NAME¶
mcheck, mcheck_check_all, mcheck_pedantic, mprobe - heap consistency checking
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <mcheck.h>
int mcheck(void (*abortfunc)(enum mcheck_status mstatus));
int mcheck_pedantic(void (*abortfunc)(enum mcheck_status mstatus));
void mcheck_check_all(void);
enum mcheck_status mprobe(void *ptr);
DESCRIPTION¶
The
mcheck() function installs a set of debugging hooks for the
malloc(3) family of memory-allocation functions. These hooks cause
certain consistency checks to be performed on the state of the heap. The
checks can detect application errors such as freeing a block of memory more
than once or corrupting the bookkeeping data structures that immediately
precede a block of allocated memory.
To be effective, the
mcheck() function must be called before the first
call to
malloc(3) or a related function. In cases where this is
difficult to ensure, linking the program with
-lmcheck inserts an
implicit call to
mcheck() (with a NULL argument) before the first call
to a memory-allocation function.
The
mcheck_pedantic() function is similar to
mcheck(), but
performs checks on all allocated blocks whenever one of the memory-allocation
functions is called. This can be very slow!
The
mcheck_check_all() function causes an immediate check on all
allocated blocks. This call is effective only if
mcheck() is called
beforehand.
If the system detects an inconsistency in the heap, the caller-supplied function
pointed to by
abortfunc is invoked with a single argument argument,
mstatus, that indicates what type of inconsistency was detected. If
abortfunc is NULL, a default function prints an error message on
stderr and calls
abort(3).
The
mprobe() function performs a consistency check on the block of
allocated memory pointed to by
ptr. The
mcheck() function should
be called beforehand (otherwise
mprobe() returns
MCHECK_DISABLED).
The following list describes the values returned by
mprobe() or passed as
the
mstatus argument when
abortfunc is invoked:
- MCHECK_DISABLED (mprobe() only)
- mcheck() was not called before the first memory allocation function
was called. Consistency checking is not possible.
- MCHECK_OK (mprobe() only)
- No inconsistency detected.
- MCHECK_HEAD
- Memory preceding an allocated block was clobbered.
- MCHECK_TAIL
- Memory following an allocated block was clobbered.
- MCHECK_FREE
- A block of memory was freed twice.
RETURN VALUE¶
mcheck() and
mcheck_pedantic() return 0 on success, or -1 on
error.
VERSIONS¶
The
mcheck_pedantic() and
mcheck_check_all() functions are
available since glibc 2.2. The
mcheck() and
mprobe() functions
are present since at least glibc 2.0
These functions are GNU extensions.
NOTES¶
Linking a program with
-lmcheck and using the
MALLOC_CHECK_
environment variable (described in
mallopt(3)) cause the same kinds of
errors to be detected. But, using
MALLOC_CHECK_ does not require the
application to be relinked.
EXAMPLE¶
The program below calls
mcheck() with a NULL argument and then frees the
same block of memory twice. The following shell session demonstrates what
happens when running the program:
$ ./a.out
About to free
About to free a second time
block freed twice
Aborted (core dumped)
Program source¶
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <mcheck.h>
int
main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
char *p;
if (mcheck(NULL) != 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "mcheck() failed\n");
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
p = malloc(1000);
fprintf(stderr, "About to free\n");
free(p);
fprintf(stderr, "\nAbout to free a second time\n");
free(p);
exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
}
SEE ALSO¶
malloc(3),
mallopt(3),
mtrace(3)
COLOPHON¶
This page is part of release 3.74 of the Linux
man-pages project. A
description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the latest
version of this page, can be found at
http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.