ArtifexSoftware / memento

Memento

Geek Repo:Geek Repo

Github PK Tool:Github PK Tool

Memento

A memory debugging library for C (or C++) programs.

Features

Memento builds into your C (or C++) project. In both release and debug builds it builds away to nothing. In a build with a magic predefine (imaginatively enough "MEMENTO"), it intercepts malloc/free/realloc/etc and handles them itself.

It watches for common errors, such as leaks, overruns, underruns, write after free, and double frees, without needing any special facilities beyond that provided by the standard C runtime.

Allocations are tracked by number, so that deterministic programs can be repeatedly rerun multiple times to meaningfully compare results.

When run under a debugger, Memento can be driven interactively so as to stop on particular allocation numbers, to examine pointers, and to watch for allocation events on particular addresses. Repeated runs on deterministic input therefore effectively allow 'rewinding' to before problems occur, and stepping forwards.

On specific systems (Windows, or Linux with backtrace support) full callstacks can be gathered for each allocation event, allowing the full history of a block to be watched.

Source level annotations can be added to the application linked with Memento to label blocks to simplify debugging. Calls can be made to check pointers and ints heuristically for validity.

With appropriate source level annotations Memento can track reference counting for blocks, and will include this data in the block history.

Memento can simulate a range of different memory exhaustion conditions; either by total amount used, or by total number of allocations. In addition it can perform automated 'squeezing' runs where an executable's response to memory exhaustion can be tested at every possible point.

Memento can be used with Valgrind's Memcheck tool (henceforth just Valgrind), to further enhance its abilities.

Contents of the distribution.

  • memento.h

    The memento header file. #include "memento.h" in all your source files, ideally as the first thing you do - certainly before anything that makes reference to an allocation function.

    Most significant projects already have a top-level include file, so this can be inserted there.

    This header file will compile away to nothing unless MEMENTO is defined.

  • memento.c

    The memento source file. Compile this with your other C files, using the same flags.

    This will compile away to nothing unless MEMENTO is defined.

  • README.md

    This readme.

  • COPYING.txt

    The ISC license under which this software is released.

  • scripts

    Various helpful scripts.

  • docs

    Documentation.

About

Memento

License:ISC License


Languages

Language:C 89.8%Language:Perl 8.7%Language:Python 1.5%