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.ccmalloc
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%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
%%%% generic configureation file for %%%%
%%%% the ccmalloc memory profiler %%%%
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
%-----------------------------------------------------------------%
% COPY THIS FILE TO `.ccmalloc' in your project or home directory %
%-----------------------------------------------------------------%
##############################################################################
## (C) 1997-1998 Armin Biere, 1998 Johannes Keukelaar
##############################################################################
%%% `%' and `#' are comments !!!!!!!
% This file must be called `.ccmalloc' and is searched for in the
% current directory and in the home directory of the user. If it
% does not exist then the default values mentioned below are used.
% It is also the currently only available user manual ;-) So here
% is a reading hint. First have a look at the short one line
% descriptions of each option ...
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% with `file' the executable is specified [a.out]
% ----------------------------------------------------------------------
% This should not be necessary for Linux and Solaris because the proc
% file system can be used to find argv[0].
%
% (the rest of this comment only applies to other OS)
%
% For other OS you should use this option unless the executable is
% in the current directory or its name is `a.out'.
%
% If you do not specify this then ccmalloc tries to find an executable
% in the current directory that matches the running program starting
% with `a.out'. For this process it must call `nm' on each executable
% file in the directory which may be time consuming. With this option
% you can speed up this process.
%
% You can also specify absolute or relative path names. This is
% necessary if you do not start your program from the current directory.
% But you can also simply link or name your program to `a.out'.
%file FILE
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% `log' specify the logfile [stderr]
% ----------------------------------------------------------------------
% The default is to use stderr. The argument to `log' is the name of
% the file you want to write to. It can also be `stdout' or `-' which
% sets stdout as logfile. If the logfile is stdout or stderr and is
% connected to a terminal then the output is slightly different.
%
% For big programs the logfile can be really big. To reduce the size
% you can use a small chain length (see `chain-length' below). The other
% possibility is to use compressed logfiles. This can be done by
% specifying a logfile name with a `.gz' (or a `.Z') suffix. This means
% that gnuzip (resp. compress) is used to compress the output.
%log FILE
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% `logpid' specify the logfile
% ----------------------------------------------------------------------
% Can be used alternatively to the `log' command if you want to use
% ccmalloc for debugging parallel applications where several copies of
% the program you are debugging must be run simoultaneously. In this
% case you can not use `log' because you do not want to write to the same
% log file. Using `logpid' uses a file name ending with the <pid> of
% the process which means the name is unique even if several copies of
% your program are run simoultaneously.
%
% If you use the compressing suffixes then the <pid> is inserted before
% the suffix (e.g. `logpid ccmalloc.log.gz' uses `ccmalloc.log.<pid>.gz'
% as the name for the log file).
%logpid FILE
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% `dont-log-chain' skip info about certain chains []
% ----------------------------------------------------------------------
% This command may be repeated any number of times. The argument to this
% command is a comma-separated list of function-or-file-and-line
% specifications. Garbage allocated from a callchain that contains this
% subchain anywhere will _not_ be logged.
%
% The comma-separated list should not contain any spaces. E.g. not:
% main, foo, bar
% but:
% main,foo,bar
% A function-or-file-and-line specification is a string followed by an
% optional colon and number, for example: main or main:14 or main.c or
% main.c:15. Note that the string is compared with both the function and
% the file name, if available. If main.c happens to be a function name,
% that will cause a match (for that string at least).
% Not specifying a line number will match any line number. If line number
% information is not available, anything will match!
% Not specifying a name (e.g. ,,,) will match an unknown function name.
% Not giving any parameters at all, will match a chain containing at least
% one unknown function.
%
% Note that if you say
% dont-log-chain wrapper.c
% _nothing_ will be logged...
%dont-log-chain
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% `only-log-chain' skip info about other chains []
% ----------------------------------------------------------------------
% The obvious counterpart to dont-log-chain. In this case, only matching
% chains will be reported. Non-matching chains will not be reported.
% Can be repeated any number of times; if the chain matches any of the
% instances, it will be reported.
%only-log-chain
########################################################################
# #
# This is the `flag' section #
# #
# `set FLAG' is the same as `set FLAG 1' #
# #
# The default values are those set below. If `silent' is disabled #
# then you will find the banner in the log file (or it is listed on #
# stdout or stderr). The banner describes the current settings of all #
# these flags. #
# #
########################################################################
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% with `only-count' ccmalloc only counts garbage - no call chains [0]
% ----------------------------------------------------------------------
% If only-count is set to one then only one additional pointer for
% each allocated data is used and no call chain is generated. This is
% the fasted and most space efficient mode ccmalloc can operate
% in. In this mode you get at least the size of garbage produced.
%
% Note that `check-free-space' does not work at all with `only-count'
% set and over writes (`check-overwrites') are only checked when
% calling free.
%set only-count 0
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% `load-dynlibs' load dynamic linked libraries into gdb [0]
% ----------------------------------------------------------------------
% If your program is linked with dynamic libraries, function and file
% name information is not available for addresses in those libraries,
% unless you set `load-dynlibs' to 1.
%set load-dynlibs 0
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% `keep-deallocated-data' does not recycle deallocated data [0]
% ----------------------------------------------------------------------
% If you enable keep-deallocated-data then all data deallocated with
% `free' (or `delete' in C++) is not given back to the free store
% but stays associated with the call chain of its allocation. This is
% very useful if your program does multiple deallocation of the
% same data.
%set keep-deallocated-data 0
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% `check-overwrites' detect overwrites [0]
% ----------------------------------------------------------------------
% If you want to detect `off by n bytes' errors you should set
% `checking-overwrites' to n/4 (on 32-Bit machines).
%
% ccmalloc inserts a boundary above allocated data. This boundary
% consists of `check-overwrites' words. If your program writes to
% this area then ccmalloc can detect this (see also check-start
% and check-interval). `ccmalloc' also does checking for overwrites
% at non word boundaries (e.g. strcpy(malloc(strlen("hello")),"hello");)
%set check-overwrites 0
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% `check-underwrites' detect overwrites [0]
% ----------------------------------------------------------------------
% same with writes below allocated data. You do not have to set this
% option if you only want detect `off (below) by one' errors because
% ccmalloc keeps a magic value just before the user data.
%set check-overwrites 0
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% `check-free-space' can be used to find dangling pointers. [0]
% ----------------------------------------------------------------------
% A very serious type of bug is to write on data that has already been
% freed. If this happens the free space management of malloc is in
% trouble and you will perhaps encounter non deterministic behaviour of
% your program. To test this first enable `keep-deallocated-data' and
% restart your program. If the problem goes away and ccmalloc does not
% report anything then you should *also* enable `check-free-space'. Now
% ccmalloc checks already deallocated data for corruption.
%
% Note that to perform this check `keep-deallocated-data' also must
% be enabled and `only-count' disabled.
%set check-free-space 0
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% `check-interval' can be used to speed up checks [0]
% ----------------------------------------------------------------------
% If check-overwrite, check-underwrites or check-free-space is set then
% the default is to do `write checks' when data is deallocated and
% to do `free space checks' when reporting together with
% `write checks' for garbage. When you want these checks to be
% performed more often then you should set `check-interval' to a
% positive number. This number is the interval between the number of
% calls to free or malloc without performing the checks.
%set check-interval 0
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% `check-start' can be used to speed up checks [0]
% ----------------------------------------------------------------------
% The flag `check-start' delays the start of checks until the given
% number of calls to free and malloc have occured. Together with
% `check-interval' you can use a binary search to find an aproximation
% when a corruption occured! If you simply set check-interval to 1 and
% check-start to 0 then this will slow done your program too much.
%set check-start 0
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% `silent' disables banner [0]
% ----------------------------------------------------------------------
% If you don't want to see the banner of ccmalloc then set
% `silent' to 1 (f.e. when logging to stderr)
%set silent
set silent 1
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% `file-info' en/disables file and line number information [1]
% ----------------------------------------------------------------------
% If your program was compiled with debugging information (-g) then
% ccmalloc can generate line number and file info for call chains opening
% a pipe to gdb. For very big programs this method is slow. In this case
% you can set `file-info' to zero and you will only get the function
% names. For SunOS 4.3.1 `nm' does not `demangle' C++ identifiers
% very well. So gdb is called instead but only if `file-info' is
% not set to 0.
%set file-info 1
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% `continue' if ccmalloc aborts when something weired happened [0]
% ----------------------------------------------------------------------
% If the free function of ccmalloc is called with an argument that does
% not make sense to ccmalloc or that has already been freed then you
% probably want the program to stop at this point. This is also
% the default behaviour. But you can force ccmalloc also to ignore
% this if you set `continue' to 1. This flag also controls the behaviour
% of ccmalloc when free space is found to be corrupted or a write
% boundary has been overwritten.
%set continue 0
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% `chain-length' is the length of the maximal call chain [0 = infinite]
% ----------------------------------------------------------------------
% You can restrict the length of call chains by setting `chain-length'
% to a number greater than zero. If `chain-length' is zero (the default)
% then chains are as long as possible (on a non x86 system only call
% chains with a finite maximal length can be generated). For big
% programs especially if keep-deallocated-data is enabled this can
% reduce the size of the log file from over 100MB to several MB!
%set chain-length 0
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% `print-addresses' of data [0]
% ----------------------------------------------------------------------
% If you want to see the addresses of the allocated data (and
% deallocated data if keep-deallocated-data is set to 1) set
% `print-addresses' to 1.
%set print-addresses 0
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% `print-on-one-line' shortens log file [0]
% ----------------------------------------------------------------------
% The default is to print function names and file/line number info
% on separate lines. With `print-on-one-line' set 1 all are printed
% on one line.
set print-on-one-line 1
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% `additional-line' enlarges readability [1]
% ----------------------------------------------------------------------
% When printing call chains an empty line is printed between to
% call points. Set `additional-line' to 0 to disable this feature.
set additional-line 0
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% `statistics' enables more accurate profiling [0]
% ----------------------------------------------------------------------
% Calculate number of allocations and deallocations and bytes also on
% a per call chain basis. This uses 4 additional pointers for each
% call chain.
set statistics 0
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% set order for sorting of call chains [1] [1]
% ----------------------------------------------------------------------
% When printing the report to the log file the call chains are sorted by
% default with respect to the largest accumulated garbage produced by
% that call chain. This can be changed with setting `sort-by-wasted'
% to 0. In this case they are sorted by the number of allocated bytes.
% If you want the number of allocations (only possible if `statistics'
% is enabled) as sorting criteria instead then set `sort-by-size' to 0.
%set sort-by-wasted 1
%set sort-by-size 1
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% report library chains [0]
% ----------------------------------------------------------------------
% Some external libraries (like libg++) have memory leaks. On some
% systems even a call to printf produces a leak. ccmalloc tries to
% detect this (only heuristically!) and with this flag you can control
% if leaks produced by such library calls are reported.
%
% Since version 0.2.1 some similar effect can be achieved by using
% `dont-log-chain' with no argument.
%set library-chains 0
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% print debugging information [X] (compile time dependend)
% ----------------------------------------------------------------------
%set debug X
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% align memory on 8 byte boundary [0] (no effect on SunOS or Solaris)
% ----------------------------------------------------------------------
%set align-8-byte 0