efence(3)efence(3)NAMEefence - Electric Fence Malloc Debugger
SYNOPSIS
#include <stdlib.h>
void * malloc (size_t size);
void free (void *ptr);
void * realloc (void *ptr, size_t size);
void * calloc (size_t nelem, size_t elsize);
void * memalign (size_t alignment, size_t size);
void * valloc (size_t size);
extern int EF_ALIGNMENT;
extern int EF_PROTECT_BELOW;
extern int EF_PROTECT_FREE;
extern int EF_ALLOW_MALLOC_0;
extern int EF_FILL;
DESCRIPTION
Electric Fence helps you detect two common programming bugs: software
that overruns the boundaries of a malloc() memory allocation, and soft‐
ware that touches a memory allocation that has been released by free().
Unlike other malloc() debuggers, Electric Fence will detect read
accesses as well as writes, and it will pinpoint the exact instruction
that causes an error. It has been in use at Pixar since 1987, and at
many other sites for years.
Electric Fence uses the virtual memory hardware of your computer to
place an inaccessible memory page immediately after (or before, at the
user's option) each memory allocation. When software reads or writes
this inaccessible page, the hardware issues a segmentation fault, stop‐
ping the program at the offending instruction. It is then trivial to
find the erroneous statement using your favorite debugger. In a similar
manner, memory that has been released by free() is made inaccessible,
and any code that touches it will get a segmentation fault.
Simply linking your application with libefence.a will allow you to
detect most, but not all, malloc buffer overruns and accesses of free
memory. If you want to be reasonably sure that you've found all bugs
of this type, you'll have to read and understand the rest of this man
page.
USAGE
Link your program with the library libefence.a . Make sure you are not
linking with -lmalloc, -lmallocdebug, or with other malloc-debugger or
malloc-enhancer libraries. You can only use one at a time. If your
system administrator has installed Electric Fence for public use,
you'll be able to use the -lefence argument to the linker, otherwise
you'll have to put the path-name for libefence.a in the linker's com‐
mand line. You can also use dynamic linking. If you're using a Bourne
shell, the statement export LD_PRELOAD=libefence.so.0.0 will cause
Electric Fence to be loaded to run all dynamic executables. The com‐
mand ef command runs a single command under Electric Fence.
Some systems will require special arguments to the linker to assure
that you are using the Electric Fence malloc() and not the one from
your C library.
Run your program using a debugger. It's easier to work this way than
to create a core file and post-mortem debug it. Electric Fence can cre‐
ate huge core files, and some operating systems will thus take minutes
simply to dump core! Some operating systems will not create usable core
files from programs that are linked with Electric Fence. If your pro‐
gram has one of the errors detected by Electric Fence, it will get a
segmentation fault (SIGSEGV) at the offending instruction. Use the
debugger to locate the erroneous statement, and repair it.
GLOBAL AND ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
Electric Fence has four configuration switches that can be enabled via
the shell environment, or by setting the value of global integer vari‐
ables using a debugger. These switches change what bugs Electric Fence
will detect, so it's important that you know how to use them.
EF_ALIGNMENT
This is an integer that specifies the alignment for any memory
allocations that will be returned by malloc(), calloc(), and
realloc(). The value is specified in bytes, thus a value of 4
will cause memory to be aligned to 32-bit boundaries unless your
system doesn't have a 8-bit characters. EF_ALIGNMENT is set to
sizeof(int) by default, since that is generally the word-size of
your CPU. If your program requires that allocations be aligned
to 64-bit boundaries and you have a 32-bit int you'll have to
set this value to 8. This is the case when compiling with the
-mips2 flag on MIPS-based systems such as those from SGI. The
memory allocation that is returned by Electric Fence malloc() is
aligned using the value in EF_ALIGNMENT, and its size the multi‐
ple of that value that is greater than or equal to the requested
size. For this reason, you will sometimes want to set EF_ALIGN‐
MENT to 0 (no alignment), so that you can detect overruns of
less than your CPU's word size. Be sure to read the section
WORD-ALIGNMENT AND OVERRUN DETECTION in this manual page before
you try this. To change this value, set EF_ALIGNMENT in the
shell environment to an integer value, or assign to the global
integer variable EF_ALIGNMENT using a debugger.
EF_PROTECT_BELOW
Electric Fence usually places an inaccessible page immediately
after each memory allocation, so that software that runs past
the end of the allocation will be detected. Setting EF_PRO‐
TECT_BELOW to 1 causes Electric Fence to place the inaccessible
page before the allocation in the address space, so that under-
runs will be detected instead of over-runs. When EF_PRO‐
TECT_BELOW is set, the EF_ALIGNMENT parameter is ignored. All
allocations will be aligned to virtual-memory-page boundaries,
and their size will be the exact size that was requested. To
change this value, set EF_PROTECT_BELOW in the shell environment
to an integer value, or assign to the global integer variable
EF_PROTECT_BELOW using a debugger.
EF_PROTECT_FREE
Electric Fence usually returns free memory to a pool from which
it may be re-allocated. If you suspect that a program may be
touching free memory, set EF_PROTECT_FREE to 1. This will cause
Electric Fence to never re-allocate memory once it has been
freed, so that any access to free memory will be detected. Some
programs will use tremendous amounts of memory when this parame‐
ter is set. To change this value, set EF_PROTECT_FREE in the
shell environment to an integer value, or assign to the global
integer variable EF_PROTECT_FREE using a debugger.
EF_ALLOW_MALLOC_0
By default, Electric Fence traps calls to malloc() with a size
of zero, because they are often the result of a software bug. If
EF_ALLOW_MALLOC_0 is non-zero, the software will not trap calls
to malloc() with a size of zero. To change this value, set
EF_ALLOC_MALLOC_0 in the shell environment to an integer value,
or assign to the global integer variable EF_ALLOC_MALLOC_0 using
a debugger.
EF_FILL
When set to a value between 0 and 255, every byte of allocated
memory is initialized to that value. This can help detect reads
of uninitialized memory. When set to -1, some memory is filled
with zeroes (the operating system default on most systems) and
some memory will retain the values written to it during its last
use.
WORD-ALIGNMENT AND OVERRUN DETECTION
There is a conflict between the alignment restrictions that malloc()
operates under and the debugging strategy used by Electric Fence. When
detecting overruns, Electric Fence malloc() allocates two or more vir‐
tual memory pages for each allocation. The last page is made inaccessi‐
ble in such a way that any read, write, or execute access will cause a
segmentation fault. Then, Electric Fence malloc() will return an
address such that the first byte after the end of the allocation is on
the inaccessible page. Thus, any overrun of the allocation will cause
a segmentation fault.
It follows that the address returned by malloc() is the address of the
inaccessible page minus the size of the memory allocation. Unfortu‐
nately, malloc() is required to return word-aligned allocations, since
many CPUs can only access a word when its address is aligned. The con‐
flict happens when software makes a memory allocation using a size that
is not a multiple of the word size, and expects to do word accesses to
that allocation. The location of the inaccessible page is fixed by
hardware at a word-aligned address. If Electric Fence malloc() is to
return an aligned address, it must increase the size of the allocation
to a multiple of the word size. In addition, the functions memalign()
and valloc() must honor explicit specifications on the alignment of the
memory allocation, and this, as well can only be implemented by
increasing the size of the allocation. Thus, there will be situations
in which the end of a memory allocation contains some padding space,
and accesses of that padding space will not be detected, even if they
are overruns.
Electric Fence provides the variable EF_ALIGNMENT so that the user can
control the default alignment used by malloc(), calloc(), and real‐
loc(). To debug overruns as small as a single byte, you can set
EF_ALIGNMENT to zero. This will result in Electric Fence malloc()
returning unaligned addresses for allocations with sizes that are not a
multiple of the word size. This is not a problem in most cases, because
compilers must pad the size of objects so that alignment restrictions
are honored when storing those objects in arrays. The problem surfaces
when software allocates odd-sized buffers for objects that must be
word-aligned. One case of this is software that allocates a buffer to
contain a structure and a string, and the string has an odd size (this
example was in a popular TIFF library). If word references are made to
un-aligned buffers, you will see a bus error (SIGBUS) instead of a seg‐
mentation fault. The only way to fix this is to re-write the offending
code to make byte references or not make odd-sized allocations, or to
set EF_ALIGNMENT to the word size.
Another example of software incompatible with EF_ALIGNMENT < word-size
is the strcmp() function and other string functions on SunOS (and prob‐
ably Solaris), which make word-sized accesses to character strings, and
may attempt to access up to three bytes beyond the end of a string.
These result in a segmentation fault (SIGSEGV). The only way around
this is to use versions of the string functions that perform byte ref‐
erences instead of word references.
INSTRUCTIONS FOR DEBUGGING YOUR PROGRAM
1. Link with libefence.a as explained above.
2. Run your program in a debugger and fix any overruns or accesses
to free memory.
3. Quit the debugger.
4. Set EF_PROTECT_BELOW = 1 in the shell environment.
5. Repeat step 2, this time repairing underruns if they occur.
6. Quit the debugger.
7. Read the restrictions in the section on WORD-ALIGNMENT AND OVER‐
RUN DETECTION. See if you can set EF_ALIGNMENT to 0 and repeat
step 2. Sometimes this will be too much work, or there will be
problems with library routines for which you don't have the
source, that will prevent you from doing this.
MEMORY USAGE AND EXECUTION SPEED
Since Electric Fence uses at least two virtual memory pages for each of
its allocations, it's a terrible memory hog. I've sometimes found it
necessary to add a swap file using swapon(8) so that the system would
have enough virtual memory to debug my program. Also, the way we manip‐
ulate memory results in various cache and translation buffer entries
being flushed with each call to malloc or free. The end result is that
your program will be much slower and use more resources while you are
debugging it with Electric Fence.
Don't leave libefence.a linked into production software! Use it only
for debugging.
MAILING LIST
There is a mailing list to support Electric Fence. You can subscribe
using the mail form at http://lists.perens.com/mailman/listinfo/elec‐
tric-fence .
AUTHOR
Bruce Perens
WARNINGS
I have tried to do as good a job as I can on this software, but I doubt
that it is even theoretically possible to make it bug-free. This soft‐
ware has no warranty. It will not detect some bugs that you might
expect it to detect, and will indicate that some non-bugs are bugs.
LICENSE
Copyright 1987-1999 Bruce Perens. All rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the terms of the GNU General Public License, Version 2, as pub‐
lished by the Free Software Foundation. A copy of this license is dis‐
tributed with this software in the file "COPYING".
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MER‐
CHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Read the file "COPY‐
ING" for more details.
CONTACTING THE AUTHOR
Bruce Perens
1563 Solano Ave. #349
Berkeley, CA 94707
Telephone: 510-526-1165
Internet: bruce@perens.com
FILES
/dev/zero: Source of memory pages (via mmap(2)).
SEE ALSOmalloc(3), mmap(2), mprotect(2), swapon(8)DIAGNOSTICS
Segmentation Fault: Examine the offending statement for violation of
the boundaries of a memory allocation.
Bus Error: See the section on WORD-ALIGNMENT AND OVERRUN DETECTION. in
this manual page.
BUGS
My explanation of the alignment issue could be improved.
Some Sun systems running SunOS 4.1 were reported to signal an access to
a protected page with SIGBUS rather than SIGSEGV, I suspect this is an
undocumented feature of a particular Sun hardware version, not just the
operating system. On these systems, eftest will fail with a bus error
until you modify the Makefile to define PAGE_PROTECTION_VIOLATED_SIGNAL
as SIGBUS.
There are, without doubt, other bugs and porting issues. Please contact
me via e-mail if you have any bug reports, ideas, etc.
WHAT'S BETTER
Purify does a much more thorough job than Electric Fence, and does not
have the huge memory overhead. Checkergcc, a modified version of the
GNU C Compiler that instruments all memory references, is available on
Linux systems and where GCC is used. It performs some of the same tasks
as Purify, but only on code that it has compiled.
27-April-1993 efence(3)