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You can ask malloc
to check the consistency of dynamic memory by
using the mcheck
function. This function is a GNU extension,
declared in mcheck.h.
Calling
mcheck
tellsmalloc
to perform occasional consistency checks. These will catch things such as writing past the end of a block that was allocated withmalloc
.The abortfn argument is the function to call when an inconsistency is found. If you supply a null pointer, then
mcheck
uses a default function which prints a message and callsabort
(see Aborting a Program). The function you supply is called with one argument, which says what sort of inconsistency was detected; its type is described below.It is too late to begin allocation checking once you have allocated anything with
malloc
. Somcheck
does nothing in that case. The function returns-1
if you call it too late, and0
otherwise (when it is successful).The easiest way to arrange to call
mcheck
early enough is to use the option `-lmcheck' when you link your program; then you don't need to modify your program source at all. Alternatively you might use a debugger to insert a call tomcheck
whenever the program is started, for example these gdb commands will automatically callmcheck
whenever the program starts:(gdb) break main Breakpoint 1, main (argc=2, argv=0xbffff964) at whatever.c:10 (gdb) command 1 Type commands for when breakpoint 1 is hit, one per line. End with a line saying just "end". >call mcheck(0) >continue >end (gdb) ...This will however only work if no initialization function of any object involved calls any of the
malloc
functions sincemcheck
must be called before the first such function.
The
mprobe
function lets you explicitly check for inconsistencies in a particular allocated block. You must have already calledmcheck
at the beginning of the program, to do its occasional checks; callingmprobe
requests an additional consistency check to be done at the time of the call.The argument pointer must be a pointer returned by
malloc
orrealloc
.mprobe
returns a value that says what inconsistency, if any, was found. The values are described below.
This enumerated type describes what kind of inconsistency was detected in an allocated block, if any. Here are the possible values:
MCHECK_DISABLED
mcheck
was not called before the first allocation. No consistency checking can be done.MCHECK_OK
- No inconsistency detected.
MCHECK_HEAD
- The data immediately before the block was modified. This commonly happens when an array index or pointer is decremented too far.
MCHECK_TAIL
- The data immediately after the block was modified. This commonly happens when an array index or pointer is incremented too far.
MCHECK_FREE
- The block was already freed.
Another possibility to check for and guard against bugs in the use of
malloc
, realloc
and free
is to set the environment
variable MALLOC_CHECK_
. When MALLOC_CHECK_
is set, a
special (less efficient) implementation is used which is designed to be
tolerant against simple errors, such as double calls of free
with
the same argument, or overruns of a single byte (off-by-one bugs). Not
all such errors can be protected against, however, and memory leaks can
result. If MALLOC_CHECK_
is set to 0
, any detected heap
corruption is silently ignored; if set to 1
, a diagnostic is
printed on stderr
; if set to 2
, abort
is called
immediately. This can be useful because otherwise a crash may happen
much later, and the true cause for the problem is then very hard to
track down.
There is one problem with MALLOC_CHECK_
: in SUID or SGID binaries
it could possibly be exploited since diverging from the normal programs
behavior it now writes something to the standard error descriptor.
Therefore the use of MALLOC_CHECK_
is disabled by default for
SUID and SGID binaries. It can be enabled again by the system
administrator by adding a file /etc/suid-debug (the content is
not important it could be empty).
So, what's the difference between using MALLOC_CHECK_
and linking
with `-lmcheck'? MALLOC_CHECK_
is orthogonal with respect to
`-lmcheck'. `-lmcheck' has been added for backward
compatibility. Both MALLOC_CHECK_
and `-lmcheck' should
uncover the same bugs - but using MALLOC_CHECK_
you don't need to
recompile your application.