(arg, "--heap", clo_heap)
else VG_BOOL_CLO(arg, "--stacks", clo_stacks)
else VG_NUM_CLO(arg, "--heap-admin", clo_heap_admin)
else VG_NUM_CLO(arg, "--depth", clo_depth)
(This works because they are actually an if-statement, but it looks odd.)
VG_NUM_CLO uses VG_(stroll10). But if you want to do any checking or
processing, you can't use those macros, leading to code like this:
else if (VG_CLO_STREQN(9, arg, "--log-fd=")) {
log_to = VgLogTo_Fd;
VG_(clo_log_name) = NULL;
tmp_log_fd = (Int)VG_(atoll)(&arg[9]);
}
So this commit:
- Improves the *_CLO_* macros so that they can be used in all circumstances.
They're now just expressions (albeit ones with side-effects, setting the
named variable appropriately). Thus they can be used as if-conditions,
and any post-checking or processing can occur in the then-statement. And
malformed numeric arguments (eg. --log-fd=foo) aren't accepted. This also
means you don't have to specify the lengths of any option strings anywhere
(eg. the 9 in the --log-fd example above). The use of a wrong number
caused at least one bug, in Massif.
- Updates all places where the macros were used.
- Updates Helgrind to use the *_CLO_* macros (it didn't use them).
- Updates Callgrind to use the *_CLO_* macros (it didn't use them), except
for the more esoteric option names (those with numbers in the option
name). This allowed getUInt() and getUWord() to be removed.
- Improves the cache option parsing in Cachegrind and Callgrind -- now uses
VG_(strtoll10)(), detects overflow, and is shorter.
- Uses INT instead of NUM in the macro names, to distinguish better vs. the
DBL macro.
- Removes VG_(atoll*) and the few remaining uses -- they're wretched
functions and VG_(strtoll*) should be used instead.
- Adds the VG_STREQN macro.
- Changes VG_BINT_CLO and VG_BHEX_CLO to abort if the given value is outside
the range -- the current silent truncation is likely to cause confusion as
much as anything.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@9255
- Rename 'oset_test' as 'unit_oset' to make its meaning more clear.
- Remove VG_(atoll36), VG_(strtoll8)() and VG_(strtoll36)(); they're not
used and so untested, but easy to crib from similar functions if they need
to be added again later.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@9204
be replaced if malloc() et al are replaced by a tool. This is because
different tools implement the function in different ways.
Add an appropriate malloc_usable_size() replacement to each of Memcheck,
Helgrind, DRD, Ptrcheck, Massif.
Update memcheck/tests/malloc_usable and add massif/tests/malloc_usable.
Merged from the DARWIN branch.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@9193
'__libc_start_main', in Massif, m_debuginfo and m_stacktrace. As part of
this, --show-below-main is now visible to tools, and Massif pays attention
to it.
Improved the description of --show-below-main=yes in the manual.
Replaced some instances of "__libc_start_main" in the test *.exp files with
"(below main)", which is what will actually be seen. Also updated
scalar.stderr.exp*, which should make it get closer to actually passing.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@9131
that are memory offsets) with PtrdiffT; OffT should only be used for file
sizes and offsets.
Change Off64T from a ULong to a Long, as it should be. Replace some uses
of ULong in the address space manager with Off64T to match.
Also add a comment explaining the meanings of the basic types like Addr,
OffT, SizeT, etc.
Also fix the prototype for VG_(pread) -- the last arg is an OffT, not an
Int.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@8959