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      6 
      7 <chapter id="manual-core" xreflabel="Valgrind's core">
      8 <title>Using and understanding the Valgrind core</title>
      9 
     10 <para>This chapter describes the Valgrind core services, command-line
     11 options and behaviours.  That means it is relevant regardless of what
     12 particular tool you are using.  The information should be sufficient for you
     13 to make effective day-to-day use of Valgrind.  Advanced topics related to
     14 the Valgrind core are described in <xref linkend="manual-core-adv"/>.
     15 </para>
     16 
     17 <para>
     18 A point of terminology: most references to "Valgrind" in this chapter
     19 refer to the Valgrind core services.  </para>
     20 
     21 
     22 
     23 <sect1 id="manual-core.whatdoes" 
     24        xreflabel="What Valgrind does with your program">
     25 <title>What Valgrind does with your program</title>
     26 
     27 <para>Valgrind is designed to be as non-intrusive as possible. It works
     28 directly with existing executables. You don't need to recompile, relink,
     29 or otherwise modify the program to be checked.</para>
     30 
     31 <para>You invoke Valgrind like this:</para>
     32 <programlisting><![CDATA[
     33 valgrind [valgrind-options] your-prog [your-prog-options]]]></programlisting>
     34 
     35 <para>The most important option is <option>--tool</option> which dictates
     36 which Valgrind tool to run.  For example, if want to run the command
     37 <computeroutput>ls -l</computeroutput> using the memory-checking tool
     38 Memcheck, issue this command:</para>
     39 
     40 <programlisting><![CDATA[
     41 valgrind --tool=memcheck ls -l]]></programlisting>
     42 
     43 <para>However, Memcheck is the default, so if you want to use it you can
     44 omit the <option>--tool</option> option.</para>
     45 
     46 <para>Regardless of which tool is in use, Valgrind takes control of your
     47 program before it starts.  Debugging information is read from the
     48 executable and associated libraries, so that error messages and other
     49 outputs can be phrased in terms of source code locations, when
     50 appropriate.</para>
     51 
     52 <para>Your program is then run on a synthetic CPU provided by the
     53 Valgrind core.  As new code is executed for the first time, the core
     54 hands the code to the selected tool.  The tool adds its own
     55 instrumentation code to this and hands the result back to the core,
     56 which coordinates the continued execution of this instrumented
     57 code.</para>
     58 
     59 <para>The amount of instrumentation code added varies widely between
     60 tools.  At one end of the scale, Memcheck adds code to check every
     61 memory access and every value computed,
     62 making it run 10-50 times slower than natively.
     63 At the other end of the spectrum, the minimal tool, called Nulgrind,
     64 adds no instrumentation at all and causes in total "only" about a 4 times
     65 slowdown.</para>
     66 
     67 <para>Valgrind simulates every single instruction your program executes.
     68 Because of this, the active tool checks, or profiles, not only the code
     69 in your application but also in all supporting dynamically-linked libraries,
     70 including the C library, graphical libraries, and so on.</para>
     71 
     72 <para>If you're using an error-detection tool, Valgrind may
     73 detect errors in system libraries, for example the GNU C or X11
     74 libraries, which you have to use.  You might not be interested in these
     75 errors, since you probably have no control over that code.  Therefore,
     76 Valgrind allows you to selectively suppress errors, by recording them in
     77 a suppressions file which is read when Valgrind starts up.  The build
     78 mechanism selects default suppressions which give reasonable
     79 behaviour for the OS and libraries detected on your machine.
     80 To make it easier to write suppressions, you can use the
     81 <option>--gen-suppressions=yes</option> option.  This tells Valgrind to
     82 print out a suppression for each reported error, which you can then
     83 copy into a suppressions file.</para>
     84 
     85 <para>Different error-checking tools report different kinds of errors.
     86 The suppression mechanism therefore allows you to say which tool or
     87 tool(s) each suppression applies to.</para>
     88 
     89 </sect1>
     90 
     91 
     92 <sect1 id="manual-core.started" xreflabel="Getting started">
     93 <title>Getting started</title>
     94 
     95 <para>First off, consider whether it might be beneficial to recompile
     96 your application and supporting libraries with debugging info enabled
     97 (the <option>-g</option> option).  Without debugging info, the best
     98 Valgrind tools will be able to do is guess which function a particular
     99 piece of code belongs to, which makes both error messages and profiling
    100 output nearly useless.  With <option>-g</option>, you'll get
    101 messages which point directly to the relevant source code lines.</para>
    102 
    103 <para>Another option you might like to consider, if you are working with
    104 C++, is <option>-fno-inline</option>.  That makes it easier to see the
    105 function-call chain, which can help reduce confusion when navigating
    106 around large C++ apps.  For example, debugging
    107 OpenOffice.org with Memcheck is a bit easier when using this option.  You
    108 don't have to do this, but doing so helps Valgrind produce more accurate
    109 and less confusing error reports.  Chances are you're set up like this
    110 already, if you intended to debug your program with GNU GDB, or some
    111 other debugger. Alternatively, the Valgrind option 
    112 <option>--read-inline-info=yes</option> instructs Valgrind to read
    113 the debug information describing inlining information. With this,
    114 function call chain will be properly shown, even when your application
    115 is compiled with inlining. </para>
    116 
    117 <para>If you are planning to use Memcheck: On rare
    118 occasions, compiler optimisations (at <option>-O2</option>
    119 and above, and sometimes <option>-O1</option>) have been
    120 observed to generate code which fools Memcheck into wrongly reporting
    121 uninitialised value errors, or missing uninitialised value errors.  We have
    122 looked in detail into fixing this, and unfortunately the result is that
    123 doing so would give a further significant slowdown in what is already a slow
    124 tool.  So the best solution is to turn off optimisation altogether.  Since
    125 this often makes things unmanageably slow, a reasonable compromise is to use
    126 <option>-O</option>.  This gets you the majority of the
    127 benefits of higher optimisation levels whilst keeping relatively small the
    128 chances of false positives or false negatives from Memcheck.  Also, you
    129 should compile your code with <option>-Wall</option> because
    130 it can identify some or all of the problems that Valgrind can miss at the
    131 higher optimisation levels.  (Using <option>-Wall</option>
    132 is also a good idea in general.)  All other tools (as far as we know) are
    133 unaffected by optimisation level, and for profiling tools like Cachegrind it
    134 is better to compile your program at its normal optimisation level.</para>
    135 
    136 <para>Valgrind understands the DWARF2/3/4 formats used by GCC 3.1 and
    137 later.  The reader for "stabs" debugging format (used by GCC versions
    138 prior to 3.1) has been disabled in Valgrind 3.9.0.</para>
    139 
    140 <para>When you're ready to roll, run Valgrind as described above.
    141 Note that you should run the real
    142 (machine-code) executable here.  If your application is started by, for
    143 example, a shell or Perl script, you'll need to modify it to invoke
    144 Valgrind on the real executables.  Running such scripts directly under
    145 Valgrind will result in you getting error reports pertaining to
    146 <filename>/bin/sh</filename>,
    147 <filename>/usr/bin/perl</filename>, or whatever interpreter
    148 you're using.  This may not be what you want and can be confusing.  You
    149 can force the issue by giving the option
    150 <option>--trace-children=yes</option>, but confusion is still
    151 likely.</para>
    152 
    153 </sect1>
    154 
    155 
    156 <!-- Referenced from both the manual and manpage -->
    157 <sect1 id="&vg-comment-id;" xreflabel="&vg-comment-label;">
    158 <title>The Commentary</title>
    159 
    160 <para>Valgrind tools write a commentary, a stream of text, detailing
    161 error reports and other significant events.  All lines in the commentary
    162 have following form:
    163 
    164 <programlisting><![CDATA[
    165 ==12345== some-message-from-Valgrind]]></programlisting>
    166 </para>
    167 
    168 <para>The <computeroutput>12345</computeroutput> is the process ID.
    169 This scheme makes it easy to distinguish program output from Valgrind
    170 commentary, and also easy to differentiate commentaries from different
    171 processes which have become merged together, for whatever reason.</para>
    172 
    173 <para>By default, Valgrind tools write only essential messages to the
    174 commentary, so as to avoid flooding you with information of secondary
    175 importance.  If you want more information about what is happening,
    176 re-run, passing the <option>-v</option> option to Valgrind.  A second
    177 <option>-v</option> gives yet more detail.
    178 </para>
    179 
    180 <para>You can direct the commentary to three different places:</para>
    181 
    182 <orderedlist>
    183 
    184   <listitem id="manual-core.out2fd" xreflabel="Directing output to fd">
    185     <para>The default: send it to a file descriptor, which is by default
    186     2 (stderr).  So, if you give the core no options, it will write
    187     commentary to the standard error stream.  If you want to send it to
    188     some other file descriptor, for example number 9, you can specify
    189     <option>--log-fd=9</option>.</para>
    190 
    191     <para>This is the simplest and most common arrangement, but can
    192     cause problems when Valgrinding entire trees of processes which
    193     expect specific file descriptors, particularly stdin/stdout/stderr,
    194     to be available for their own use.</para>
    195   </listitem>
    196 
    197   <listitem id="manual-core.out2file" 
    198             xreflabel="Directing output to file"> <para>A less intrusive
    199     option is to write the commentary to a file, which you specify by
    200     <option>--log-file=filename</option>.  There are special format
    201     specifiers that can be used to use a process ID or an environment
    202     variable name in the log file name.  These are useful/necessary if your
    203     program invokes multiple processes (especially for MPI programs).
    204     See the <link linkend="manual-core.basicopts">basic options section</link>
    205     for more details.</para>
    206   </listitem>
    207 
    208   <listitem id="manual-core.out2socket" 
    209             xreflabel="Directing output to network socket"> <para>The
    210     least intrusive option is to send the commentary to a network
    211     socket.  The socket is specified as an IP address and port number
    212     pair, like this: <option>--log-socket=192.168.0.1:12345</option> if
    213     you want to send the output to host IP 192.168.0.1 port 12345
    214     (note: we
    215     have no idea if 12345 is a port of pre-existing significance).  You
    216     can also omit the port number:
    217     <option>--log-socket=192.168.0.1</option>, in which case a default
    218     port of 1500 is used.  This default is defined by the constant
    219     <computeroutput>VG_CLO_DEFAULT_LOGPORT</computeroutput> in the
    220     sources.</para>
    221 
    222     <para>Note, unfortunately, that you have to use an IP address here,
    223     rather than a hostname.</para>
    224 
    225     <para>Writing to a network socket is pointless if you don't
    226     have something listening at the other end.  We provide a simple
    227     listener program,
    228     <computeroutput>valgrind-listener</computeroutput>, which accepts
    229     connections on the specified port and copies whatever it is sent to
    230     stdout.  Probably someone will tell us this is a horrible security
    231     risk.  It seems likely that people will write more sophisticated
    232     listeners in the fullness of time.</para>
    233 
    234     <para><computeroutput>valgrind-listener</computeroutput> can accept
    235     simultaneous connections from up to 50 Valgrinded processes.  In front
    236     of each line of output it prints the current number of active
    237     connections in round brackets.</para>
    238 
    239     <para><computeroutput>valgrind-listener</computeroutput> accepts three
    240     command-line options:</para>
    241     <!-- start of xi:include in the manpage -->
    242     <variablelist id="listener.opts.list">
    243        <varlistentry>
    244          <term><option>-e --exit-at-zero</option></term>
    245          <listitem>
    246            <para>When the number of connected processes falls back to zero,
    247            exit.  Without this, it will run forever, that is, until you
    248            send it Control-C.</para>
    249          </listitem>
    250        </varlistentry>
    251        <varlistentry>
    252          <term><option>--max-connect=INTEGER</option></term>
    253          <listitem>
    254            <para>By default, the listener can connect to up to 50 processes.
    255              Occasionally, that number is too small. Use this option to
    256              provide a different limit. E.g.
    257              <computeroutput>--max-connect=100</computeroutput>.
    258            </para>
    259          </listitem>
    260        </varlistentry>
    261        <varlistentry>
    262         <term><option>portnumber</option></term>
    263         <listitem>
    264           <para>Changes the port it listens on from the default (1500).
    265           The specified port must be in the range 1024 to 65535.
    266           The same restriction applies to port numbers specified by a
    267           <option>--log-socket</option> to Valgrind itself.</para>
    268         </listitem>
    269       </varlistentry>
    270     </variablelist>
    271     <!-- end of xi:include in the manpage -->
    272 
    273     <para>If a Valgrinded process fails to connect to a listener, for
    274     whatever reason (the listener isn't running, invalid or unreachable
    275     host or port, etc), Valgrind switches back to writing the commentary
    276     to stderr.  The same goes for any process which loses an established
    277     connection to a listener.  In other words, killing the listener
    278     doesn't kill the processes sending data to it.</para>
    279   </listitem>
    280 
    281 </orderedlist>
    282 
    283 <para>Here is an important point about the relationship between the
    284 commentary and profiling output from tools.  The commentary contains a
    285 mix of messages from the Valgrind core and the selected tool.  If the
    286 tool reports errors, it will report them to the commentary.  However, if
    287 the tool does profiling, the profile data will be written to a file of
    288 some kind, depending on the tool, and independent of what
    289 <option>--log-*</option> options are in force.  The commentary is
    290 intended to be a low-bandwidth, human-readable channel.  Profiling data,
    291 on the other hand, is usually voluminous and not meaningful without
    292 further processing, which is why we have chosen this arrangement.</para>
    293 
    294 </sect1>
    295 
    296 
    297 <sect1 id="manual-core.report" xreflabel="Reporting of errors">
    298 <title>Reporting of errors</title>
    299 
    300 <para>When an error-checking tool
    301 detects something bad happening in the program, an error
    302 message is written to the commentary.  Here's an example from Memcheck:</para>
    303 
    304 <programlisting><![CDATA[
    305 ==25832== Invalid read of size 4
    306 ==25832==    at 0x8048724: BandMatrix::ReSize(int, int, int) (bogon.cpp:45)
    307 ==25832==    by 0x80487AF: main (bogon.cpp:66)
    308 ==25832==  Address 0xBFFFF74C is not stack'd, malloc'd or free'd]]></programlisting>
    309 
    310 <para>This message says that the program did an illegal 4-byte read of
    311 address 0xBFFFF74C, which, as far as Memcheck can tell, is not a valid
    312 stack address, nor corresponds to any current heap blocks or recently freed
    313 heap blocks.  The read is happening at line 45 of
    314 <filename>bogon.cpp</filename>, called from line 66 of the same file,
    315 etc.  For errors associated with an identified (current or freed) heap block,
    316 for example reading freed memory, Valgrind reports not only the
    317 location where the error happened, but also where the associated heap block
    318 was allocated/freed.</para>
    319 
    320 <para>Valgrind remembers all error reports.  When an error is detected,
    321 it is compared against old reports, to see if it is a duplicate.  If so,
    322 the error is noted, but no further commentary is emitted.  This avoids
    323 you being swamped with bazillions of duplicate error reports.</para>
    324 
    325 <para>If you want to know how many times each error occurred, run with
    326 the <option>-v</option> option.  When execution finishes, all the
    327 reports are printed out, along with, and sorted by, their occurrence
    328 counts.  This makes it easy to see which errors have occurred most
    329 frequently.</para>
    330 
    331 <para>Errors are reported before the associated operation actually
    332 happens.  For example, if you're using Memcheck and your program attempts to
    333 read from address zero, Memcheck will emit a message to this effect, and
    334 your program will then likely die with a segmentation fault.</para>
    335 
    336 <para>In general, you should try and fix errors in the order that they
    337 are reported.  Not doing so can be confusing.  For example, a program
    338 which copies uninitialised values to several memory locations, and later
    339 uses them, will generate several error messages, when run on Memcheck.
    340 The first such error message may well give the most direct clue to the
    341 root cause of the problem.</para>
    342 
    343 <para>The process of detecting duplicate errors is quite an
    344 expensive one and can become a significant performance overhead
    345 if your program generates huge quantities of errors.  To avoid
    346 serious problems, Valgrind will simply stop collecting
    347 errors after 1,000 different errors have been seen, or 10,000,000 errors
    348 in total have been seen.  In this situation you might as well
    349 stop your program and fix it, because Valgrind won't tell you
    350 anything else useful after this.  Note that the 1,000/10,000,000 limits
    351 apply after suppressed errors are removed.  These limits are
    352 defined in <filename>m_errormgr.c</filename> and can be increased
    353 if necessary.</para>
    354 
    355 <para>To avoid this cutoff you can use the
    356 <option>--error-limit=no</option> option.  Then Valgrind will always show
    357 errors, regardless of how many there are.  Use this option carefully,
    358 since it may have a bad effect on performance.</para>
    359 
    360 </sect1>
    361 
    362 
    363 <sect1 id="manual-core.suppress" xreflabel="Suppressing errors">
    364 <title>Suppressing errors</title>
    365 
    366 <para>The error-checking tools detect numerous problems in the system
    367 libraries, such as the C library, 
    368 which come pre-installed with your OS.  You can't easily fix
    369 these, but you don't want to see these errors (and yes, there are many!)
    370 So Valgrind reads a list of errors to suppress at startup.  A default
    371 suppression file is created by the
    372 <computeroutput>./configure</computeroutput> script when the system is
    373 built.</para>
    374 
    375 <para>You can modify and add to the suppressions file at your leisure,
    376 or, better, write your own.  Multiple suppression files are allowed.
    377 This is useful if part of your project contains errors you can't or
    378 don't want to fix, yet you don't want to continuously be reminded of
    379 them.</para>
    380 
    381 <formalpara><title>Note:</title> <para>By far the easiest way to add
    382 suppressions is to use the <option>--gen-suppressions=yes</option> option
    383 described in <xref linkend="manual-core.options"/>.  This generates
    384 suppressions automatically.  For best results,
    385 though, you may want to edit the output
    386     of  <option>--gen-suppressions=yes</option> by hand, in which
    387 case it would be advisable to read through this section.
    388 </para>
    389 </formalpara>
    390 
    391 <para>Each error to be suppressed is described very specifically, to
    392 minimise the possibility that a suppression-directive inadvertently
    393 suppresses a bunch of similar errors which you did want to see.  The
    394 suppression mechanism is designed to allow precise yet flexible
    395 specification of errors to suppress.</para>
    396 
    397 <para>If you use the <option>-v</option> option, at the end of execution,
    398 Valgrind prints out one line for each used suppression, giving the number of times
    399 it got used, its name and the filename and line number where the suppression is
    400 defined. Depending on the suppression kind, the filename and line number are optionally
    401 followed by additional information (such as the number of blocks and bytes suppressed
    402 by a memcheck leak suppression). Here's the suppressions used by a
    403 run of <computeroutput>valgrind -v --tool=memcheck ls -l</computeroutput>:</para>
    404 
    405 <programlisting><![CDATA[
    406 --1610-- used_suppression:      2 dl-hack3-cond-1 /usr/lib/valgrind/default.supp:1234
    407 --1610-- used_suppression:      2 glibc-2.5.x-on-SUSE-10.2-(PPC)-2a /usr/lib/valgrind/default.supp:1234
    408 ]]></programlisting>
    409 
    410 <para>Multiple suppressions files are allowed.  Valgrind loads suppression
    411 patterns from <filename>$PREFIX/lib/valgrind/default.supp</filename> unless
    412 <option>--default-suppressions=no</option> has been specified.  You can
    413 ask to add suppressions from additional files by specifying
    414 <option>--suppressions=/path/to/file.supp</option> one or more times.
    415 </para>
    416 
    417 <para>If you want to understand more about suppressions, look at an
    418 existing suppressions file whilst reading the following documentation.
    419 The file <filename>glibc-2.3.supp</filename>, in the source
    420 distribution, provides some good examples.</para>
    421 
    422 <para>Each suppression has the following components:</para>
    423 
    424 <itemizedlist>
    425 
    426   <listitem>
    427     <para>First line: its name.  This merely gives a handy name to the
    428     suppression, by which it is referred to in the summary of used
    429     suppressions printed out when a program finishes.  It's not
    430     important what the name is; any identifying string will do.</para>
    431   </listitem>
    432 
    433   <listitem>
    434     <para>Second line: name of the tool(s) that the suppression is for
    435     (if more than one, comma-separated), and the name of the suppression
    436     itself, separated by a colon (n.b.: no spaces are allowed), eg:</para>
    437 <programlisting><![CDATA[
    438 tool_name1,tool_name2:suppression_name]]></programlisting>
    439 
    440     <para>Recall that Valgrind is a modular system, in which
    441     different instrumentation tools can observe your program whilst it
    442     is running.  Since different tools detect different kinds of errors,
    443     it is necessary to say which tool(s) the suppression is meaningful
    444     to.</para>
    445 
    446     <para>Tools will complain, at startup, if a tool does not understand
    447     any suppression directed to it.  Tools ignore suppressions which are
    448     not directed to them.  As a result, it is quite practical to put
    449     suppressions for all tools into the same suppression file.</para>
    450   </listitem>
    451 
    452   <listitem>
    453     <para>Next line: a small number of suppression types have extra
    454     information after the second line (eg. the <varname>Param</varname>
    455     suppression for Memcheck)</para>
    456   </listitem>
    457 
    458   <listitem>
    459     <para>Remaining lines: This is the calling context for the error --
    460     the chain of function calls that led to it.  There can be up to 24
    461     of these lines.</para>
    462 
    463     <para>Locations may be names of either shared objects or
    464     functions.  They begin
    465     <computeroutput>obj:</computeroutput> and
    466     <computeroutput>fun:</computeroutput> respectively.  Function and
    467     object names to match against may use the wildcard characters
    468     <computeroutput>*</computeroutput> and
    469     <computeroutput>?</computeroutput>.</para>
    470 
    471     <para><command>Important note: </command> C++ function names must be
    472     <command>mangled</command>.  If you are writing suppressions by
    473     hand, use the <option>--demangle=no</option> option to get the
    474     mangled names in your error messages.  An example of a mangled
    475     C++ name is  <computeroutput>_ZN9QListView4showEv</computeroutput>.
    476     This is the form that the GNU C++ compiler uses internally, and
    477     the form that must be used in suppression files.  The equivalent
    478     demangled name, <computeroutput>QListView::show()</computeroutput>,
    479     is what you see at the C++ source code level.
    480     </para>
    481 
    482     <para>A location line may also be
    483     simply "<computeroutput>...</computeroutput>" (three dots).  This is
    484     a frame-level wildcard, which matches zero or more frames.  Frame
    485     level wildcards are useful because they make it easy to ignore
    486     varying numbers of uninteresting frames in between frames of
    487     interest.  That is often important when writing suppressions which
    488     are intended to be robust against variations in the amount of
    489     function inlining done by compilers.</para>
    490   </listitem>
    491 
    492   <listitem>
    493     <para>Finally, the entire suppression must be between curly
    494     braces. Each brace must be the first character on its own
    495     line.</para>
    496   </listitem>
    497 
    498  </itemizedlist>
    499 
    500 <para>A suppression only suppresses an error when the error matches all
    501 the details in the suppression.  Here's an example:</para>
    502 
    503 <programlisting><![CDATA[
    504 {
    505   __gconv_transform_ascii_internal/__mbrtowc/mbtowc
    506   Memcheck:Value4
    507   fun:__gconv_transform_ascii_internal
    508   fun:__mbr*toc
    509   fun:mbtowc
    510 }]]></programlisting>
    511 
    512 
    513 <para>What it means is: for Memcheck only, suppress a
    514 use-of-uninitialised-value error, when the data size is 4, when it
    515 occurs in the function
    516 <computeroutput>__gconv_transform_ascii_internal</computeroutput>, when
    517 that is called from any function of name matching
    518 <computeroutput>__mbr*toc</computeroutput>, when that is called from
    519 <computeroutput>mbtowc</computeroutput>.  It doesn't apply under any
    520 other circumstances.  The string by which this suppression is identified
    521 to the user is
    522 <computeroutput>__gconv_transform_ascii_internal/__mbrtowc/mbtowc</computeroutput>.</para>
    523 
    524 <para>(See <xref linkend="mc-manual.suppfiles"/> for more details
    525 on the specifics of Memcheck's suppression kinds.)</para>
    526 
    527 <para>Another example, again for the Memcheck tool:</para>
    528 
    529 <programlisting><![CDATA[
    530 {
    531   libX11.so.6.2/libX11.so.6.2/libXaw.so.7.0
    532   Memcheck:Value4
    533   obj:/usr/X11R6/lib/libX11.so.6.2
    534   obj:/usr/X11R6/lib/libX11.so.6.2
    535   obj:/usr/X11R6/lib/libXaw.so.7.0
    536 }]]></programlisting>
    537 
    538 <para>This suppresses any size 4 uninitialised-value error which occurs
    539 anywhere in <filename>libX11.so.6.2</filename>, when called from
    540 anywhere in the same library, when called from anywhere in
    541 <filename>libXaw.so.7.0</filename>.  The inexact specification of
    542 locations is regrettable, but is about all you can hope for, given that
    543 the X11 libraries shipped on the Linux distro on which this example
    544 was made have had their symbol tables removed.</para>
    545 
    546 <para>Although the above two examples do not make this clear, you can
    547 freely mix <computeroutput>obj:</computeroutput> and
    548 <computeroutput>fun:</computeroutput> lines in a suppression.</para>
    549 
    550 <para>Finally, here's an example using three frame-level wildcards:</para>
    551 
    552 <programlisting><![CDATA[
    553 {
    554    a-contrived-example
    555    Memcheck:Leak
    556    fun:malloc
    557    ...
    558    fun:ddd
    559    ...
    560    fun:ccc
    561    ...
    562    fun:main
    563 }
    564 ]]></programlisting>
    565 This suppresses Memcheck memory-leak errors, in the case where
    566 the allocation was done by <computeroutput>main</computeroutput>
    567 calling (though any number of intermediaries, including zero)
    568 <computeroutput>ccc</computeroutput>,
    569 calling onwards via
    570 <computeroutput>ddd</computeroutput> and eventually
    571 to <computeroutput>malloc.</computeroutput>.
    572 </sect1>
    573 
    574 
    575 <sect1 id="manual-core.options" 
    576        xreflabel="Core Command-line Options">
    577 <title>Core Command-line Options</title>
    578 
    579 <para>As mentioned above, Valgrind's core accepts a common set of options.
    580 The tools also accept tool-specific options, which are documented
    581 separately for each tool.</para>
    582 
    583 <para>Valgrind's default settings succeed in giving reasonable behaviour
    584 in most cases.  We group the available options by rough categories.</para>
    585 
    586 <sect2 id="manual-core.toolopts" xreflabel="Tool-selection Option">
    587 <title>Tool-selection Option</title>
    588 
    589 <para id="tool.opts.para">The single most important option.</para>
    590 
    591 <variablelist id="tool.opts.list">
    592 
    593   <varlistentry id="tool_name" xreflabel="--tool">
    594     <term>
    595       <option><![CDATA[--tool=<toolname> [default: memcheck] ]]></option>
    596     </term>
    597     <listitem>
    598       <para>Run the Valgrind tool called <varname>toolname</varname>,
    599       e.g. memcheck, cachegrind, callgrind, helgrind, drd, massif,
    600       lackey, none, exp-sgcheck, exp-bbv, exp-dhat, etc.</para>
    601     </listitem>
    602   </varlistentry>
    603 
    604 </variablelist>
    605 
    606 </sect2>
    607 
    608 
    609 
    610 <sect2 id="manual-core.basicopts" xreflabel="Basic Options">
    611 <title>Basic Options</title>
    612 
    613 <!-- start of xi:include in the manpage -->
    614 <para id="basic.opts.para">These options work with all tools.</para>
    615 
    616 <variablelist id="basic.opts.list">
    617 
    618   <varlistentry id="opt.help" xreflabel="--help">
    619     <term><option>-h --help</option></term>
    620     <listitem>
    621       <para>Show help for all options, both for the core and for the
    622       selected tool.  If the option is repeated it is equivalent to giving
    623       <option>--help-debug</option>.</para>
    624     </listitem>
    625   </varlistentry>
    626 
    627   <varlistentry id="opt.help-debug" xreflabel="--help-debug">
    628     <term><option>--help-debug</option></term>
    629     <listitem>
    630       <para>Same as <option>--help</option>, but also lists debugging
    631       options which usually are only of use to Valgrind's
    632       developers.</para>
    633     </listitem>
    634   </varlistentry>
    635 
    636   <varlistentry id="opt.version" xreflabel="--version">
    637     <term><option>--version</option></term>
    638     <listitem>
    639       <para>Show the version number of the Valgrind core. Tools can have
    640       their own version numbers. There is a scheme in place to ensure
    641       that tools only execute when the core version is one they are
    642       known to work with. This was done to minimise the chances of
    643       strange problems arising from tool-vs-core version
    644       incompatibilities.</para>
    645     </listitem>
    646   </varlistentry>
    647 
    648   <varlistentry id="opt.quiet" xreflabel="--quiet">
    649     <term><option>-q</option>, <option>--quiet</option></term>
    650     <listitem>
    651       <para>Run silently, and only print error messages. Useful if you
    652       are running regression tests or have some other automated test
    653       machinery.</para>
    654     </listitem>
    655   </varlistentry>
    656 
    657   <varlistentry id="opt.verbose" xreflabel="--verbose">
    658     <term><option>-v</option>, <option>--verbose</option></term>
    659     <listitem>
    660       <para>Be more verbose. Gives extra information on various aspects
    661       of your program, such as: the shared objects loaded, the
    662       suppressions used, the progress of the instrumentation and
    663       execution engines, and warnings about unusual behaviour. Repeating
    664       the option increases the verbosity level.</para>
    665     </listitem>
    666   </varlistentry>
    667 
    668   <varlistentry id="opt.trace-children" xreflabel="--trace-children">
    669     <term>
    670       <option><![CDATA[--trace-children=<yes|no> [default: no] ]]></option>
    671     </term>
    672     <listitem>
    673       <para>When enabled, Valgrind will trace into sub-processes
    674       initiated via the <varname>exec</varname> system call.  This is
    675       necessary for multi-process programs.
    676       </para>
    677       <para>Note that Valgrind does trace into the child of a
    678       <varname>fork</varname> (it would be difficult not to, since
    679       <varname>fork</varname> makes an identical copy of a process), so this
    680       option is arguably badly named.  However, most children of
    681       <varname>fork</varname> calls immediately call <varname>exec</varname>
    682       anyway.
    683       </para>
    684     </listitem>
    685   </varlistentry>
    686 
    687   <varlistentry id="opt.trace-children-skip" xreflabel="--trace-children-skip">
    688     <term>
    689       <option><![CDATA[--trace-children-skip=patt1,patt2,... ]]></option>
    690     </term>
    691     <listitem>
    692       <para>This option only has an effect when 
    693         <option>--trace-children=yes</option> is specified.  It allows
    694         for some children to be skipped.  The option takes a comma
    695         separated list of patterns for the names of child executables
    696         that Valgrind should not trace into.  Patterns may include the
    697         metacharacters <computeroutput>?</computeroutput>
    698         and <computeroutput>*</computeroutput>, which have the usual
    699         meaning.</para>
    700       <para>
    701         This can be useful for pruning uninteresting branches from a
    702         tree of processes being run on Valgrind.  But you should be
    703         careful when using it.  When Valgrind skips tracing into an
    704         executable, it doesn't just skip tracing that executable, it
    705         also skips tracing any of that executable's child processes.
    706         In other words, the flag doesn't merely cause tracing to stop
    707         at the specified executables -- it skips tracing of entire
    708         process subtrees rooted at any of the specified
    709         executables.</para>
    710     </listitem>
    711   </varlistentry>
    712 
    713   <varlistentry id="opt.trace-children-skip-by-arg"
    714                 xreflabel="--trace-children-skip-by-arg">
    715     <term>
    716       <option><![CDATA[--trace-children-skip-by-arg=patt1,patt2,... ]]></option>
    717     </term>
    718     <listitem>
    719       <para>This is the same as  
    720         <option>--trace-children-skip</option>, with one difference:
    721         the decision as to whether to trace into a child process is
    722         made by examining the arguments to the child process, rather
    723         than the name of its executable.</para>
    724     </listitem>
    725   </varlistentry>
    726 
    727   <varlistentry id="opt.child-silent-after-fork"
    728                 xreflabel="--child-silent-after-fork">
    729     <term>
    730       <option><![CDATA[--child-silent-after-fork=<yes|no> [default: no] ]]></option>
    731     </term>
    732     <listitem>
    733       <para>When enabled, Valgrind will not show any debugging or
    734       logging output for the child process resulting from
    735       a <varname>fork</varname> call.  This can make the output less
    736       confusing (although more misleading) when dealing with processes
    737       that create children.  It is particularly useful in conjunction
    738       with <varname>--trace-children=</varname>.  Use of this option is also
    739       strongly recommended if you are requesting XML output
    740       (<varname>--xml=yes</varname>), since otherwise the XML from child and
    741       parent may become mixed up, which usually makes it useless.
    742       </para>
    743     </listitem>
    744   </varlistentry>
    745 
    746   <varlistentry id="opt.vgdb" xreflabel="--vgdb">
    747     <term>
    748       <option><![CDATA[--vgdb=<no|yes|full> [default: yes] ]]></option>
    749     </term>
    750     <listitem>
    751       
    752       <para>Valgrind will provide "gdbserver" functionality when
    753       <option>--vgdb=yes</option> or <option>--vgdb=full</option> is
    754       specified.  This allows an external GNU GDB debugger to control
    755       and debug your program when it runs on Valgrind.
    756       <option>--vgdb=full</option> incurs significant performance
    757       overheads, but provides more precise breakpoints and
    758       watchpoints. See <xref linkend="manual-core-adv.gdbserver"/> for
    759       a detailed description.
    760       </para>
    761 
    762       <para> If the embedded gdbserver is enabled but no gdb is
    763       currently being used, the <xref linkend="manual-core-adv.vgdb"/>
    764       command line utility can send "monitor commands" to Valgrind
    765       from a shell.  The Valgrind core provides a set of
    766       <xref linkend="manual-core-adv.valgrind-monitor-commands"/>. A tool
    767       can optionally provide tool specific monitor commands, which are
    768       documented in the tool specific chapter.
    769       </para>
    770 
    771     </listitem>
    772   </varlistentry>
    773 
    774   <varlistentry id="opt.vgdb-error" xreflabel="--vgdb-error">
    775     <term>
    776       <option><![CDATA[--vgdb-error=<number> [default: 999999999] ]]></option>
    777     </term>
    778     <listitem>
    779       <para> Use this option when the Valgrind gdbserver is enabled with
    780       <option>--vgdb=yes</option> or <option>--vgdb=full</option>.
    781       Tools that report errors will wait
    782       for "<computeroutput>number</computeroutput>" errors to be
    783       reported before freezing the program and waiting for you to
    784       connect with GDB.  It follows that a value of zero will cause
    785       the gdbserver to be started before your program is executed.
    786       This is typically used to insert GDB breakpoints before
    787       execution, and also works with tools that do not report
    788       errors, such as Massif.
    789       </para>
    790     </listitem>
    791   </varlistentry>
    792 
    793   <varlistentry id="opt.vgdb-stop-at" xreflabel="--vgdb-stop-at">
    794     <term>
    795       <option><![CDATA[--vgdb-stop-at=<set> [default: none] ]]></option>
    796     </term>
    797     <listitem>
    798       <para> Use this option when the Valgrind gdbserver is enabled with
    799       <option>--vgdb=yes</option> or <option>--vgdb=full</option>.
    800       The Valgrind gdbserver will be invoked for each error after
    801       <option>--vgdb-error</option> have been reported.
    802       You can additionally ask the Valgrind gdbserver to be invoked
    803       for other events, specified in one of the following ways:  </para>
    804       <itemizedlist>
    805         <listitem><para>a comma separated list of one or more of
    806             <option>startup exit valgrindabexit</option>.</para>
    807 
    808           <para>The values <option>startup</option> <option>exit</option>
    809           <option>valgrindabexit</option> respectively indicate to
    810           invoke gdbserver before your program is executed, after the
    811           last instruction of your program, on Valgrind abnormal exit
    812           (e.g. internal error, out of memory, ...).</para>
    813 
    814           <para>Note: <option>startup</option> and
    815           <option>--vgdb-error=0</option> will both cause Valgrind
    816           gdbserver to be invoked before your program is executed. The
    817           <option>--vgdb-error=0</option> will in addition cause your 
    818           program to stop on all subsequent errors.</para>
    819 
    820         </listitem>
    821         
    822         <listitem><para><option>all</option> to specify the complete set.
    823             It is equivalent to
    824             <option>--vgdb-stop-at=startup,exit,valgrindabexit</option>.</para>
    825         </listitem>
    826         
    827         <listitem><para><option>none</option> for the empty set.</para>
    828         </listitem>
    829       </itemizedlist>
    830     </listitem>
    831   </varlistentry>
    832 
    833   <varlistentry id="opt.track-fds" xreflabel="--track-fds">
    834     <term>
    835       <option><![CDATA[--track-fds=<yes|no> [default: no] ]]></option>
    836     </term>
    837     <listitem>
    838       <para>When enabled, Valgrind will print out a list of open file
    839       descriptors on exit or on request, via the gdbserver monitor
    840       command <varname>v.info open_fds</varname>.  Along with each
    841       file descriptor is printed a stack backtrace of where the file
    842       was opened and any details relating to the file descriptor such
    843       as the file name or socket details.</para>
    844     </listitem>
    845   </varlistentry>
    846 
    847   <varlistentry id="opt.time-stamp" xreflabel="--time-stamp">
    848     <term>
    849       <option><![CDATA[--time-stamp=<yes|no> [default: no] ]]></option>
    850     </term>
    851     <listitem>
    852       <para>When enabled, each message is preceded with an indication of
    853       the elapsed wallclock time since startup, expressed as days,
    854       hours, minutes, seconds and milliseconds.</para>
    855     </listitem>
    856   </varlistentry>
    857 
    858   <varlistentry id="opt.log-fd" xreflabel="--log-fd">
    859     <term>
    860       <option><![CDATA[--log-fd=<number> [default: 2, stderr] ]]></option>
    861     </term>
    862     <listitem>
    863       <para>Specifies that Valgrind should send all of its messages to
    864       the specified file descriptor.  The default, 2, is the standard
    865       error channel (stderr).  Note that this may interfere with the
    866       client's own use of stderr, as Valgrind's output will be
    867       interleaved with any output that the client sends to
    868       stderr.</para>
    869     </listitem>
    870   </varlistentry>
    871 
    872   <varlistentry id="opt.log-file" xreflabel="--log-file">
    873     <term>
    874       <option><![CDATA[--log-file=<filename> ]]></option>
    875     </term>
    876     <listitem>
    877       <para>Specifies that Valgrind should send all of its messages to
    878       the specified file.  If the file name is empty, it causes an abort.
    879       There are three special format specifiers that can be used in the file
    880       name.</para>
    881 
    882       <para><option>%p</option> is replaced with the current process ID.
    883       This is very useful for program that invoke multiple processes.
    884       WARNING: If you use <option>--trace-children=yes</option> and your
    885       program invokes multiple processes OR your program forks without
    886       calling exec afterwards, and you don't use this specifier
    887       (or the <option>%q</option> specifier below), the Valgrind output from
    888       all those processes will go into one file, possibly jumbled up, and
    889       possibly incomplete.</para>
    890 
    891       <para><option>%q{FOO}</option> is replaced with the contents of the
    892       environment variable <varname>FOO</varname>.  If the
    893       <option>{FOO}</option> part is malformed, it causes an abort.  This
    894       specifier is rarely needed, but very useful in certain circumstances
    895       (eg. when running MPI programs).  The idea is that you specify a
    896       variable which will be set differently for each process in the job,
    897       for example <computeroutput>BPROC_RANK</computeroutput> or whatever is
    898       applicable in your MPI setup.  If the named environment variable is not
    899       set, it causes an abort.  Note that in some shells, the
    900       <option>{</option> and <option>}</option> characters may need to be
    901       escaped with a backslash.</para>
    902 
    903       <para><option>%%</option> is replaced with <option>%</option>.</para>
    904       
    905       <para>If an <option>%</option> is followed by any other character, it
    906       causes an abort.</para>
    907 
    908       <para>If the file name specifies a relative file name, it is put
    909       in the program's initial working directory : this is the current
    910       directory when the program started its execution after the fork
    911       or after the exec.  If it specifies an absolute file name (ie.
    912       starts with '/') then it is put there.
    913       </para>
    914     </listitem>
    915   </varlistentry>
    916 
    917   <varlistentry id="opt.log-socket" xreflabel="--log-socket">
    918     <term>
    919       <option><![CDATA[--log-socket=<ip-address:port-number> ]]></option>
    920     </term>
    921     <listitem>
    922       <para>Specifies that Valgrind should send all of its messages to
    923       the specified port at the specified IP address.  The port may be
    924       omitted, in which case port 1500 is used.  If a connection cannot
    925       be made to the specified socket, Valgrind falls back to writing
    926       output to the standard error (stderr).  This option is intended to
    927       be used in conjunction with the
    928       <computeroutput>valgrind-listener</computeroutput> program.  For
    929       further details, see 
    930       <link linkend="&vg-comment-id;">the commentary</link>
    931       in the manual.</para>
    932     </listitem>
    933   </varlistentry>
    934 
    935 </variablelist>
    936 <!-- end of xi:include in the manpage -->
    937 
    938 </sect2>
    939 
    940 
    941 <sect2 id="manual-core.erropts" xreflabel="Error-related Options">
    942 <title>Error-related Options</title>
    943 
    944 <!-- start of xi:include in the manpage -->
    945 <para id="error-related.opts.para">These options are used by all tools
    946 that can report errors, e.g. Memcheck, but not Cachegrind.</para>
    947 
    948 <variablelist id="error-related.opts.list">
    949 
    950   <varlistentry id="opt.xml" xreflabel="--xml">
    951     <term>
    952       <option><![CDATA[--xml=<yes|no> [default: no] ]]></option>
    953     </term>
    954     <listitem>
    955       <para>When enabled, the important parts of the output (e.g. tool error
    956       messages) will be in XML format rather than plain text.  Furthermore,
    957       the XML output will be sent to a different output channel than the
    958       plain text output.  Therefore, you also must use one of
    959       <option>--xml-fd</option>, <option>--xml-file</option> or
    960       <option>--xml-socket</option> to specify where the XML is to be sent.
    961       </para>
    962       
    963       <para>Less important messages will still be printed in plain text, but
    964       because the XML output and plain text output are sent to different
    965       output channels (the destination of the plain text output is still
    966       controlled by <option>--log-fd</option>, <option>--log-file</option>
    967       and <option>--log-socket</option>) this should not cause problems.
    968       </para>
    969 
    970       <para>This option is aimed at making life easier for tools that consume
    971       Valgrind's output as input, such as GUI front ends.  Currently this
    972       option works with Memcheck, Helgrind, DRD and SGcheck.  The output
    973       format is specified in the file
    974       <computeroutput>docs/internals/xml-output-protocol4.txt</computeroutput>
    975       in the source tree for Valgrind 3.5.0 or later.</para>
    976 
    977       <para>The recommended options for a GUI to pass, when requesting
    978       XML output, are: <option>--xml=yes</option> to enable XML output,
    979       <option>--xml-file</option> to send the XML output to a (presumably
    980       GUI-selected) file, <option>--log-file</option> to send the plain
    981       text output to a second GUI-selected file,
    982       <option>--child-silent-after-fork=yes</option>, and
    983       <option>-q</option> to restrict the plain text output to critical
    984       error messages created by Valgrind itself.  For example, failure to
    985       read a specified suppressions file counts as a critical error message.
    986       In this way, for a successful run the text output file will be empty.
    987       But if it isn't empty, then it will contain important information
    988       which the GUI user should be made aware
    989       of.</para>
    990     </listitem>
    991   </varlistentry>
    992 
    993   <varlistentry id="opt.xml-fd" xreflabel="--xml-fd">
    994     <term>
    995       <option><![CDATA[--xml-fd=<number> [default: -1, disabled] ]]></option>
    996     </term>
    997     <listitem>
    998       <para>Specifies that Valgrind should send its XML output to the
    999       specified file descriptor.  It must be used in conjunction with
   1000       <option>--xml=yes</option>.</para>
   1001     </listitem>
   1002   </varlistentry>
   1003 
   1004   <varlistentry id="opt.xml-file" xreflabel="--xml-file">
   1005     <term>
   1006       <option><![CDATA[--xml-file=<filename> ]]></option>
   1007     </term>
   1008     <listitem>
   1009       <para>Specifies that Valgrind should send its XML output
   1010       to the specified file.  It must be used in conjunction with
   1011       <option>--xml=yes</option>.  Any <option>%p</option> or
   1012       <option>%q</option> sequences appearing in the filename are expanded
   1013       in exactly the same way as they are for <option>--log-file</option>.
   1014       See the description of <option>--log-file</option> for details.
   1015       </para>
   1016     </listitem>
   1017   </varlistentry>
   1018 
   1019   <varlistentry id="opt.xml-socket" xreflabel="--xml-socket">
   1020     <term>
   1021       <option><![CDATA[--xml-socket=<ip-address:port-number> ]]></option>
   1022     </term>
   1023     <listitem>
   1024       <para>Specifies that Valgrind should send its XML output the
   1025       specified port at the specified IP address.  It must be used in
   1026       conjunction with <option>--xml=yes</option>.  The form of the argument
   1027       is the same as that used by <option>--log-socket</option>.
   1028       See the description of <option>--log-socket</option>
   1029       for further details.</para>
   1030     </listitem>
   1031   </varlistentry>
   1032 
   1033   <varlistentry id="opt.xml-user-comment" xreflabel="--xml-user-comment">
   1034     <term>
   1035       <option><![CDATA[--xml-user-comment=<string> ]]></option>
   1036     </term>
   1037     <listitem>
   1038       <para>Embeds an extra user comment string at the start of the XML
   1039       output.  Only works when <option>--xml=yes</option> is specified;
   1040       ignored otherwise.</para>
   1041     </listitem>
   1042   </varlistentry>
   1043 
   1044   <varlistentry id="opt.demangle" xreflabel="--demangle">
   1045     <term>
   1046       <option><![CDATA[--demangle=<yes|no> [default: yes] ]]></option>
   1047     </term>
   1048     <listitem>
   1049       <para>Enable/disable automatic demangling (decoding) of C++ names.
   1050       Enabled by default.  When enabled, Valgrind will attempt to
   1051       translate encoded C++ names back to something approaching the
   1052       original.  The demangler handles symbols mangled by g++ versions
   1053       2.X, 3.X and 4.X.</para>
   1054 
   1055       <para>An important fact about demangling is that function names
   1056       mentioned in suppressions files should be in their mangled form.
   1057       Valgrind does not demangle function names when searching for
   1058       applicable suppressions, because to do otherwise would make
   1059       suppression file contents dependent on the state of Valgrind's
   1060       demangling machinery, and also slow down suppression matching.</para>
   1061     </listitem>
   1062   </varlistentry>
   1063 
   1064   <varlistentry id="opt.num-callers" xreflabel="--num-callers">
   1065     <term>
   1066       <option><![CDATA[--num-callers=<number> [default: 12] ]]></option>
   1067     </term>
   1068     <listitem>
   1069       <para>Specifies the maximum number of entries shown in stack traces
   1070       that identify program locations.  Note that errors are commoned up
   1071       using only the top four function locations (the place in the current
   1072       function, and that of its three immediate callers).  So this doesn't
   1073       affect the total number of errors reported.</para>
   1074 
   1075       <para>The maximum value for this is 500. Note that higher settings
   1076       will make Valgrind run a bit more slowly and take a bit more
   1077       memory, but can be useful when working with programs with
   1078       deeply-nested call chains.</para>
   1079     </listitem>
   1080   </varlistentry>
   1081 
   1082   <varlistentry id="opt.unw-stack-scan-thresh"
   1083                 xreflabel="--unw-stack-scan-thresh">
   1084     <term>
   1085       <option><![CDATA[--unw-stack-scan-thresh=<number> [default: 0] ]]></option>
   1086     </term>
   1087     <term>
   1088       <option><![CDATA[--unw-stack-scan-frames=<number> [default: 5] ]]></option>
   1089     </term>
   1090     <listitem>
   1091       <para>Stack-scanning support is available only on ARM
   1092       targets.</para>
   1093 
   1094       <para>These flags enable and control stack unwinding by stack
   1095       scanning.  When the normal stack unwinding mechanisms -- usage
   1096       of Dwarf CFI records, and frame-pointer following -- fail, stack
   1097       scanning may be able to recover a stack trace.</para>
   1098 
   1099       <para>Note that stack scanning is an imprecise, heuristic
   1100       mechanism that may give very misleading results, or none at all.
   1101       It should be used only in emergencies, when normal unwinding
   1102       fails, and it is important to nevertheless have stack
   1103       traces.</para>
   1104 
   1105       <para>Stack scanning is a simple technique: the unwinder reads
   1106       words from the stack, and tries to guess which of them might be
   1107       return addresses, by checking to see if they point just after
   1108       ARM or Thumb call instructions.  If so, the word is added to the
   1109       backtrace.</para>
   1110 
   1111       <para>The main danger occurs when a function call returns,
   1112       leaving its return address exposed, and a new function is
   1113       called, but the new function does not overwrite the old address.
   1114       The result of this is that the backtrace may contain entries for
   1115       functions which have already returned, and so be very
   1116       confusing.</para>
   1117 
   1118       <para>A second limitation of this implementation is that it will
   1119       scan only the page (4KB, normally) containing the starting stack
   1120       pointer.  If the stack frames are large, this may result in only
   1121       a few (or not even any) being present in the trace.  Also, if
   1122       you are unlucky and have an initial stack pointer near the end
   1123       of its containing page, the scan may miss all interesting
   1124       frames.</para>
   1125 
   1126       <para>By default stack scanning is disabled.  The normal use
   1127       case is to ask for it when a stack trace would otherwise be very
   1128       short.  So, to enable it,
   1129       use <computeroutput>--unw-stack-scan-thresh=number</computeroutput>.
   1130       This requests Valgrind to try using stack scanning to "extend"
   1131       stack traces which contain fewer
   1132       than <computeroutput>number</computeroutput> frames.</para>
   1133 
   1134       <para>If stack scanning does take place, it will only generate
   1135       at most the number of frames specified
   1136       by <computeroutput>--unw-stack-scan-frames</computeroutput>.
   1137       Typically, stack scanning generates so many garbage entries that
   1138       this value is set to a low value (5) by default.  In no case
   1139       will a stack trace larger than the value specified
   1140       by <computeroutput>--num-callers</computeroutput> be
   1141       created.</para>
   1142     </listitem>
   1143   </varlistentry>
   1144 
   1145   <varlistentry id="opt.error-limit" xreflabel="--error-limit">
   1146     <term>
   1147       <option><![CDATA[--error-limit=<yes|no> [default: yes] ]]></option>
   1148     </term>
   1149     <listitem>
   1150       <para>When enabled, Valgrind stops reporting errors after 10,000,000
   1151       in total, or 1,000 different ones, have been seen.  This is to
   1152       stop the error tracking machinery from becoming a huge performance
   1153       overhead in programs with many errors.</para>
   1154     </listitem>
   1155   </varlistentry>
   1156 
   1157   <varlistentry id="opt.error-exitcode" xreflabel="--error-exitcode">
   1158     <term>
   1159       <option><![CDATA[--error-exitcode=<number> [default: 0] ]]></option>
   1160     </term>
   1161     <listitem>
   1162       <para>Specifies an alternative exit code to return if Valgrind
   1163       reported any errors in the run.  When set to the default value
   1164       (zero), the return value from Valgrind will always be the return 
   1165       value of the process being simulated.  When set to a nonzero value,
   1166       that value is returned instead, if Valgrind detects any errors.
   1167       This is useful for using Valgrind as part of an automated test
   1168       suite, since it makes it easy to detect test cases for which
   1169       Valgrind has reported errors, just by inspecting return codes.</para>
   1170     </listitem>
   1171   </varlistentry>
   1172 
   1173   <varlistentry id="opt.error-markers" xreflabel="--error-markers">
   1174     <term>
   1175       <option><![CDATA[--error-markers=<begin>,<end> [default: none]]]></option>
   1176     </term>
   1177     <listitem>
   1178       <para>When errors are output as plain text (i.e. XML not used),
   1179       <option>--error-markers</option> instructs to output a line
   1180       containing the <option>begin</option> (<option>end</option>)
   1181       string before (after) each error. </para>
   1182       <para> Such marker lines facilitate searching for errors and/or
   1183       extracting errors in an output file that contain valgrind errors mixed
   1184       with the program output. </para>
   1185       <para> Note that empty markers are accepted. So, only using a begin
   1186       (or an end) marker is possible.</para>
   1187     </listitem>
   1188   </varlistentry>
   1189 
   1190   <varlistentry id="opt.sigill-diagnostics" xreflabel="--sigill-diagnostics">
   1191     <term>
   1192       <option><![CDATA[--sigill-diagnostics=<yes|no> [default: yes] ]]></option>
   1193     </term>
   1194     <listitem>
   1195       <para>Enable/disable printing of illegal instruction diagnostics.
   1196       Enabled by default, but defaults to disabled when
   1197       <option>--quiet</option> is given. The default can always be explicitly
   1198       overridden by giving this option.</para>
   1199 
   1200       <para>When enabled, a warning message will be printed, along with some
   1201       diagnostics, whenever an instruction is encountered that Valgrind
   1202       cannot decode or translate, before the program is given a SIGILL signal.
   1203       Often an illegal instruction indicates a bug in the program or missing
   1204       support for the particular instruction in Valgrind.  But some programs
   1205       do deliberately try to execute an instruction that might be missing
   1206       and trap the SIGILL signal to detect processor features.  Using
   1207       this flag makes it possible to avoid the diagnostic output
   1208       that you would otherwise get in such cases.</para>
   1209     </listitem>
   1210   </varlistentry>
   1211 
   1212   <varlistentry id="opt.show-below-main" xreflabel="--show-below-main">
   1213     <term>
   1214       <option><![CDATA[--show-below-main=<yes|no> [default: no] ]]></option>
   1215     </term>
   1216     <listitem>
   1217       <para>By default, stack traces for errors do not show any
   1218       functions that appear beneath <function>main</function> because
   1219       most of the time it's uninteresting C library stuff and/or
   1220       gobbledygook.  Alternatively, if <function>main</function> is not
   1221       present in the stack trace, stack traces will not show any functions
   1222       below <function>main</function>-like functions such as glibc's
   1223       <function>__libc_start_main</function>.   Furthermore, if
   1224       <function>main</function>-like functions are present in the trace,
   1225       they are normalised as <function>(below main)</function>, in order to
   1226       make the output more deterministic.</para>
   1227       
   1228       <para>If this option is enabled, all stack trace entries will be
   1229       shown and <function>main</function>-like functions will not be
   1230       normalised.</para>
   1231     </listitem>
   1232   </varlistentry>
   1233 
   1234   <varlistentry id="opt.fullpath-after" xreflabel="--fullpath-after">
   1235     <term>
   1236       <option><![CDATA[--fullpath-after=<string>
   1237               [default: don't show source paths] ]]></option>
   1238     </term>
   1239     <listitem>
   1240       <para>By default Valgrind only shows the filenames in stack
   1241       traces, but not full paths to source files.  When using Valgrind
   1242       in large projects where the sources reside in multiple different
   1243       directories, this can be inconvenient.
   1244       <option>--fullpath-after</option> provides a flexible solution
   1245       to this problem.  When this option is present, the path to each
   1246       source file is shown, with the following all-important caveat:
   1247       if <option>string</option> is found in the path, then the path
   1248       up to and including <option>string</option> is omitted, else the
   1249       path is shown unmodified.  Note that <option>string</option> is
   1250       not required to be a prefix of the path.</para>
   1251 
   1252       <para>For example, consider a file named
   1253       <computeroutput>/home/janedoe/blah/src/foo/bar/xyzzy.c</computeroutput>.
   1254       Specifying <option>--fullpath-after=/home/janedoe/blah/src/</option>
   1255       will cause Valgrind to show the name
   1256       as <computeroutput>foo/bar/xyzzy.c</computeroutput>.</para>
   1257 
   1258       <para>Because the string is not required to be a prefix,
   1259       <option>--fullpath-after=src/</option> will produce the same
   1260       output.  This is useful when the path contains arbitrary
   1261       machine-generated characters.  For example, the
   1262       path
   1263       <computeroutput>/my/build/dir/C32A1B47/blah/src/foo/xyzzy</computeroutput>
   1264       can be pruned to <computeroutput>foo/xyzzy</computeroutput>
   1265       using
   1266       <option>--fullpath-after=/blah/src/</option>.</para>
   1267 
   1268       <para>If you simply want to see the full path, just specify an
   1269       empty string: <option>--fullpath-after=</option>.  This isn't a
   1270       special case, merely a logical consequence of the above rules.</para>
   1271 
   1272       <para>Finally, you can use <option>--fullpath-after</option>
   1273       multiple times.  Any appearance of it causes Valgrind to switch
   1274       to producing full paths and applying the above filtering rule.
   1275       Each produced path is compared against all
   1276       the <option>--fullpath-after</option>-specified strings, in the
   1277       order specified.  The first string to match causes the path to
   1278       be truncated as described above.  If none match, the full path
   1279       is shown.  This facilitates chopping off prefixes when the
   1280       sources are drawn from a number of unrelated directories.
   1281       </para>
   1282     </listitem>
   1283   </varlistentry>
   1284 
   1285   <varlistentry id="opt.extra-debuginfo-path" xreflabel="--extra-debuginfo-path">
   1286     <term>
   1287       <option><![CDATA[--extra-debuginfo-path=<path> [default: undefined and unused] ]]></option>
   1288     </term>
   1289     <listitem>
   1290       <para>By default Valgrind searches in several well-known paths
   1291       for debug objects, such
   1292       as <computeroutput>/usr/lib/debug/</computeroutput>.</para>
   1293 
   1294       <para>However, there may be scenarios where you may wish to put
   1295       debug objects at an arbitrary location, such as external storage
   1296       when running Valgrind on a mobile device with limited local
   1297       storage.  Another example might be a situation where you do not
   1298       have permission to install debug object packages on the system
   1299       where you are running Valgrind.</para>
   1300 
   1301       <para>In these scenarios, you may provide an absolute path as an extra,
   1302       final place for Valgrind to search for debug objects by specifying
   1303       <option>--extra-debuginfo-path=/path/to/debug/objects</option>.
   1304       The given path will be prepended to the absolute path name of
   1305       the searched-for object.  For example, if Valgrind is looking
   1306       for the debuginfo
   1307       for <computeroutput>/w/x/y/zz.so</computeroutput>
   1308       and <option>--extra-debuginfo-path=/a/b/c</option> is specified,
   1309       it will look for a debug object at
   1310       <computeroutput>/a/b/c/w/x/y/zz.so</computeroutput>.</para>
   1311 
   1312       <para>This flag should only be specified once.  If it is
   1313       specified multiple times, only the last instance is
   1314       honoured.</para>
   1315     </listitem>
   1316   </varlistentry>
   1317 
   1318   <varlistentry id="opt.debuginfo-server" xreflabel="--debuginfo-server">
   1319     <term>
   1320       <option><![CDATA[--debuginfo-server=ipaddr:port [default: undefined and unused]]]></option>
   1321     </term>
   1322     <listitem>
   1323       <para>This is a new, experimental, feature introduced in version
   1324       3.9.0.</para>
   1325 
   1326       <para>In some scenarios it may be convenient to read debuginfo
   1327       from objects stored on a different machine.  With this flag,
   1328       Valgrind will query a debuginfo server running
   1329       on <computeroutput>ipaddr</computeroutput> and listening on
   1330       port <computeroutput>port</computeroutput>, if it cannot find
   1331       the debuginfo object in the local filesystem.</para>
   1332 
   1333       <para>The debuginfo server must accept TCP connections on
   1334       port <computeroutput>port</computeroutput>.  The debuginfo
   1335       server is contained in the source
   1336       file <computeroutput>auxprogs/valgrind-di-server.c</computeroutput>.
   1337       It will only serve from the directory it is started
   1338       in.  <computeroutput>port</computeroutput> defaults to 1500 in
   1339       both client and server if not specified.</para>
   1340 
   1341       <para>If Valgrind looks for the debuginfo for
   1342       <computeroutput>/w/x/y/zz.so</computeroutput> by using the
   1343       debuginfo server, it will strip the pathname components and
   1344       merely request <computeroutput>zz.so</computeroutput> on the
   1345       server.  That in turn will look only in its current working
   1346       directory for a matching debuginfo object.</para>
   1347 
   1348       <para>The debuginfo data is transmitted in small fragments (8
   1349       KB) as requested by Valgrind.  Each block is compressed using
   1350       LZO to reduce transmission time.  The implementation has been
   1351       tuned for best performance over a single-stage 802.11g (WiFi)
   1352       network link.</para>
   1353 
   1354       <para>Note that checks for matching primary vs debug objects,
   1355       using GNU debuglink CRC scheme, are performed even when using
   1356       the debuginfo server.  To disable such checking, you need to
   1357       also specify
   1358       <computeroutput>--allow-mismatched-debuginfo=yes</computeroutput>.
   1359       </para>
   1360 
   1361       <para>By default the Valgrind build system will
   1362       build <computeroutput>valgrind-di-server</computeroutput> for
   1363       the target platform, which is almost certainly not what you
   1364       want.  So far we have been unable to find out how to get
   1365       automake/autoconf to build it for the build platform.  If
   1366       you want to use it, you will have to recompile it by hand using
   1367       the command shown at the top
   1368       of <computeroutput>auxprogs/valgrind-di-server.c</computeroutput>.</para>
   1369     </listitem>
   1370   </varlistentry>
   1371 
   1372   <varlistentry id="opt.allow-mismatched-debuginfo"
   1373                 xreflabel="--allow-mismatched-debuginfo">
   1374     <term>
   1375       <option><![CDATA[--allow-mismatched-debuginfo=no|yes [no] ]]></option>
   1376     </term>
   1377     <listitem>
   1378       <para>When reading debuginfo from separate debuginfo objects,
   1379       Valgrind will by default check that the main and debuginfo
   1380       objects match, using the GNU debuglink mechanism.  This
   1381       guarantees that it does not read debuginfo from out of date
   1382       debuginfo objects, and also ensures that Valgrind can't crash as
   1383       a result of mismatches.</para>
   1384 
   1385       <para>This check can be overridden using 
   1386       <computeroutput>--allow-mismatched-debuginfo=yes</computeroutput>.
   1387       This may be useful when the debuginfo and main objects have not
   1388       been split in the proper way.  Be careful when using this,
   1389       though: it disables all consistency checking, and Valgrind has
   1390       been observed to crash when the main and debuginfo objects don't
   1391       match.</para>
   1392     </listitem>
   1393   </varlistentry>
   1394 
   1395   <varlistentry id="opt.suppressions" xreflabel="--suppressions">
   1396     <term>
   1397       <option><![CDATA[--suppressions=<filename> [default: $PREFIX/lib/valgrind/default.supp] ]]></option>
   1398     </term>
   1399     <listitem>
   1400       <para>Specifies an extra file from which to read descriptions of
   1401       errors to suppress.  You may use up to 100 extra suppression
   1402       files.</para>
   1403     </listitem>
   1404   </varlistentry>
   1405 
   1406   <varlistentry id="opt.gen-suppressions" xreflabel="--gen-suppressions">
   1407     <term>
   1408       <option><![CDATA[--gen-suppressions=<yes|no|all> [default: no] ]]></option>
   1409     </term>
   1410     <listitem>
   1411       <para>When set to <varname>yes</varname>, Valgrind will pause
   1412       after every error shown and print the line:
   1413       <literallayout><computeroutput>    ---- Print suppression ? --- [Return/N/n/Y/y/C/c] ----</computeroutput></literallayout>
   1414 
   1415       Pressing <varname>Ret</varname>, or <varname>N Ret</varname> or
   1416       <varname>n Ret</varname>, causes Valgrind continue execution without
   1417       printing a suppression for this error.</para>
   1418 
   1419       <para>Pressing <varname>Y Ret</varname> or
   1420       <varname>y Ret</varname> causes Valgrind to write a suppression
   1421       for this error.  You can then cut and paste it into a suppression file
   1422       if you don't want to hear about the error in the future.</para>
   1423 
   1424       <para>When set to <varname>all</varname>, Valgrind will print a
   1425       suppression for every reported error, without querying the
   1426       user.</para>
   1427 
   1428       <para>This option is particularly useful with C++ programs, as it
   1429       prints out the suppressions with mangled names, as
   1430       required.</para>
   1431 
   1432       <para>Note that the suppressions printed are as specific as
   1433       possible.  You may want to common up similar ones, by adding
   1434       wildcards to function names, and by using frame-level wildcards.
   1435       The wildcarding facilities are powerful yet flexible, and with a
   1436       bit of careful editing, you may be able to suppress a whole
   1437       family of related errors with only a few suppressions.  
   1438       <!-- commented out because it causes broken links in the man page
   1439       For details on how to do this, see
   1440       <xref linkend="manual-core.suppress"/>.
   1441       -->
   1442       </para>
   1443 
   1444       <para>Sometimes two different errors
   1445       are suppressed by the same suppression, in which case Valgrind
   1446       will output the suppression more than once, but you only need to
   1447       have one copy in your suppression file (but having more than one
   1448       won't cause problems).  Also, the suppression name is given as
   1449       <computeroutput>&lt;insert a suppression name
   1450       here&gt;</computeroutput>; the name doesn't really matter, it's
   1451       only used with the <option>-v</option> option which prints out all
   1452       used suppression records.</para>
   1453     </listitem>
   1454   </varlistentry>
   1455 
   1456   <varlistentry id="opt.input-fd" xreflabel="--input-fd">
   1457     <term>
   1458       <option><![CDATA[--input-fd=<number> [default: 0, stdin] ]]></option>
   1459     </term>
   1460     <listitem>
   1461       <para>When using
   1462       <option>--gen-suppressions=yes</option>, Valgrind will stop so as
   1463       to read keyboard input from you when each error occurs.  By
   1464       default it reads from the standard input (stdin), which is
   1465       problematic for programs which close stdin.  This option allows
   1466       you to specify an alternative file descriptor from which to read
   1467       input.</para>
   1468     </listitem>
   1469   </varlistentry>
   1470 
   1471   <varlistentry id="opt.dsymutil" xreflabel="--dsymutil">
   1472     <term>
   1473       <option><![CDATA[--dsymutil=no|yes [yes] ]]></option>
   1474     </term>
   1475     <listitem>
   1476       <para>This option is only relevant when running Valgrind on
   1477       Mac OS X.</para>
   1478 
   1479       <para>Mac OS X uses a deferred debug information (debuginfo)
   1480       linking scheme.  When object files containing debuginfo are
   1481       linked into a <computeroutput>.dylib</computeroutput> or an
   1482       executable, the debuginfo is not copied into the final file.
   1483       Instead, the debuginfo must be linked manually by
   1484       running <computeroutput>dsymutil</computeroutput>, a
   1485       system-provided utility, on the executable
   1486       or <computeroutput>.dylib</computeroutput>.  The resulting
   1487       combined debuginfo is placed in a directory alongside the
   1488       executable or <computeroutput>.dylib</computeroutput>, but with
   1489       the extension <computeroutput>.dSYM</computeroutput>.</para>
   1490 
   1491       <para>With <option>--dsymutil=no</option>, Valgrind
   1492       will detect cases where the
   1493       <computeroutput>.dSYM</computeroutput> directory is either
   1494       missing, or is present but does not appear to match the
   1495       associated executable or <computeroutput>.dylib</computeroutput>,
   1496       most likely because it is out of date.  In these cases, Valgrind
   1497       will print a warning message but take no further action.</para>
   1498 
   1499       <para>With <option>--dsymutil=yes</option>, Valgrind
   1500       will, in such cases, automatically
   1501       run <computeroutput>dsymutil</computeroutput> as necessary to
   1502       bring the debuginfo up to date.  For all practical purposes, if
   1503       you always use <option>--dsymutil=yes</option>, then
   1504       there is never any need to
   1505       run <computeroutput>dsymutil</computeroutput> manually or as part
   1506       of your applications's build system, since Valgrind will run it
   1507       as necessary.</para>
   1508 
   1509       <para>Valgrind will not attempt to
   1510       run <computeroutput>dsymutil</computeroutput> on any 
   1511       executable or library in
   1512       <computeroutput>/usr/</computeroutput>,
   1513       <computeroutput>/bin/</computeroutput>,
   1514       <computeroutput>/sbin/</computeroutput>,
   1515       <computeroutput>/opt/</computeroutput>,
   1516       <computeroutput>/sw/</computeroutput>,
   1517       <computeroutput>/System/</computeroutput>,
   1518       <computeroutput>/Library/</computeroutput> or
   1519       <computeroutput>/Applications/</computeroutput>
   1520       since <computeroutput>dsymutil</computeroutput> will always fail
   1521       in such situations.  It fails both because the debuginfo for
   1522       such pre-installed system components is not available anywhere,
   1523       and also because it would require write privileges in those
   1524       directories.</para>
   1525 
   1526       <para>Be careful when
   1527       using <option>--dsymutil=yes</option>, since it will
   1528       cause pre-existing <computeroutput>.dSYM</computeroutput>
   1529       directories to be silently deleted and re-created.  Also note that
   1530       <computeroutput>dsymutil</computeroutput> is quite slow, sometimes
   1531       excessively so.</para>
   1532     </listitem>
   1533   </varlistentry>
   1534 
   1535   <varlistentry id="opt.max-stackframe" xreflabel="--max-stackframe">
   1536     <term>
   1537       <option><![CDATA[--max-stackframe=<number> [default: 2000000] ]]></option>
   1538     </term>
   1539     <listitem>
   1540       <para>The maximum size of a stack frame.  If the stack pointer moves by
   1541       more than this amount then Valgrind will assume that
   1542       the program is switching to a different stack.</para>
   1543 
   1544       <para>You may need to use this option if your program has large
   1545       stack-allocated arrays.  Valgrind keeps track of your program's
   1546       stack pointer.  If it changes by more than the threshold amount,
   1547       Valgrind assumes your program is switching to a different stack,
   1548       and Memcheck behaves differently than it would for a stack pointer
   1549       change smaller than the threshold.  Usually this heuristic works
   1550       well.  However, if your program allocates large structures on the
   1551       stack, this heuristic will be fooled, and Memcheck will
   1552       subsequently report large numbers of invalid stack accesses.  This
   1553       option allows you to change the threshold to a different
   1554       value.</para>
   1555 
   1556       <para>You should only consider use of this option if Valgrind's
   1557       debug output directs you to do so.  In that case it will tell you
   1558       the new threshold you should specify.</para>
   1559 
   1560       <para>In general, allocating large structures on the stack is a
   1561       bad idea, because you can easily run out of stack space,
   1562       especially on systems with limited memory or which expect to
   1563       support large numbers of threads each with a small stack, and also
   1564       because the error checking performed by Memcheck is more effective
   1565       for heap-allocated data than for stack-allocated data.  If you
   1566       have to use this option, you may wish to consider rewriting your
   1567       code to allocate on the heap rather than on the stack.</para>
   1568     </listitem>
   1569   </varlistentry>
   1570 
   1571   <varlistentry id="opt.main-stacksize" xreflabel="--main-stacksize">
   1572     <term>
   1573       <option><![CDATA[--main-stacksize=<number>
   1574                [default: use current 'ulimit' value] ]]></option>
   1575     </term>
   1576     <listitem>
   1577       <para>Specifies the size of the main thread's stack.</para>
   1578 
   1579       <para>To simplify its memory management, Valgrind reserves all
   1580       required space for the main thread's stack at startup.  That
   1581       means it needs to know the required stack size at
   1582       startup.</para>
   1583 
   1584       <para>By default, Valgrind uses the current "ulimit" value for
   1585       the stack size, or 16 MB, whichever is lower.  In many cases
   1586       this gives a stack size in the range 8 to 16 MB, which almost
   1587       never overflows for most applications.</para>
   1588 
   1589       <para>If you need a larger total stack size,
   1590       use <option>--main-stacksize</option> to specify it.  Only set
   1591       it as high as you need, since reserving far more space than you
   1592       need (that is, hundreds of megabytes more than you need)
   1593       constrains Valgrind's memory allocators and may reduce the total
   1594       amount of memory that Valgrind can use.  This is only really of
   1595       significance on 32-bit machines.</para>
   1596 
   1597       <para>On Linux, you may request a stack of size up to 2GB.
   1598       Valgrind will stop with a diagnostic message if the stack cannot
   1599       be allocated.</para>
   1600 
   1601       <para><option>--main-stacksize</option> only affects the stack
   1602       size for the program's initial thread.  It has no bearing on the
   1603       size of thread stacks, as Valgrind does not allocate
   1604       those.</para>
   1605 
   1606       <para>You may need to use both <option>--main-stacksize</option>
   1607       and <option>--max-stackframe</option> together.  It is important
   1608       to understand that <option>--main-stacksize</option> sets the
   1609       maximum total stack size,
   1610       whilst <option>--max-stackframe</option> specifies the largest
   1611       size of any one stack frame.  You will have to work out
   1612       the <option>--main-stacksize</option> value for yourself
   1613       (usually, if your applications segfaults).  But Valgrind will
   1614       tell you the needed <option>--max-stackframe</option> size, if
   1615       necessary.</para>
   1616 
   1617       <para>As discussed further in the description
   1618       of <option>--max-stackframe</option>, a requirement for a large
   1619       stack is a sign of potential portability problems.  You are best
   1620       advised to place all large data in heap-allocated memory.</para>
   1621     </listitem>
   1622   </varlistentry>
   1623 
   1624   <varlistentry id="opt.max-threads" xreflabel="--max-threads">
   1625     <term>
   1626       <option><![CDATA[--max-threads=<number> [default: 500] ]]></option>
   1627     </term>
   1628     <listitem>
   1629       <para>By default, Valgrind can handle to up to 500 threads.
   1630       Occasionally, that number is too small. Use this option to
   1631       provide a different limit. E.g.
   1632       <computeroutput>--max-threads=3000</computeroutput>.
   1633       </para>
   1634     </listitem>
   1635   </varlistentry>
   1636 
   1637 </variablelist>
   1638 <!-- end of xi:include in the manpage -->
   1639 
   1640 </sect2>
   1641 
   1642 
   1643 <sect2 id="manual-core.mallocopts" xreflabel="malloc-related Options">
   1644 <title>malloc-related Options</title>
   1645 
   1646 <!-- start of xi:include in the manpage -->
   1647 <para id="malloc-related.opts.para">For tools that use their own version of
   1648 <computeroutput>malloc</computeroutput> (e.g. Memcheck,
   1649 Massif, Helgrind, DRD), the following options apply.</para>
   1650 
   1651 <variablelist id="malloc-related.opts.list">
   1652 
   1653   <varlistentry id="opt.alignment" xreflabel="--alignment">
   1654     <term>
   1655       <option><![CDATA[--alignment=<number> [default: 8 or 16, depending on the platform] ]]></option>
   1656     </term>
   1657     <listitem>
   1658       <para>By default Valgrind's <function>malloc</function>,
   1659       <function>realloc</function>, etc, return a block whose starting
   1660       address is 8-byte aligned or 16-byte aligned (the value depends on the
   1661       platform and matches the platform default).  This option allows you to
   1662       specify a different alignment.  The supplied value must be greater
   1663       than or equal to the default, less than or equal to 4096, and must be
   1664       a power of two.</para>
   1665     </listitem>
   1666   </varlistentry>
   1667 
   1668   <varlistentry id="opt.redzone-size" xreflabel="--redzone-size">
   1669     <term>
   1670       <option><![CDATA[--redzone-size=<number> [default: depends on the tool] ]]></option>
   1671     </term>
   1672     <listitem>
   1673       <para> Valgrind's <function>malloc, realloc,</function> etc, add
   1674       padding blocks before and after each heap block allocated by the
   1675       program being run. Such padding blocks are called redzones.  The
   1676       default value for the redzone size depends on the tool.  For
   1677       example, Memcheck adds and protects a minimum of 16 bytes before
   1678       and after each block allocated by the client.  This allows it to
   1679       detect block underruns or overruns of up to 16 bytes.
   1680       </para>
   1681       <para>Increasing the redzone size makes it possible to detect
   1682       overruns of larger distances, but increases the amount of memory
   1683       used by Valgrind.  Decreasing the redzone size will reduce the
   1684       memory needed by Valgrind but also reduces the chances of
   1685       detecting over/underruns, so is not recommended.</para>
   1686     </listitem>
   1687   </varlistentry>
   1688 
   1689 </variablelist>
   1690 <!-- end of xi:include in the manpage -->
   1691 
   1692 </sect2>
   1693 
   1694 
   1695 <sect2 id="manual-core.rareopts" xreflabel="Uncommon Options">
   1696 <title>Uncommon Options</title>
   1697 
   1698 <!-- start of xi:include in the manpage -->
   1699 <para id="uncommon.opts.para">These options apply to all tools, as they
   1700 affect certain obscure workings of the Valgrind core.  Most people won't
   1701 need to use them.</para>
   1702 
   1703 <variablelist id="uncommon.opts.list">
   1704 
   1705   <varlistentry id="opt.smc-check" xreflabel="--smc-check">
   1706     <term>
   1707       <option><![CDATA[--smc-check=<none|stack|all|all-non-file>
   1708       [default: all-non-file for x86/amd64/s390x, stack for other archs] ]]></option>
   1709     </term>
   1710     <listitem>
   1711       <para>This option controls Valgrind's detection of self-modifying
   1712        code.  If no checking is done, when a program executes some code, then
   1713        overwrites it with new code, and executes the new code, Valgrind will
   1714        continue to execute the translations it made for the old code.  This
   1715        will likely lead to incorrect behaviour and/or crashes.</para>
   1716       <para>For "modern" architectures -- anything that's not x86,
   1717         amd64 or s390x -- the default is <varname>stack</varname>.
   1718         This is because a correct program must take explicit action
   1719         to reestablish D-I cache coherence following code
   1720         modification.  Valgrind observes and honours such actions,
   1721         with the result that self-modifying code is transparently
   1722         handled with zero extra cost.</para>
   1723        <para>For x86, amd64 and s390x, the program is not required to
   1724         notify the hardware of required D-I coherence syncing.  Hence
   1725         the default is <varname>all-non-file</varname>, which covers
   1726         the normal case of generating code into an anonymous
   1727         (non-file-backed) mmap'd area.</para>
   1728        <para>The meanings of the four available settings are as
   1729         follows.  No detection (<varname>none</varname>),
   1730         detect self-modifying code
   1731         on the stack (which is used by GCC to implement nested
   1732         functions) (<varname>stack</varname>), detect self-modifying code
   1733         everywhere (<varname>all</varname>), and detect
   1734         self-modifying code everywhere except in file-backed
   1735         mappings (<varname>all-non-file</varname>).</para>
   1736        <para>Running with <varname>all</varname> will slow Valgrind
   1737         down noticeably.  Running with <varname>none</varname> will
   1738         rarely speed things up, since very little code gets
   1739         dynamically generated in most programs.  The
   1740         <function>VALGRIND_DISCARD_TRANSLATIONS</function> client
   1741         request is an alternative to <option>--smc-check=all</option>
   1742         and <option>--smc-check=all-non-file</option>
   1743         that requires more programmer effort but allows Valgrind to run
   1744         your program faster, by telling it precisely when translations
   1745         need to be re-made.
   1746         <!-- commented out because it causes broken links in the man page
   1747         ;  see <xref
   1748         linkend="manual-core-adv.clientreq"/> for more details.
   1749         -->
   1750         </para>
   1751       <para><option>--smc-check=all-non-file</option> provides a
   1752        cheaper but more limited version
   1753        of <option>--smc-check=all</option>.  It adds checks to any
   1754        translations that do not originate from file-backed memory
   1755        mappings.  Typical applications that generate code, for example
   1756        JITs in web browsers, generate code into anonymous mmaped areas,
   1757        whereas the "fixed" code of the browser always lives in
   1758        file-backed mappings.  <option>--smc-check=all-non-file</option>
   1759        takes advantage of this observation, limiting the overhead of
   1760        checking to code which is likely to be JIT generated.</para>
   1761     </listitem>
   1762   </varlistentry>
   1763 
   1764   <varlistentry id="opt.read-inline-info" xreflabel="--read-inline-info">
   1765     <term>
   1766       <option><![CDATA[--read-inline-info=<yes|no> [default: see below] ]]></option>
   1767     </term>
   1768     <listitem>
   1769       <para>When enabled, Valgrind will read information about inlined
   1770       function calls from DWARF3 debug info.  This slows Valgrind
   1771       startup and makes it use more memory (typically for each inlined
   1772       piece of code, 6 words and space for the function name), but it
   1773       results in more descriptive stacktraces.  For the 3.10.0
   1774       release, this functionality is enabled by default only for Linux,
   1775       Android and Solaris targets and only for the tools Memcheck, Helgrind
   1776       and DRD.  Here is an example of some stacktraces with
   1777       <option>--read-inline-info=no</option>:
   1778 </para>
   1779 <programlisting><![CDATA[
   1780 ==15380== Conditional jump or move depends on uninitialised value(s)
   1781 ==15380==    at 0x80484EA: main (inlinfo.c:6)
   1782 ==15380== 
   1783 ==15380== Conditional jump or move depends on uninitialised value(s)
   1784 ==15380==    at 0x8048550: fun_noninline (inlinfo.c:6)
   1785 ==15380==    by 0x804850E: main (inlinfo.c:34)
   1786 ==15380== 
   1787 ==15380== Conditional jump or move depends on uninitialised value(s)
   1788 ==15380==    at 0x8048520: main (inlinfo.c:6)
   1789 ]]></programlisting>
   1790       <para>And here are the same errors with
   1791       <option>--read-inline-info=yes</option>:</para>
   1792 <programlisting><![CDATA[
   1793 ==15377== Conditional jump or move depends on uninitialised value(s)
   1794 ==15377==    at 0x80484EA: fun_d (inlinfo.c:6)
   1795 ==15377==    by 0x80484EA: fun_c (inlinfo.c:14)
   1796 ==15377==    by 0x80484EA: fun_b (inlinfo.c:20)
   1797 ==15377==    by 0x80484EA: fun_a (inlinfo.c:26)
   1798 ==15377==    by 0x80484EA: main (inlinfo.c:33)
   1799 ==15377== 
   1800 ==15377== Conditional jump or move depends on uninitialised value(s)
   1801 ==15377==    at 0x8048550: fun_d (inlinfo.c:6)
   1802 ==15377==    by 0x8048550: fun_noninline (inlinfo.c:41)
   1803 ==15377==    by 0x804850E: main (inlinfo.c:34)
   1804 ==15377== 
   1805 ==15377== Conditional jump or move depends on uninitialised value(s)
   1806 ==15377==    at 0x8048520: fun_d (inlinfo.c:6)
   1807 ==15377==    by 0x8048520: main (inlinfo.c:35)
   1808 ]]></programlisting>
   1809     </listitem>
   1810   </varlistentry>
   1811 
   1812   <varlistentry id="opt.read-var-info" xreflabel="--read-var-info">
   1813     <term>
   1814       <option><![CDATA[--read-var-info=<yes|no> [default: no] ]]></option>
   1815     </term>
   1816     <listitem>
   1817       <para>When enabled, Valgrind will read information about
   1818       variable types and locations from DWARF3 debug info.
   1819       This slows Valgrind startup significantly and makes it use significantly
   1820       more memory, but for the tools that can take advantage of it (Memcheck,
   1821       Helgrind, DRD) it can result in more precise error messages.  For example,
   1822       here are some standard errors issued by Memcheck:</para>
   1823 <programlisting><![CDATA[
   1824 ==15363== Uninitialised byte(s) found during client check request
   1825 ==15363==    at 0x80484A9: croak (varinfo1.c:28)
   1826 ==15363==    by 0x8048544: main (varinfo1.c:55)
   1827 ==15363==  Address 0x80497f7 is 7 bytes inside data symbol "global_i2"
   1828 ==15363== 
   1829 ==15363== Uninitialised byte(s) found during client check request
   1830 ==15363==    at 0x80484A9: croak (varinfo1.c:28)
   1831 ==15363==    by 0x8048550: main (varinfo1.c:56)
   1832 ==15363==  Address 0xbea0d0cc is on thread 1's stack
   1833 ==15363==  in frame #1, created by main (varinfo1.c:45)
   1834 ]]></programlisting>
   1835 
   1836       <para>And here are the same errors with
   1837       <option>--read-var-info=yes</option>:</para>
   1838 
   1839 <programlisting><![CDATA[
   1840 ==15370== Uninitialised byte(s) found during client check request
   1841 ==15370==    at 0x80484A9: croak (varinfo1.c:28)
   1842 ==15370==    by 0x8048544: main (varinfo1.c:55)
   1843 ==15370==  Location 0x80497f7 is 0 bytes inside global_i2[7],
   1844 ==15370==  a global variable declared at varinfo1.c:41
   1845 ==15370== 
   1846 ==15370== Uninitialised byte(s) found during client check request
   1847 ==15370==    at 0x80484A9: croak (varinfo1.c:28)
   1848 ==15370==    by 0x8048550: main (varinfo1.c:56)
   1849 ==15370==  Location 0xbeb4a0cc is 0 bytes inside local var "local"
   1850 ==15370==  declared at varinfo1.c:46, in frame #1 of thread 1
   1851 ]]></programlisting>
   1852     </listitem>
   1853   </varlistentry>
   1854 
   1855   <varlistentry id="opt.vgdb-poll" xreflabel="--vgdb-poll">
   1856     <term>
   1857       <option><![CDATA[--vgdb-poll=<number> [default: 5000] ]]></option>
   1858     </term>
   1859     <listitem>
   1860       <para> As part of its main loop, the Valgrind scheduler will
   1861       poll to check if some activity (such as an external command or
   1862       some input from a gdb) has to be handled by gdbserver.  This
   1863       activity poll will be done after having run the given number of
   1864       basic blocks (or slightly more than the given number of basic
   1865       blocks). This poll is quite cheap so the default value is set
   1866       relatively low. You might further decrease this value if vgdb
   1867       cannot use ptrace system call to interrupt Valgrind if all
   1868       threads are (most of the time) blocked in a system call.
   1869       </para>
   1870     </listitem>
   1871   </varlistentry>
   1872 
   1873   <varlistentry id="opt.vgdb-shadow-registers" xreflabel="--vgdb-shadow-registers">
   1874     <term>
   1875       <option><![CDATA[--vgdb-shadow-registers=no|yes [default: no] ]]></option>
   1876     </term>
   1877     <listitem>
   1878       <para> When activated, gdbserver will expose the Valgrind shadow registers
   1879       to GDB. With this, the value of the Valgrind shadow registers can be examined
   1880       or changed using GDB. Exposing shadow registers only works with GDB version
   1881       7.1 or later.
   1882       </para>
   1883     </listitem>
   1884   </varlistentry>
   1885 
   1886   <varlistentry id="opt.vgdb-prefix" xreflabel="--vgdb-prefix">
   1887     <term>
   1888       <option><![CDATA[--vgdb-prefix=<prefix> [default: /tmp/vgdb-pipe] ]]></option>
   1889     </term>
   1890     <listitem>
   1891       <para> To communicate with gdb/vgdb, the Valgrind gdbserver
   1892       creates 3 files (2 named FIFOs and a mmap shared memory
   1893       file). The prefix option controls the directory and prefix for
   1894       the creation of these files.
   1895       </para>
   1896     </listitem>
   1897   </varlistentry>
   1898 
   1899   <varlistentry id="opt.run-libc-freeres" xreflabel="--run-libc-freeres">
   1900     <term>
   1901       <option><![CDATA[--run-libc-freeres=<yes|no> [default: yes] ]]></option>
   1902     </term>
   1903     <listitem>
   1904       <para>This option is only relevant when running Valgrind on Linux.</para>
   1905 
   1906       <para>The GNU C library (<function>libc.so</function>), which is
   1907       used by all programs, may allocate memory for its own uses.
   1908       Usually it doesn't bother to free that memory when the program
   1909       ends&mdash;there would be no point, since the Linux kernel reclaims
   1910       all process resources when a process exits anyway, so it would
   1911       just slow things down.</para>
   1912 
   1913       <para>The glibc authors realised that this behaviour causes leak
   1914       checkers, such as Valgrind, to falsely report leaks in glibc, when
   1915       a leak check is done at exit.  In order to avoid this, they
   1916       provided a routine called <function>__libc_freeres</function>
   1917       specifically to make glibc release all memory it has allocated.
   1918       Memcheck therefore tries to run
   1919       <function>__libc_freeres</function> at exit.</para>
   1920 
   1921       <para>Unfortunately, in some very old versions of glibc,
   1922       <function>__libc_freeres</function> is sufficiently buggy to cause
   1923       segmentation faults.  This was particularly noticeable on Red Hat
   1924       7.1.  So this option is provided in order to inhibit the run of
   1925       <function>__libc_freeres</function>.  If your program seems to run
   1926       fine on Valgrind, but segfaults at exit, you may find that
   1927       <option>--run-libc-freeres=no</option> fixes that, although at the
   1928       cost of possibly falsely reporting space leaks in
   1929       <filename>libc.so</filename>.</para>
   1930     </listitem>
   1931   </varlistentry>
   1932 
   1933   <varlistentry id="opt.sim-hints" xreflabel="--sim-hints">
   1934     <term>
   1935       <option><![CDATA[--sim-hints=hint1,hint2,... ]]></option>
   1936     </term>
   1937     <listitem>
   1938       <para>Pass miscellaneous hints to Valgrind which slightly modify
   1939       the simulated behaviour in nonstandard or dangerous ways, possibly
   1940       to help the simulation of strange features.  By default no hints
   1941       are enabled.  Use with caution!  Currently known hints are:</para>
   1942 
   1943       <itemizedlist>
   1944         <listitem>
   1945           <para><option>lax-ioctls: </option> Be very lax about ioctl
   1946           handling; the only assumption is that the size is
   1947           correct. Doesn't require the full buffer to be initialised
   1948           when writing.  Without this, using some device drivers with a
   1949           large number of strange ioctl commands becomes very
   1950           tiresome.</para>
   1951         </listitem>
   1952 
   1953         <listitem>
   1954           <para><option>fuse-compatible: </option> Enable special
   1955             handling for certain system calls that may block in a FUSE
   1956             file-system.  This may be necessary when running Valgrind
   1957             on a multi-threaded program that uses one thread to manage
   1958             a FUSE file-system and another thread to access that
   1959             file-system.
   1960           </para>
   1961         </listitem>
   1962 
   1963         <listitem>
   1964           <para><option>enable-outer: </option> Enable some special
   1965           magic needed when the program being run is itself
   1966           Valgrind.</para>
   1967         </listitem>
   1968 
   1969         <listitem>
   1970           <para><option>no-inner-prefix: </option> Disable printing
   1971           a prefix <option>&gt;</option> in front of each stdout or
   1972           stderr output line in an inner Valgrind being run by an
   1973           outer Valgrind. This is useful when running Valgrind
   1974           regression tests in an outer/inner setup. Note that the
   1975           prefix <option>&gt;</option> will always be printed in
   1976           front of the inner debug logging lines.</para>
   1977         </listitem>
   1978         <listitem>
   1979           <para><option>no-nptl-pthread-stackcache: </option>
   1980             This hint is only relevant when running Valgrind on Linux.</para>
   1981 
   1982           <para>The GNU glibc pthread library
   1983             (<function>libpthread.so</function>), which is used by
   1984             pthread programs, maintains a cache of pthread stacks.
   1985             When a pthread terminates, the memory used for the pthread
   1986             stack and some thread local storage related data structure
   1987             are not always directly released.  This memory is kept in
   1988             a cache (up to a certain size), and is re-used if a new
   1989             thread is started.</para>
   1990 
   1991           <para>This cache causes the helgrind tool to report some
   1992             false positive race condition errors on this cached
   1993             memory, as helgrind does not understand the internal glibc
   1994             cache synchronisation primitives. So, when using helgrind,
   1995             disabling the cache helps to avoid false positive race
   1996             conditions, in particular when using thread local storage
   1997             variables (e.g. variables using the
   1998             <function>__thread</function> qualifier).</para>
   1999 
   2000           <para>When using the memcheck tool, disabling the cache
   2001             ensures the memory used by glibc to handle __thread
   2002             variables is directly released when a thread
   2003             terminates.</para>
   2004 
   2005           <para>Note: Valgrind disables the cache using some internal
   2006             knowledge of the glibc stack cache implementation and by
   2007             examining the debug information of the pthread
   2008             library. This technique is thus somewhat fragile and might
   2009             not work for all glibc versions. This has been succesfully
   2010             tested with various glibc versions (e.g. 2.11, 2.16, 2.18)
   2011             on various platforms.</para>
   2012         </listitem>
   2013         <listitem>
   2014           <para><option>lax-doors: </option> (Solaris only) Be very lax
   2015           about door syscall handling over unrecognised door file
   2016           descriptors. Does not require that full buffer is initialised
   2017           when writing. Without this, programs using libdoor(3LIB)
   2018           functionality with completely proprietary semantics may report
   2019           large number of false positives.</para>
   2020         </listitem>
   2021       </itemizedlist>
   2022     </listitem>
   2023   </varlistentry>
   2024 
   2025   <varlistentry id="opt.fair-sched" xreflabel="--fair-sched">
   2026     <term>
   2027       <option><![CDATA[--fair-sched=<no|yes|try>    [default: no] ]]></option>
   2028     </term>
   2029 
   2030     <listitem> <para>The <option>--fair-sched</option> option controls
   2031       the locking mechanism used by Valgrind to serialise thread
   2032       execution.  The locking mechanism controls the way the threads
   2033       are scheduled, and different settings give different trade-offs
   2034       between fairness and performance. For more details about the
   2035       Valgrind thread serialisation scheme and its impact on
   2036       performance and thread scheduling, see
   2037       <xref linkend="&vg-pthreads-perf-sched-id;"/>.</para>
   2038 
   2039       <itemizedlist>
   2040         <listitem> <para>The value <option>--fair-sched=yes</option>
   2041           activates a fair scheduler.  In short, if multiple threads are
   2042           ready to run, the threads will be scheduled in a round robin
   2043           fashion.  This mechanism is not available on all platforms or
   2044           Linux versions.  If not available,
   2045           using <option>--fair-sched=yes</option> will cause Valgrind to
   2046           terminate with an error.</para>
   2047         <para>You may find this setting improves overall
   2048           responsiveness if you are running an interactive
   2049           multithreaded program, for example a web browser, on
   2050           Valgrind.</para>
   2051         </listitem>
   2052         
   2053         <listitem> <para>The value <option>--fair-sched=try</option>
   2054           activates fair scheduling if available on the
   2055           platform.  Otherwise, it will automatically fall back
   2056           to <option>--fair-sched=no</option>.</para>
   2057         </listitem>
   2058         
   2059         <listitem> <para>The value <option>--fair-sched=no</option> activates
   2060           a scheduler which does not guarantee fairness
   2061           between threads ready to run, but which in general gives the
   2062          highest performance.</para>
   2063         </listitem>
   2064       </itemizedlist>
   2065     </listitem>
   2066 
   2067   </varlistentry>
   2068 
   2069   <varlistentry id="opt.kernel-variant" xreflabel="--kernel-variant">
   2070     <term>
   2071       <option>--kernel-variant=variant1,variant2,...</option>
   2072     </term>
   2073     <listitem>
   2074       <para>Handle system calls and ioctls arising from minor variants
   2075       of the default kernel for this platform.  This is useful for
   2076       running on hacked kernels or with kernel modules which support
   2077       nonstandard ioctls, for example.  Use with caution.  If you don't
   2078       understand what this option does then you almost certainly don't
   2079       need it.  Currently known variants are:</para>
   2080       <itemizedlist>
   2081         <listitem>
   2082           <para><option>bproc</option>: support the
   2083             <function>sys_broc</function> system call on x86.  This is for
   2084             running on BProc, which is a minor variant of standard Linux which
   2085             is sometimes used for building clusters.
   2086           </para>
   2087         </listitem>
   2088         <listitem>
   2089           <para><option>android-no-hw-tls</option>: some
   2090           versions of the Android emulator for ARM do not provide a
   2091           hardware TLS (thread-local state) register, and Valgrind
   2092           crashes at startup.  Use this variant to select software
   2093           support for TLS.
   2094           </para>
   2095         </listitem>
   2096         <listitem>
   2097           <para><option>android-gpu-sgx5xx</option>: use this to
   2098           support handling of proprietary ioctls for the PowerVR SGX
   2099           5XX series of GPUs on Android devices.  Failure to select
   2100           this does not cause stability problems, but may cause
   2101           Memcheck to report false errors after the program performs
   2102           GPU-specific ioctls.
   2103           </para>
   2104         </listitem>
   2105         <listitem>
   2106           <para><option>android-gpu-adreno3xx</option>: similarly, use
   2107           this to support handling of proprietary ioctls for the
   2108           Qualcomm Adreno 3XX series of GPUs on Android devices.
   2109           </para>
   2110         </listitem>
   2111       </itemizedlist>
   2112     </listitem>
   2113   </varlistentry>
   2114 
   2115   <varlistentry id="opt.merge-recursive-frames" xreflabel="--merge-recursive-frames">
   2116     <term>
   2117       <option><![CDATA[--merge-recursive-frames=<number> [default: 0] ]]></option>
   2118     </term>
   2119     <listitem>
   2120       <para>Some recursive algorithms, for example balanced binary
   2121       tree implementations, create many different stack traces, each
   2122       containing cycles of calls.  A cycle is defined as two identical
   2123       program counter values separated by zero or more other program
   2124       counter values.  Valgrind may then use a lot of memory to store
   2125       all these stack traces.  This is a poor use of memory
   2126       considering that such stack traces contain repeated
   2127       uninteresting recursive calls instead of more interesting
   2128       information such as the function that has initiated the
   2129       recursive call.
   2130       </para>
   2131       <para>The option <option>--merge-recursive-frames=&lt;number&gt;</option>
   2132       instructs Valgrind to detect and merge recursive call cycles
   2133       having a size of up to <option>&lt;number&gt;</option>
   2134       frames. When such a cycle is detected, Valgrind records the
   2135       cycle in the stack trace as a unique program counter.
   2136       </para>
   2137       <para>
   2138       The value 0 (the default) causes no recursive call merging.
   2139       A value of 1 will cause stack traces of simple recursive algorithms
   2140       (for example, a factorial implementation) to be collapsed.
   2141       A value of 2 will usually be needed to collapse stack traces produced
   2142       by recursive algorithms such as binary trees, quick sort, etc.
   2143       Higher values might be needed for more complex recursive algorithms.
   2144       </para>
   2145       <para>Note: recursive calls are detected by analysis of program
   2146       counter values.  They are not detected by looking at function
   2147       names.</para>
   2148    </listitem>
   2149   </varlistentry>
   2150 
   2151   <varlistentry id="opt.num-transtab-sectors" xreflabel="--num-transtab-sectors">
   2152     <term>
   2153       <option><![CDATA[--num-transtab-sectors=<number> [default: 6
   2154       for Android platforms, 16 for all others] ]]></option>
   2155     </term>
   2156     <listitem>
   2157       <para>Valgrind translates and instruments your program's machine
   2158       code in small fragments (basic blocks). The translations are stored in a
   2159       translation cache that is divided into a number of sections
   2160       (sectors). If the cache is full, the sector containing the
   2161       oldest translations is emptied and reused. If these old
   2162       translations are needed again, Valgrind must re-translate and
   2163       re-instrument the corresponding machine code, which is
   2164       expensive.  If the "executed instructions" working set of a
   2165       program is big, increasing the number of sectors may improve
   2166       performance by reducing the number of re-translations needed.
   2167       Sectors are allocated on demand.  Once allocated, a sector can
   2168       never be freed, and occupies considerable space, depending on the tool
   2169       and the value of <option>--avg-transtab-entry-size</option>
   2170       (about 40 MB per sector for Memcheck).  Use the
   2171       option <option>--stats=yes</option> to obtain precise
   2172       information about the memory used by a sector and the allocation
   2173       and recycling of sectors.</para>
   2174    </listitem>
   2175   </varlistentry>
   2176 
   2177   <varlistentry id="opt.avg-transtab-entry-size" xreflabel="--avg-transtab-entry-size">
   2178     <term>
   2179       <option><![CDATA[--avg-transtab-entry-size=<number> [default: 0,
   2180       meaning use tool provided default] ]]></option>
   2181     </term>
   2182     <listitem>
   2183       <para>Average size of translated basic block. This average size
   2184       is used to dimension the size of a sector.
   2185       Each tool provides a default value to be used.
   2186       If this default value is too small, the translation sectors
   2187       will become full too quickly. If this default value is too big,
   2188       a significant part of the translation sector memory will be unused.
   2189       Note that the average size of a basic block translation depends
   2190       on the tool, and might depend on tool options. For example,
   2191       the memcheck option <option>--track-origins=yes</option>
   2192       increases the size of the basic block translations.
   2193       Use <option>--avg-transtab-entry-size</option> to tune the size of the
   2194       sectors, either to gain memory or to avoid too many retranslations.
   2195       </para>
   2196    </listitem>
   2197   </varlistentry>
   2198 
   2199   <varlistentry id="opt.aspace-minaddr" xreflabel="----aspace-minaddr">
   2200     <term>
   2201       <option><![CDATA[--aspace-minaddr=<address> [default: depends
   2202       on the platform] ]]></option>
   2203     </term>
   2204     <listitem>
   2205       <para>To avoid potential conflicts with some system libraries,
   2206       Valgrind does not use the address space
   2207       below <option>--aspace-minaddr</option> value, keeping it
   2208       reserved in case a library specifically requests memory in this
   2209       region.  So, some "pessimistic" value is guessed by Valgrind
   2210       depending on the platform. On linux, by default, Valgrind avoids
   2211       using the first 64MB even if typically there is no conflict in
   2212       this complete zone.  You can use the
   2213       option <option>--aspace-minaddr</option> to have your memory
   2214       hungry application benefitting from more of this lower memory.
   2215       On the other hand, if you encounter a conflict, increasing
   2216       aspace-minaddr value might solve it. Conflicts will typically
   2217       manifest themselves with mmap failures in the low range of the
   2218       address space. The
   2219       provided <computeroutput>address</computeroutput> must be page
   2220       aligned and must be equal or bigger to 0x1000 (4KB). To find the
   2221       default value on your platform, do something such as
   2222       <computeroutput>valgrind -d -d date 2&gt;&amp;1 | grep -i minaddr</computeroutput>.
   2223       Values lower than 0x10000 (64KB) are known to create problems
   2224       on some distributions.
   2225       </para>
   2226    </listitem>
   2227   </varlistentry>
   2228 
   2229   <varlistentry id="opt.valgrind-stacksize" xreflabel="----valgrind-stacksize">
   2230     <term>
   2231       <option><![CDATA[--valgrind-stacksize=<number> [default: 1MB] ]]></option>
   2232     </term>
   2233     <listitem>
   2234       <para>For each thread, Valgrind needs its own 'private' stack.
   2235       The default size for these stacks is largely dimensioned, and so
   2236       should be sufficient in most cases.  In case the size is too small,
   2237       Valgrind will segfault. Before segfaulting, a warning might be produced
   2238       by Valgrind when approaching the limit.
   2239       </para>
   2240       <para>
   2241       Use the option <option>--valgrind-stacksize</option> if such an (unlikely)
   2242       warning is produced, or Valgrind dies due to a segmentation violation.
   2243       Such segmentation violations have been seen when demangling huge C++
   2244       symbols.
   2245       </para>
   2246       <para>If your application uses many threads and needs a lot of memory, you can
   2247       gain some memory by reducing the size of these Valgrind stacks using
   2248       the option <option>--valgrind-stacksize</option>.
   2249       </para>
   2250    </listitem>
   2251   </varlistentry>
   2252 
   2253   <varlistentry id="opt.show-emwarns" xreflabel="--show-emwarns">
   2254     <term>
   2255       <option><![CDATA[--show-emwarns=<yes|no> [default: no] ]]></option>
   2256     </term>
   2257     <listitem>
   2258       <para>When enabled, Valgrind will emit warnings about its CPU
   2259       emulation in certain cases.  These are usually not
   2260       interesting.</para>
   2261    </listitem>
   2262   </varlistentry>
   2263 
   2264   <varlistentry id="opt.require-text-symbol"
   2265         xreflabel="--require-text-symbol">
   2266     <term>
   2267       <option><![CDATA[--require-text-symbol=:sonamepatt:fnnamepatt]]></option>
   2268     </term>
   2269     <listitem>
   2270       <para>When a shared object whose soname
   2271       matches <varname>sonamepatt</varname> is loaded into the
   2272       process, examine all the text symbols it exports.  If none of
   2273       those match <varname>fnnamepatt</varname>, print an error
   2274       message and abandon the run.  This makes it possible to ensure
   2275       that the run does not continue unless a given shared object
   2276       contains a particular function name.
   2277       </para>
   2278       <para>
   2279       Both <varname>sonamepatt</varname> and
   2280       <varname>fnnamepatt</varname> can be written using the usual
   2281       <varname>?</varname> and <varname>*</varname> wildcards.  For
   2282       example: <varname>":*libc.so*:foo?bar"</varname>.  You may use
   2283       characters other than a colon to separate the two patterns.  It
   2284       is only important that the first character and the separator
   2285       character are the same.  For example, the above example could
   2286       also be written <varname>"Q*libc.so*Qfoo?bar"</varname>.
   2287       Multiple <varname> --require-text-symbol</varname> flags are
   2288       allowed, in which case shared objects that are loaded into
   2289       the process will be checked against all of them.
   2290       </para>
   2291       <para>
   2292       The purpose of this is to support reliable usage of marked-up
   2293       libraries.  For example, suppose we have a version of GCC's
   2294       <varname>libgomp.so</varname> which has been marked up with
   2295       annotations to support Helgrind.  It is only too easy and
   2296       confusing to load the wrong, un-annotated
   2297       <varname>libgomp.so</varname> into the application.  So the idea
   2298       is: add a text symbol in the marked-up library, for
   2299       example <varname>annotated_for_helgrind_3_6</varname>, and then
   2300       give the flag
   2301       <varname>--require-text-symbol=:*libgomp*so*:annotated_for_helgrind_3_6</varname>
   2302       so that when <varname>libgomp.so</varname> is loaded, Valgrind
   2303       scans its symbol table, and if the symbol isn't present the run
   2304       is aborted, rather than continuing silently with the
   2305       un-marked-up library.  Note that you should put the entire flag
   2306       in quotes to stop shells expanding up the <varname>*</varname>
   2307       and <varname>?</varname> wildcards.
   2308       </para>
   2309    </listitem>
   2310   </varlistentry>
   2311 
   2312   <varlistentry id="opt.soname-synonyms"
   2313         xreflabel="--soname-synonyms">
   2314     <term>
   2315       <option><![CDATA[--soname-synonyms=syn1=pattern1,syn2=pattern2,...]]></option>
   2316     </term>
   2317     <listitem>
   2318       <para>When a shared library is loaded, Valgrind checks for 
   2319       functions in the library that must be replaced or wrapped.
   2320       For example, Memcheck replaces all malloc related
   2321       functions (malloc, free, calloc, ...) with its own versions.
   2322       Such replacements are done by default only in shared libraries whose
   2323       soname matches a predefined soname pattern (e.g.
   2324       <varname>libc.so*</varname> on linux).
   2325       By default, no replacement is done for a statically linked
   2326       library or for alternative libraries such as tcmalloc.
   2327       In some cases, the replacements allow
   2328       <option>--soname-synonyms</option> to specify one additional
   2329       synonym pattern, giving flexibility in the replacement. </para>
   2330 
   2331       <para>Currently, this flexibility is only allowed for the
   2332       malloc related functions, using the
   2333       synonym <varname>somalloc</varname>.  This synonym is usable for
   2334       all tools doing standard replacement of malloc related functions
   2335       (e.g. memcheck, massif, drd, helgrind, exp-dhat, exp-sgcheck).
   2336       </para>
   2337 
   2338       <itemizedlist>
   2339         <listitem>
   2340 
   2341           <para>Alternate malloc library: to replace the malloc
   2342           related functions in an alternate library with
   2343           soname <varname>mymalloclib.so</varname>, give the
   2344           option <option>--soname-synonyms=somalloc=mymalloclib.so</option>.
   2345           A pattern can be used to match multiple libraries sonames.
   2346           For
   2347           example, <option>--soname-synonyms=somalloc=*tcmalloc*</option>
   2348           will match the soname of all variants of the tcmalloc library
   2349           (native, debug, profiled, ... tcmalloc variants). </para>
   2350           <para>Note: the soname of a elf shared library can be
   2351           retrieved using the readelf utility. </para>
   2352 
   2353         </listitem>
   2354 
   2355         <listitem>
   2356           <para>Replacements in a statically linked library are done by
   2357           using the <varname>NONE</varname> pattern. For example, if
   2358           you link with <varname>libtcmalloc.a</varname>, memcheck 
   2359           will properly work when you give the
   2360           option <option>--soname-synonyms=somalloc=NONE</option>.  Note
   2361           that a NONE pattern will match the main executable and any
   2362           shared library having no soname. </para>
   2363         </listitem>
   2364 
   2365         <listitem>
   2366           <para>To run a "default" Firefox build for Linux, in which
   2367           JEMalloc is linked in to the main executable,
   2368           use <option>--soname-synonyms=somalloc=NONE</option>.
   2369           </para>
   2370         </listitem>
   2371 
   2372       </itemizedlist>
   2373    </listitem>
   2374   </varlistentry>
   2375 
   2376 
   2377 </variablelist>
   2378 <!-- end of xi:include in the manpage -->
   2379 
   2380 </sect2>
   2381 
   2382 
   2383 <sect2 id="manual-core.debugopts" xreflabel="Debugging Options">
   2384 <title>Debugging Options</title>
   2385 
   2386 <!-- start of xi:include in the manpage -->
   2387 <para id="debug.opts.para">There are also some options for debugging
   2388 Valgrind itself.  You shouldn't need to use them in the normal run of
   2389 things.  If you wish to see the list, use the
   2390 <option>--help-debug</option> option.</para>
   2391 
   2392 <para>If you wish to debug your program rather than debugging
   2393 Valgrind itself, then you should use the options
   2394 <option>--vgdb=yes</option> or <option>--vgdb=full</option>.
   2395 </para>
   2396 
   2397 <!-- end of xi:include in the manpage -->
   2398 
   2399 </sect2>
   2400 
   2401 
   2402 <sect2 id="manual-core.defopts" xreflabel="Setting Default Options">
   2403 <title>Setting Default Options</title>
   2404 
   2405 <para>Note that Valgrind also reads options from three places:</para>
   2406 
   2407   <orderedlist>
   2408    <listitem>
   2409     <para>The file <computeroutput>~/.valgrindrc</computeroutput></para>
   2410    </listitem>
   2411 
   2412    <listitem>
   2413     <para>The environment variable
   2414     <computeroutput>$VALGRIND_OPTS</computeroutput></para>
   2415    </listitem>
   2416 
   2417    <listitem>
   2418     <para>The file <computeroutput>./.valgrindrc</computeroutput></para>
   2419    </listitem>
   2420   </orderedlist>
   2421 
   2422 <para>These are processed in the given order, before the
   2423 command-line options.  Options processed later override those
   2424 processed earlier; for example, options in
   2425 <computeroutput>./.valgrindrc</computeroutput> will take
   2426 precedence over those in
   2427 <computeroutput>~/.valgrindrc</computeroutput>.
   2428 </para>
   2429 
   2430 <para>Please note that the <computeroutput>./.valgrindrc</computeroutput>
   2431 file is ignored if it is marked as world writeable or not owned 
   2432 by the current user. This is because the
   2433 <computeroutput>./.valgrindrc</computeroutput> can contain options that are
   2434 potentially harmful or can be used by a local attacker to execute code under
   2435 your user account.
   2436 </para>
   2437 
   2438 <para>Any tool-specific options put in
   2439 <computeroutput>$VALGRIND_OPTS</computeroutput> or the
   2440 <computeroutput>.valgrindrc</computeroutput> files should be
   2441 prefixed with the tool name and a colon.  For example, if you
   2442 want Memcheck to always do leak checking, you can put the
   2443 following entry in <literal>~/.valgrindrc</literal>:</para>
   2444 
   2445 <programlisting><![CDATA[
   2446 --memcheck:leak-check=yes]]></programlisting>
   2447 
   2448 <para>This will be ignored if any tool other than Memcheck is
   2449 run.  Without the <computeroutput>memcheck:</computeroutput>
   2450 part, this will cause problems if you select other tools that
   2451 don't understand
   2452 <option>--leak-check=yes</option>.</para>
   2453 
   2454 </sect2>
   2455 
   2456 </sect1>
   2457 
   2458 
   2459 
   2460 <sect1 id="manual-core.pthreads" xreflabel="Support for Threads">
   2461 <title>Support for Threads</title>
   2462 
   2463 <para>Threaded programs are fully supported.</para>
   2464 
   2465 <para>The main thing to point out with respect to threaded programs is
   2466 that your program will use the native threading library, but Valgrind
   2467 serialises execution so that only one (kernel) thread is running at a
   2468 time.  This approach avoids the horrible implementation problems of
   2469 implementing a truly multithreaded version of Valgrind, but it does
   2470 mean that threaded apps never use more than one CPU simultaneously,
   2471 even if you have a multiprocessor or multicore machine.</para>
   2472 
   2473 <para>Valgrind doesn't schedule the threads itself.  It merely ensures
   2474 that only one thread runs at once, using a simple locking scheme.  The
   2475 actual thread scheduling remains under control of the OS kernel.  What
   2476 this does mean, though, is that your program will see very different
   2477 scheduling when run on Valgrind than it does when running normally.
   2478 This is both because Valgrind is serialising the threads, and because
   2479 the code runs so much slower than normal.</para>
   2480 
   2481 <para>This difference in scheduling may cause your program to behave
   2482 differently, if you have some kind of concurrency, critical race,
   2483 locking, or similar, bugs.  In that case you might consider using the
   2484 tools Helgrind and/or DRD to track them down.</para>
   2485 
   2486 <para>On Linux, Valgrind also supports direct use of the
   2487 <computeroutput>clone</computeroutput> system call,
   2488 <computeroutput>futex</computeroutput> and so on.
   2489 <computeroutput>clone</computeroutput> is supported where either
   2490 everything is shared (a thread) or nothing is shared (fork-like); partial
   2491 sharing will fail.
   2492 </para>
   2493 
   2494 <!-- Referenced from both the manual and manpage -->
   2495 <sect2 id="&vg-pthreads-perf-sched-id;" xreflabel="&vg-pthreads-perf-sched-label;">
   2496 <title>Scheduling and Multi-Thread Performance</title>
   2497 
   2498 <para>A thread executes code only when it holds the abovementioned
   2499 lock.  After executing some number of instructions, the running thread
   2500 will release the lock.  All threads ready to run will then compete to
   2501 acquire the lock.</para>
   2502 
   2503 <para>The <option>--fair-sched</option> option controls the locking mechanism
   2504 used to serialise thread execution.</para>
   2505 
   2506 <para>The default pipe based locking mechanism
   2507 (<option>--fair-sched=no</option>) is available on all
   2508 platforms.  Pipe based locking does not guarantee fairness between
   2509 threads: it is quite likely that a thread that has just released the
   2510 lock reacquires it immediately, even though other threads are ready to
   2511 run.  When using pipe based locking, different runs of the same
   2512 multithreaded application might give very different thread
   2513 scheduling.</para>
   2514 
   2515 <para>An alternative locking mechanism, based on futexes, is available
   2516 on some platforms.  If available, it is activated
   2517 by <option>--fair-sched=yes</option> or
   2518 <option>--fair-sched=try</option>.  Futex based locking ensures
   2519 fairness (round-robin scheduling) between threads: if multiple threads
   2520 are ready to run, the lock will be given to the thread which first
   2521 requested the lock.  Note that a thread which is blocked in a system
   2522 call (e.g. in a blocking read system call) has not (yet) requested the
   2523 lock: such a thread requests the lock only after the system call is
   2524 finished.</para>
   2525 
   2526 <para> The fairness of the futex based locking produces better
   2527 reproducibility of thread scheduling for different executions of a
   2528 multithreaded application. This better reproducibility is particularly
   2529 helpful when using Helgrind or DRD.</para>
   2530 
   2531 <para>Valgrind's use of thread serialisation implies that only one
   2532 thread at a time may run.  On a multiprocessor/multicore system, the
   2533 running thread is assigned to one of the CPUs by the OS kernel
   2534 scheduler.  When a thread acquires the lock, sometimes the thread will
   2535 be assigned to the same CPU as the thread that just released the
   2536 lock.  Sometimes, the thread will be assigned to another CPU.  When
   2537 using pipe based locking, the thread that just acquired the lock
   2538 will usually be scheduled on the same CPU as the thread that just
   2539 released the lock.  With the futex based mechanism, the thread that
   2540 just acquired the lock will more often be scheduled on another
   2541 CPU.</para>
   2542 
   2543 <para>Valgrind's thread serialisation and CPU assignment by the OS
   2544 kernel scheduler can interact badly with the CPU frequency scaling
   2545 available on many modern CPUs.  To decrease power consumption, the
   2546 frequency of a CPU or core is automatically decreased if the CPU/core
   2547 has not been used recently.  If the OS kernel often assigns the thread
   2548 which just acquired the lock to another CPU/core, it is quite likely
   2549 that this CPU/core is currently at a low frequency.  The frequency of
   2550 this CPU will be increased after some time.  However, during this
   2551 time, the (only) running thread will have run at the low frequency.
   2552 Once this thread has run for some time, it will release the lock.
   2553 Another thread will acquire this lock, and might be scheduled again on
   2554 another CPU whose clock frequency was decreased in the
   2555 meantime.</para>
   2556 
   2557 <para>The futex based locking causes threads to change CPUs/cores more
   2558 often.  So, if CPU frequency scaling is activated, the futex based
   2559 locking might decrease significantly the performance of a
   2560 multithreaded app running under Valgrind.  Performance losses of up to
   2561 50% degradation have been observed, as compared to running on a
   2562 machine for which CPU frequency scaling has been disabled.  The pipe
   2563 based locking locking scheme also interacts badly with CPU frequency
   2564 scaling, with performance losses in the range 10..20% having been
   2565 observed.</para>
   2566 
   2567 <para>To avoid such performance degradation, you should indicate to
   2568 the kernel that all CPUs/cores should always run at maximum clock
   2569 speed.  Depending on your Linux distribution, CPU frequency scaling
   2570 may be controlled using a graphical interface or using command line
   2571 such as
   2572 <computeroutput>cpufreq-selector</computeroutput> or
   2573 <computeroutput>cpufreq-set</computeroutput>.
   2574 </para>
   2575 
   2576 <para>An alternative way to avoid these problems is to tell the
   2577 OS scheduler to tie a Valgrind process to a specific (fixed) CPU using the
   2578 <computeroutput>taskset</computeroutput> command.  This should ensure
   2579 that the selected CPU does not fall below its maximum frequency
   2580 setting so long as any thread of the program has work to do.
   2581 </para>
   2582 
   2583 </sect2>
   2584 
   2585 
   2586 </sect1>
   2587 
   2588 <sect1 id="manual-core.signals" xreflabel="Handling of Signals">
   2589 <title>Handling of Signals</title>
   2590 
   2591 <para>Valgrind has a fairly complete signal implementation.  It should be
   2592 able to cope with any POSIX-compliant use of signals.</para>
   2593  
   2594 <para>If you're using signals in clever ways (for example, catching
   2595 SIGSEGV, modifying page state and restarting the instruction), you're
   2596 probably relying on precise exceptions.  In this case, you will need
   2597 to use <option>--vex-iropt-register-updates=allregs-at-mem-access</option>
   2598 or <option>--vex-iropt-register-updates=allregs-at-each-insn</option>.
   2599 </para>
   2600 
   2601 <para>If your program dies as a result of a fatal core-dumping signal,
   2602 Valgrind will generate its own core file
   2603 (<computeroutput>vgcore.NNNNN</computeroutput>) containing your program's
   2604 state.  You may use this core file for post-mortem debugging with GDB or
   2605 similar.  (Note: it will not generate a core if your core dump size limit is
   2606 0.)  At the time of writing the core dumps do not include all the floating
   2607 point register information.</para>
   2608 
   2609 <para>In the unlikely event that Valgrind itself crashes, the operating system
   2610 will create a core dump in the usual way.</para>
   2611 
   2612 </sect1>
   2613 
   2614 
   2615 
   2616 
   2617 
   2618 
   2619 
   2620 
   2621 <sect1 id="manual-core.install" xreflabel="Building and Installing">
   2622 <title>Building and Installing Valgrind</title>
   2623 
   2624 <para>We use the standard Unix
   2625 <computeroutput>./configure</computeroutput>,
   2626 <computeroutput>make</computeroutput>, <computeroutput>make
   2627 install</computeroutput> mechanism.  Once you have completed 
   2628 <computeroutput>make install</computeroutput> you may then want 
   2629 to run the regression tests
   2630 with <computeroutput>make regtest</computeroutput>.
   2631 </para>
   2632 
   2633 <para>In addition to the usual
   2634 <option>--prefix=/path/to/install/tree</option>, there are three
   2635  options which affect how Valgrind is built:
   2636 <itemizedlist>
   2637 
   2638   <listitem>
   2639     <para><option>--enable-inner</option></para>
   2640     <para>This builds Valgrind with some special magic hacks which make
   2641      it possible to run it on a standard build of Valgrind (what the
   2642      developers call "self-hosting").  Ordinarily you should not use
   2643      this option as various kinds of safety checks are disabled.
   2644    </para>
   2645   </listitem>
   2646 
   2647   <listitem>
   2648     <para><option>--enable-only64bit</option></para>
   2649     <para><option>--enable-only32bit</option></para>
   2650     <para>On 64-bit platforms (amd64-linux, ppc64-linux,
   2651      amd64-darwin), Valgrind is by default built in such a way that
   2652      both 32-bit and 64-bit executables can be run.  Sometimes this
   2653      cleverness is a problem for a variety of reasons.  These two
   2654      options allow for single-target builds in this situation.  If you
   2655      issue both, the configure script will complain.  Note they are
   2656      ignored on 32-bit-only platforms (x86-linux, ppc32-linux,
   2657      arm-linux, x86-darwin).
   2658    </para>
   2659   </listitem>
   2660 
   2661 </itemizedlist>
   2662 </para>
   2663 
   2664 <para>The <computeroutput>configure</computeroutput> script tests
   2665 the version of the X server currently indicated by the current
   2666 <computeroutput>$DISPLAY</computeroutput>.  This is a known bug.
   2667 The intention was to detect the version of the current X
   2668 client libraries, so that correct suppressions could be selected
   2669 for them, but instead the test checks the server version.  This
   2670 is just plain wrong.</para>
   2671 
   2672 <para>If you are building a binary package of Valgrind for
   2673 distribution, please read <literal>README_PACKAGERS</literal>
   2674 <xref linkend="dist.readme-packagers"/>.  It contains some
   2675 important information.</para>
   2676 
   2677 <para>Apart from that, there's not much excitement here.  Let us
   2678 know if you have build problems.</para>
   2679 
   2680 </sect1>
   2681 
   2682 
   2683 
   2684 <sect1 id="manual-core.problems" xreflabel="If You Have Problems">
   2685 <title>If You Have Problems</title>
   2686 
   2687 <para>Contact us at <ulink url="&vg-url;">&vg-url;</ulink>.</para>
   2688 
   2689 <para>See <xref linkend="manual-core.limits"/> for the known
   2690 limitations of Valgrind, and for a list of programs which are
   2691 known not to work on it.</para>
   2692 
   2693 <para>All parts of the system make heavy use of assertions and 
   2694 internal self-checks.  They are permanently enabled, and we have no 
   2695 plans to disable them.  If one of them breaks, please mail us!</para>
   2696 
   2697 <para>If you get an assertion failure
   2698 in <filename>m_mallocfree.c</filename>, this may have happened because
   2699 your program wrote off the end of a heap block, or before its
   2700 beginning, thus corrupting heap metadata.  Valgrind hopefully will have
   2701 emitted a message to that effect before dying in this way.</para>
   2702 
   2703 <para>Read the <xref linkend="FAQ"/> for more advice about common problems, 
   2704 crashes, etc.</para>
   2705 
   2706 </sect1>
   2707 
   2708 
   2709 
   2710 <sect1 id="manual-core.limits" xreflabel="Limitations">
   2711 <title>Limitations</title>
   2712 
   2713 <para>The following list of limitations seems long.  However, most
   2714 programs actually work fine.</para>
   2715 
   2716 <para>Valgrind will run programs on the supported platforms
   2717 subject to the following constraints:</para>
   2718 
   2719  <itemizedlist>
   2720   <listitem>
   2721    <para>On x86 and amd64, there is no support for 3DNow!
   2722    instructions.  If the translator encounters these, Valgrind will
   2723    generate a SIGILL when the instruction is executed.  Apart from
   2724    that, on x86 and amd64, essentially all instructions are supported,
   2725    up to and including AVX and AES in 64-bit mode and SSSE3 in 32-bit
   2726    mode.  32-bit mode does in fact support the bare minimum SSE4
   2727    instructions needed to run programs on MacOSX 10.6 on 32-bit
   2728    targets.
   2729    </para>
   2730   </listitem>
   2731 
   2732   <listitem>
   2733    <para>On ppc32 and ppc64, almost all integer, floating point and
   2734    Altivec instructions are supported.  Specifically: integer and FP
   2735    insns that are mandatory for PowerPC, the "General-purpose
   2736    optional" group (fsqrt, fsqrts, stfiwx), the "Graphics optional"
   2737    group (fre, fres, frsqrte, frsqrtes), and the Altivec (also known
   2738    as VMX) SIMD instruction set, are supported.  Also, instructions
   2739    from the Power ISA 2.05 specification, as present in POWER6 CPUs,
   2740    are supported.</para>
   2741   </listitem>
   2742 
   2743   <listitem>
   2744    <para>On ARM, essentially the entire ARMv7-A instruction set
   2745     is supported, in both ARM and Thumb mode.  ThumbEE and Jazelle are
   2746     not supported.  NEON, VFPv3 and ARMv6 media support is fairly
   2747     complete.
   2748    </para>
   2749   </listitem>
   2750 
   2751   <listitem>
   2752    <para>If your program does its own memory management, rather than
   2753    using malloc/new/free/delete, it should still work, but Memcheck's
   2754    error checking won't be so effective.  If you describe your
   2755    program's memory management scheme using "client requests" (see
   2756    <xref linkend="manual-core-adv.clientreq"/>), Memcheck can do
   2757    better.  Nevertheless, using malloc/new and free/delete is still
   2758    the best approach.</para>
   2759   </listitem>
   2760 
   2761   <listitem>
   2762    <para>Valgrind's signal simulation is not as robust as it could be.
   2763    Basic POSIX-compliant sigaction and sigprocmask functionality is
   2764    supplied, but it's conceivable that things could go badly awry if you
   2765    do weird things with signals.  Workaround: don't.  Programs that do
   2766    non-POSIX signal tricks are in any case inherently unportable, so
   2767    should be avoided if possible.</para>
   2768   </listitem>
   2769 
   2770   <listitem>
   2771    <para>Machine instructions, and system calls, have been implemented
   2772    on demand.  So it's possible, although unlikely, that a program will
   2773    fall over with a message to that effect.  If this happens, please
   2774    report all the details printed out, so we can try and implement the
   2775    missing feature.</para>
   2776   </listitem>
   2777 
   2778   <listitem>
   2779    <para>Memory consumption of your program is majorly increased
   2780    whilst running under Valgrind's Memcheck tool.  This is due to the
   2781    large amount of administrative information maintained behind the
   2782    scenes.  Another cause is that Valgrind dynamically translates the
   2783    original executable.  Translated, instrumented code is 12-18 times
   2784    larger than the original so you can easily end up with 150+ MB of
   2785    translations when running (eg) a web browser.</para>
   2786   </listitem>
   2787 
   2788   <listitem>
   2789    <para>Valgrind can handle dynamically-generated code just fine.  If
   2790    you regenerate code over the top of old code (ie. at the same
   2791    memory addresses), if the code is on the stack Valgrind will
   2792    realise the code has changed, and work correctly.  This is
   2793    necessary to handle the trampolines GCC uses to implemented nested
   2794    functions.  If you regenerate code somewhere other than the stack,
   2795    and you are running on an 32- or 64-bit x86 CPU, you will need to
   2796    use the <option>--smc-check=all</option> option, and Valgrind will
   2797    run more slowly than normal.  Or you can add client requests that
   2798    tell Valgrind when your program has overwritten code.
   2799    </para>
   2800    <para> On other platforms (ARM, PowerPC) Valgrind observes and
   2801    honours the cache invalidation hints that programs are obliged to
   2802    emit to notify new code, and so self-modifying-code support should
   2803    work automatically, without the need
   2804    for <option>--smc-check=all</option>.</para>
   2805   </listitem>
   2806 
   2807   <listitem>
   2808    <para>Valgrind has the following limitations
   2809    in its implementation of x86/AMD64 floating point relative to 
   2810    IEEE754.</para>
   2811 
   2812    <para>Precision: There is no support for 80 bit arithmetic.
   2813    Internally, Valgrind represents all such "long double" numbers in 64
   2814    bits, and so there may be some differences in results.  Whether or
   2815    not this is critical remains to be seen.  Note, the x86/amd64
   2816    fldt/fstpt instructions (read/write 80-bit numbers) are correctly
   2817    simulated, using conversions to/from 64 bits, so that in-memory
   2818    images of 80-bit numbers look correct if anyone wants to see.</para>
   2819 
   2820    <para>The impression observed from many FP regression tests is that
   2821    the accuracy differences aren't significant.  Generally speaking, if
   2822    a program relies on 80-bit precision, there may be difficulties
   2823    porting it to non x86/amd64 platforms which only support 64-bit FP
   2824    precision.  Even on x86/amd64, the program may get different results
   2825    depending on whether it is compiled to use SSE2 instructions (64-bits
   2826    only), or x87 instructions (80-bit).  The net effect is to make FP
   2827    programs behave as if they had been run on a machine with 64-bit IEEE
   2828    floats, for example PowerPC.  On amd64 FP arithmetic is done by
   2829    default on SSE2, so amd64 looks more like PowerPC than x86 from an FP
   2830    perspective, and there are far fewer noticeable accuracy differences
   2831    than with x86.</para>
   2832 
   2833    <para>Rounding: Valgrind does observe the 4 IEEE-mandated rounding
   2834    modes (to nearest, to +infinity, to -infinity, to zero) for the
   2835    following conversions: float to integer, integer to float where
   2836    there is a possibility of loss of precision, and float-to-float
   2837    rounding.  For all other FP operations, only the IEEE default mode
   2838    (round to nearest) is supported.</para>
   2839 
   2840    <para>Numeric exceptions in FP code: IEEE754 defines five types of
   2841    numeric exception that can happen: invalid operation (sqrt of
   2842    negative number, etc), division by zero, overflow, underflow,
   2843    inexact (loss of precision).</para>
   2844 
   2845    <para>For each exception, two courses of action are defined by IEEE754:
   2846    either (1) a user-defined exception handler may be called, or (2) a
   2847    default action is defined, which "fixes things up" and allows the
   2848    computation to proceed without throwing an exception.</para>
   2849 
   2850    <para>Currently Valgrind only supports the default fixup actions.
   2851    Again, feedback on the importance of exception support would be
   2852    appreciated.</para>
   2853 
   2854    <para>When Valgrind detects that the program is trying to exceed any
   2855    of these limitations (setting exception handlers, rounding mode, or
   2856    precision control), it can print a message giving a traceback of
   2857    where this has happened, and continue execution.  This behaviour used
   2858    to be the default, but the messages are annoying and so showing them
   2859    is now disabled by default.  Use <option>--show-emwarns=yes</option> to see
   2860    them.</para>
   2861 
   2862    <para>The above limitations define precisely the IEEE754 'default'
   2863    behaviour: default fixup on all exceptions, round-to-nearest
   2864    operations, and 64-bit precision.</para>
   2865   </listitem>
   2866    
   2867   <listitem>
   2868    <para>Valgrind has the following limitations in
   2869    its implementation of x86/AMD64 SSE2 FP arithmetic, relative to 
   2870    IEEE754.</para>
   2871 
   2872    <para>Essentially the same: no exceptions, and limited observance of
   2873    rounding mode.  Also, SSE2 has control bits which make it treat
   2874    denormalised numbers as zero (DAZ) and a related action, flush
   2875    denormals to zero (FTZ).  Both of these cause SSE2 arithmetic to be
   2876    less accurate than IEEE requires.  Valgrind detects, ignores, and can
   2877    warn about, attempts to enable either mode.</para>
   2878   </listitem>
   2879 
   2880   <listitem>
   2881    <para>Valgrind has the following limitations in
   2882    its implementation of ARM VFPv3 arithmetic, relative to 
   2883    IEEE754.</para>
   2884 
   2885    <para>Essentially the same: no exceptions, and limited observance
   2886    of rounding mode.  Also, switching the VFP unit into vector mode
   2887    will cause Valgrind to abort the program -- it has no way to
   2888    emulate vector uses of VFP at a reasonable performance level.  This
   2889    is no big deal given that non-scalar uses of VFP instructions are
   2890    in any case deprecated.</para>
   2891   </listitem>
   2892 
   2893   <listitem>
   2894    <para>Valgrind has the following limitations
   2895    in its implementation of PPC32 and PPC64 floating point 
   2896    arithmetic, relative to IEEE754.</para>
   2897 
   2898    <para>Scalar (non-Altivec): Valgrind provides a bit-exact emulation of
   2899    all floating point instructions, except for "fre" and "fres", which are
   2900    done more precisely than required by the PowerPC architecture specification.
   2901    All floating point operations observe the current rounding mode.
   2902    </para>
   2903 
   2904    <para>However, fpscr[FPRF] is not set after each operation.  That could
   2905    be done but would give measurable performance overheads, and so far
   2906    no need for it has been found.</para>
   2907 
   2908    <para>As on x86/AMD64, IEEE754 exceptions are not supported: all floating
   2909    point exceptions are handled using the default IEEE fixup actions.
   2910    Valgrind detects, ignores, and can warn about, attempts to unmask 
   2911    the 5 IEEE FP exception kinds by writing to the floating-point status 
   2912    and control register (fpscr).
   2913    </para>
   2914 
   2915    <para>Vector (Altivec, VMX): essentially as with x86/AMD64 SSE/SSE2: 
   2916    no exceptions, and limited observance of rounding mode.  
   2917    For Altivec, FP arithmetic
   2918    is done in IEEE/Java mode, which is more accurate than the Linux default
   2919    setting.  "More accurate" means that denormals are handled properly, 
   2920    rather than simply being flushed to zero.</para>
   2921   </listitem>
   2922  </itemizedlist>
   2923 
   2924  <para>Programs which are known not to work are:</para>
   2925  <itemizedlist>
   2926   <listitem>
   2927    <para>emacs starts up but immediately concludes it is out of
   2928    memory and aborts.  It may be that Memcheck does not provide
   2929    a good enough emulation of the 
   2930    <computeroutput>mallinfo</computeroutput> function.
   2931    Emacs works fine if you build it to use
   2932    the standard malloc/free routines.</para>
   2933   </listitem>
   2934  </itemizedlist>
   2935 
   2936 </sect1>
   2937 
   2938 
   2939 <sect1 id="manual-core.example" xreflabel="An Example Run">
   2940 <title>An Example Run</title>
   2941 
   2942 <para>This is the log for a run of a small program using Memcheck.
   2943 The program is in fact correct, and the reported error is as the
   2944 result of a potentially serious code generation bug in GNU g++
   2945 (snapshot 20010527).</para>
   2946 
   2947 <programlisting><![CDATA[
   2948 sewardj@phoenix:~/newmat10$ ~/Valgrind-6/valgrind -v ./bogon 
   2949 ==25832== Valgrind 0.10, a memory error detector for x86 RedHat 7.1.
   2950 ==25832== Copyright (C) 2000-2001, and GNU GPL'd, by Julian Seward.
   2951 ==25832== Startup, with flags:
   2952 ==25832== --suppressions=/home/sewardj/Valgrind/redhat71.supp
   2953 ==25832== reading syms from /lib/ld-linux.so.2
   2954 ==25832== reading syms from /lib/libc.so.6
   2955 ==25832== reading syms from /mnt/pima/jrs/Inst/lib/libgcc_s.so.0
   2956 ==25832== reading syms from /lib/libm.so.6
   2957 ==25832== reading syms from /mnt/pima/jrs/Inst/lib/libstdc++.so.3
   2958 ==25832== reading syms from /home/sewardj/Valgrind/valgrind.so
   2959 ==25832== reading syms from /proc/self/exe
   2960 ==25832== 
   2961 ==25832== Invalid read of size 4
   2962 ==25832==    at 0x8048724: BandMatrix::ReSize(int,int,int) (bogon.cpp:45)
   2963 ==25832==    by 0x80487AF: main (bogon.cpp:66)
   2964 ==25832==  Address 0xBFFFF74C is not stack'd, malloc'd or free'd
   2965 ==25832==
   2966 ==25832== ERROR SUMMARY: 1 errors from 1 contexts (suppressed: 0 from 0)
   2967 ==25832== malloc/free: in use at exit: 0 bytes in 0 blocks.
   2968 ==25832== malloc/free: 0 allocs, 0 frees, 0 bytes allocated.
   2969 ==25832== For a detailed leak analysis, rerun with: --leak-check=yes
   2970 ]]></programlisting>
   2971 
   2972 <para>The GCC folks fixed this about a week before GCC 3.0
   2973 shipped.</para>
   2974 
   2975 </sect1>
   2976 
   2977 
   2978 <sect1 id="manual-core.warnings" xreflabel="Warning Messages">
   2979 <title>Warning Messages You Might See</title>
   2980 
   2981 <para>Some of these only appear if you run in verbose mode
   2982 (enabled by <option>-v</option>):</para>
   2983 
   2984  <itemizedlist>
   2985 
   2986   <listitem>
   2987     <para><computeroutput>More than 100 errors detected.  Subsequent
   2988     errors will still be recorded, but in less detail than
   2989     before.</computeroutput></para>
   2990 
   2991     <para>After 100 different errors have been shown, Valgrind becomes
   2992     more conservative about collecting them.  It then requires only the
   2993     program counters in the top two stack frames to match when deciding
   2994     whether or not two errors are really the same one.  Prior to this
   2995     point, the PCs in the top four frames are required to match.  This
   2996     hack has the effect of slowing down the appearance of new errors
   2997     after the first 100.  The 100 constant can be changed by recompiling
   2998     Valgrind.</para>
   2999   </listitem>
   3000 
   3001   <listitem>
   3002     <para><computeroutput>More than 1000 errors detected.  I'm not
   3003     reporting any more.  Final error counts may be inaccurate.  Go fix
   3004     your program!</computeroutput></para>
   3005 
   3006     <para>After 1000 different errors have been detected, Valgrind
   3007     ignores any more.  It seems unlikely that collecting even more
   3008     different ones would be of practical help to anybody, and it avoids
   3009     the danger that Valgrind spends more and more of its time comparing
   3010     new errors against an ever-growing collection.  As above, the 1000
   3011     number is a compile-time constant.</para>
   3012   </listitem>
   3013 
   3014   <listitem>
   3015     <para><computeroutput>Warning: client switching stacks?</computeroutput></para>
   3016 
   3017     <para>Valgrind spotted such a large change in the stack pointer
   3018     that it guesses the client is switching to a different stack.  At
   3019     this point it makes a kludgey guess where the base of the new
   3020     stack is, and sets memory permissions accordingly.  At the moment
   3021     "large change" is defined as a change of more that 2000000 in the
   3022     value of the stack pointer register.  If Valgrind guesses wrong,
   3023     you may get many bogus error messages following this and/or have
   3024     crashes in the stack trace recording code.  You might avoid these
   3025     problems by informing Valgrind about the stack bounds using
   3026     VALGRIND_STACK_REGISTER client request. </para>
   3027 
   3028   </listitem>
   3029 
   3030   <listitem>
   3031     <para><computeroutput>Warning: client attempted to close Valgrind's
   3032     logfile fd &lt;number&gt;</computeroutput></para>
   3033 
   3034     <para>Valgrind doesn't allow the client to close the logfile,
   3035     because you'd never see any diagnostic information after that point.
   3036     If you see this message, you may want to use the
   3037     <option>--log-fd=&lt;number&gt;</option> option to specify a
   3038     different logfile file-descriptor number.</para>
   3039   </listitem>
   3040 
   3041   <listitem>
   3042     <para><computeroutput>Warning: noted but unhandled ioctl
   3043     &lt;number&gt;</computeroutput></para>
   3044 
   3045     <para>Valgrind observed a call to one of the vast family of
   3046     <computeroutput>ioctl</computeroutput> system calls, but did not
   3047     modify its memory status info (because nobody has yet written a 
   3048     suitable wrapper).  The call will still have gone through, but you may get
   3049     spurious errors after this as a result of the non-update of the
   3050     memory info.</para>
   3051   </listitem>
   3052 
   3053   <listitem>
   3054     <para><computeroutput>Warning: set address range perms: large range
   3055     &lt;number></computeroutput></para>
   3056 
   3057     <para>Diagnostic message, mostly for benefit of the Valgrind
   3058     developers, to do with memory permissions.</para>
   3059   </listitem>
   3060 
   3061  </itemizedlist>
   3062 
   3063 </sect1>
   3064 
   3065 
   3066 
   3067 
   3068 
   3069 
   3070 </chapter>
   3071