- Auto-frees all chunks assuming that destroying a pool destroys all
objects in the pool
- Uses itself to allocate other memory blocks
Unit tests included.
Fixes BZ#367995
Patch by: Ruurd Beerstra <ruurd.beerstra@infor.com>
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@15984
This is (a) consistent with how the other containers are defined
and, more importantly, (b) allows the constification of the hash table API.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@14639
The option --keep-stacktraces controls which stack trace(s) to keep for
malloc'd and/or free'd blocks. This can be used to obtain more information
for 'use after free' errors or to decrease Valgrind memory and/or cpu usage
by recording less information for heap blocks.
This fixes 312913 Dangling pointers error should also report the alloc
stack trace.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@13223
* For tools replacing the malloc library (e.g. Memcheck, Helgrind, ...),
the option --redzone-size=<number> allows to control the padding
blocks (redzones) added before and after each client allocated block.
Smaller redzones decrease the memory needed by Valgrind. Bigger
redzones increase the chance to detect blocks overrun or underrun.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@12807
User is supposed to mark the superblock(s) of a mempool as noaccess.
As Valgrind objective is to find bugs for users which are doing bugs, let's even
find (some) bugs if the user has a bug in the bug detection code.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@12714
about leaked or reachable blocks)
This patch implements two new memcheck gdbserver monitor commands:
block_list <loss_record_nr>
after a leak search, shows the list of blocks of <loss_record_nr>
who_points_at <addr> [<len>]
shows places pointing inside <len> (default 1) bytes at <addr>
(with len 1, only shows "start pointers" pointing exactly to <addr>,
with len > 1, will also show "interior pointers")
Compiled and reg-tested on f12/x86, deb5/amd64, f16/ppc64.
The 'block_list' command is implemented on top of the
lr_array/lc_chunks/lc_extras arrays used during the last leak search.
NB: no impact on the memory for the typical Valgrind usage where a leak
search is only done at the end of the run.
Printing the block_list of a loss record simply consists in scanning the
lc_chunks to find back the chunks corresponding to the loss record for which
block lists is requested.
The 'who_points_at' command is implemented by doing a scan similar to
(but simpler than) the leak search scan.
lc_scan_memory has been enhanced to have a mode to search for a specific
address, rather than to search for all allocated blocks.
VG_(apply_to_GP_regs) has been enhanced to also provide the ThreadId and
register name in the callback function.
The patch touches multiple files (but most changes are easy/trivial or factorise
existing code).
Most significant changes are in memcheck/mc_leakcheck.c :
* changed the LC_Extra struct to remember the clique for indirect leaks
(size of structure not changed).
* made lr_array a static global
* changed lc_scan_memory:
to have a search mode for a specific address (for who_points_at)
(for leak search) to pass a 'current clique' in addition to the clique
leader
so as to have a proper clique hierarchy for indirectly leaked blocks.
* print_results: reset values at the beginning of the print_result of the
next leak search, rather than at the end of print_results of the previous
leak search.
This allows to continue showing the same info for loss records till a new
leak search is done.
* new function print_clique which recursively prints a group of leaked
blocks, starting from the clique leader.
* new function MC_(print_block_list) : calls print_clique for each clique
leader found for the given loss record.
* static void scan_memory_root_set : code extracted from
MC_(detect_memory_leaks) (no relevant change)
* void MC_(who_points_at) : calls scan_memory_root_set, lc_scan_memory
and VG_(apply_to_GP_regs)(search_address_in_GP_reg) to search
pointers to the given address.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@12357
* new files include/pub_tool_groupalloc.h and coregrind/m_groupalloc.c
implementing a group allocator (based on helgrind group alloc).
* include/Makefile.am coregrind/Makefile.am : added pub_tool_groupalloc.h
and m_groupalloc.c
* helgrind/libhb_core.c : use pub_tool_groupalloc.h/m_groupalloc.c
instead of the local implementation.
* include/pub_tool_oset.h coregrind/m_oset.c : new function
allowing to create an oset that will use a pool allocator.
new function allowing to clone an oset (so as to share the pool alloc)
* memcheck/tests/unit_oset.c drd/tests/unit_bitmap.c : modified
so that it compiles with the new m_oset.c
* memcheck/mc_main.c : use group alloc for MC_Chunk
memcheck/mc_include.h : declare the MC_Chunk group alloc
* memcheck/mc_main.c : use group alloc for the nodes of the secVBitTable OSet
* include/pub_tool_hashtable.h coregrind/m_hashtable.c : pass the free node
function in the VG_(HT_destruct).
(needed as the hashtable user can allocate a node with its own alloc,
the hash table destroy must be able to free the nodes with the user
own free).
* coregrind/m_gdbserver/m_gdbserver.c : pass free function to VG_(HT_destruct)
* memcheck/mc_replace_strmem.c memcheck/mc_machine.c
memcheck/mc_malloc_wrappers.c memcheck/mc_leakcheck.c
memcheck/mc_errors.c memcheck/mc_translate.c : new include needed
due to group alloc.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@12341
other wrappers in that it took place before the silly-args check.
Testcase and patch by Yann Droneaud (yann@droneaud.fr).
Fixes#281482
Also included is a related fix to MC_(new_block). Incrementing the
alloc counter and updating the allocated memory amount should
occur under the same condition (allocation succeeded).
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@12324
(Philippe Waroquiers, philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be)
This patch provides three improvements in the way the free list is
handled in memcheck.
First improvement: a new command line option --freelist-big-blocks
(default 1000000) specifies the size of "free list big blocks".
Such big blocks will be put on the free list, but will be re-cycled first
(i.e. in preference to block having a smaller size).
This fixes the bug https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=250065.
Technically, the freed list is divided in two lists : small
and big blocks. Blocks are first released from the big block list.
Second improvement: the blocks of the freed list are re-cycled before
a new block is malloc-ed, not after a block is freed.
This gives better error messages for dangling pointer errors
when doing many frees without doing malloc between the frees.
(this does not uses more memory).
Third improvement: a block bigger than the free list volume will be
put in the free list (till a malloc is done, so as the needed memory
is not bigger than before) but will be put at the beginning of the
free list, rather than at the end. So, allocating then freeing such a
block does not cause any blocks in the free list to be released.
Results of the improvements above, with the new regression test
memcheck/test/big_blocks_freed_list: with the patch, 7 errors
are detected, 6 are giving the (correct) allocation stack.
Without the patch, only 6 errors are detected, 5 errors without
allocation stack, 1 with a (wrong) allocation stack.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@12202
rendering the mempool machinery impossibly slow for pools containing
many blocks. Fixes#255966.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@11513
mempools: try and relate an invalid address to known mempool
allocated blocks, and if that fails, to malloc'd blocks that
back the mempool. See #254420.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@11509
messages printed for client-annotated blocks do now include a correct
address description. Closes#237371.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@11320
- Always print a blank line after significant messages (eg. errors). This
makes the handling of blank lines much simpler.
- Don't print full stops at the end of messages. We mostly don't do it, so
I got rid of all the remaining ones I could find for consistency.
- Use --leak-check=full rather than --leak-check=yes, for consistency with
docs and other messages.
- Update partiallydefinedeq.stderr.exp2 for older changes.
This commit only updates the code. Test updates will follow shortly. (I'm
separating them so the code changes aren't swamped by the test changes in
the SVN logs.)
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@10783
* For all tools and the core, don't show statistics when -v is in
effect. Instead, try to restrict -v to mostly user-useful
stuff.
* A new flag --stats=no|yes [no] produces statistics output instead.
* Fix longstanding problem in that Memcheck's leak checker ran after
the core's error manager module shut down, thereby not showing use
counts of leak suppressions. This fixes#186790.
* As a consequence, the leak checker text output of Memcheck has
changed a bit -- leak check is done before the final error
summary is done (much more logical), and the output has been
tidied up a bit.
* Helgrind, Drd and Ptrcheck now also print "For counts of
detected and suppressed errors, rerun with: -v", which makes
them consistent with Memcheck in this regard. These are
filtered out by the regtest filter scripts.
For all tools except Memcheck, the regtests are unchanged. On
Memcheck regtests still fail due to rearrangements of the leak
checker output. This will be fixed by a followup commit.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@10746
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
relatively minor extensions to m_debuginfo, a major overhaul of
m_debuginfo/readdwarf3.c to get its space usage under control, and
changes throughout the system to enable heap-use profiling.
The majority of the merged changes were committed into
branches/PTRCHECK as the following revs: 8591 8595 8598 8599 8601 and
8161.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@8621
and moves the block even when the new size is smaller or the same.
This increases the chance that it can detect buggy code which assumes
that realloc-smaller doesn't cause the block to move.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@8454
support to Memcheck for tracking the origin of uninitialised values,
if you use the --track-origins=yes flag.
This currently causes some Memcheck regression tests to fail, because
they now print an extra line of advisory text in their output. This
will be fixed.
The core-tool interface is slightly changed. The version number for
the interface needs to be incremented.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@7982
--fill-free=<hexnumber>, which cause malloc'd(etc) and free'd(etc)
blocks to be filled with the specified value. This can apparently be
useful for shaking out hard-to-track-down memory corruption. The
definedness/addressability of said areas is not affected -- only the
contents. Documentation to follow.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@7259
any wierdness on very large machines in the future. Also, double the
default size from 5MB to 10MB, on the basis that programs are now on
average twice as lardy as they were when it was set to 5MB, whenever
that was.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@7256
kludges^H^H^H^H^H^H^Henhancements:
r6802: For VG_(record_ExeContext) et al, add a new parameter
(first_ip_delta) which is added to the initial IP value before the
stack is unwound. A safe value to pass is zero, which causes the
existing behaviour to be unchanged. This is a kludge needed to work
around the incomplete amd64 stack unwind info in glibc-2.5's clone()
routine.
r7059: Add a last-ditch heuristic-hack to the amd64-linux stack
unwinder, which is used when all other methods fail. Seems like GDB
has something similar.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@7118
Allow hashtables to dynamically resize (patch from Christoph
Bartoschek). Results in the following interface changes:
* HT_construct: no need to supply an initial table size.
Instead, supply a text string used to "name" the table, so
that debugging messages ("resizing the table") can say which
one they are resizing.
* Remove VG_(HT_get_node). This exposes the chain structure to
callers (via the next_ptr parameter), which is a problem since
callers could get some info about the chain structure which then
changes when the table is resized. Fortunately is not used.
* Remove VG_(HT_first_match) and VG_(HT_apply_to_all_nodes) as
they are unused.
* Make the iteration mechanism more paranoid, so any adding or
deleting of nodes part way through an iteration causes VG_(HT_next)
to assert.
* Fix the comment on VG_(HT_to_array) so it no longer speaks
specifically about MC's leak detector.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@6778
allocated, rather than SizeT which is word-sized. Your average C++
lardware can easily turn over more than 4G in total in a half hour run
on a 32-bit machine, in which case the counter wraps around.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@6649
different error kinds were reusing the same struct for storing their
details. Each one used some but not all the fields, and the AddrInfo was
similar, and it was very confusing.
So I changed MC_Error and AddrInfo to be tagged unions, like Vex's IRExpr and
IRStmt types. The resulting code is a little more verbose but much easier
to understand. I also split up several error kinds, which also made things
simpler. The user-visible behaviour is identical except for a couple of
very minor things that I've documented in the NEWS file for the 3.3.0
release.
Ideally I'd get rid of the Addr and Char* fields in the core Error type,
which are not always used, and do them similarly within tools. But that
would require changing the core/tool interface, so I'm leaving it for the
moment.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@6402