<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd"> <!-- Material used from: HTML 4.01 specs: http://www.w3.org/TR/html401/ --> <html> <head> <META http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1"> <title>AddressSanitizer, a fast memory error detector</title> <link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="../menu.css"> <link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="../content.css"> <style type="text/css"> td { vertical-align: top; } </style> </head> <body> <!--#include virtual="../menu.html.incl"--> <div id="content"> <h1>AddressSanitizer</h1> <ul> <li> <a href="#intro">Introduction</a> <li> <a href="#howtobuild">How to Build</a> <li> <a href="#usage">Usage</a> <ul><li> <a href="#has_feature">__has_feature(address_sanitizer)</a></ul> <ul><li> <a href="#no_address_safety_analysis"> __attribute__((no_address_safety_analysis))</a></ul> <li> <a href="#platforms">Supported Platforms</a> <li> <a href="#limitations">Limitations</a> <li> <a href="#status">Current Status</a> <li> <a href="#moreinfo">More Information</a> </ul> <h2 id="intro">Introduction</h2> AddressSanitizer is a fast memory error detector. It consists of a compiler instrumentation module and a run-time library. The tool can detect the following types of bugs: <ul> <li> Out-of-bounds accesses to heap, stack and globals <li> Use-after-free <li> Use-after-return (to some extent) <li> Double-free, invalid free </ul> Typical slowdown introduced by AddressSanitizer is <b>2x</b>. <h2 id="howtobuild">How to build</h2> Follow the <a href="../get_started.html">clang build instructions</a>. <BR> <h2 id="usage">Usage</h2> Simply compile and link your program with <tt>-faddress-sanitizer</tt> flag. <BR> To get a reasonable performance add <tt>-O1</tt> or higher. <BR> To get nicer stack traces in error messages add <tt>-fno-omit-frame-pointer</tt>. <BR> To get perfect stack traces you may need to disable inlining (just use <tt>-O1</tt>) and tail call elimination (</tt>-fno-optimize-sibling-calls</tt>). <pre> % cat example_UseAfterFree.cc int main(int argc, char **argv) { int *array = new int[100]; delete [] array; return array[argc]; // BOOM } </pre> <pre> % clang -O1 -g -faddress-sanitizer -fno-omit-frame-pointer example_UseAfterFree.cc </pre> If a bug is detected, the program will print an error message to stderr and exit with a non-zero exit code. Currently, AddressSanitizer does not symbolize its output, so you may need to use a separate script to symbolize the result offline (this will be fixed in future). <pre> % ./a.out 2> log % projects/compiler-rt/lib/asan/scripts/asan_symbolize.py / < log | c++filt ==9442== ERROR: AddressSanitizer heap-use-after-free on address 0x7f7ddab8c084 at pc 0x403c8c bp 0x7fff87fb82d0 sp 0x7fff87fb82c8 READ of size 4 at 0x7f7ddab8c084 thread T0 #0 0x403c8c in main example_UseAfterFree.cc:4 #1 0x7f7ddabcac4d in __libc_start_main ??:0 0x7f7ddab8c084 is located 4 bytes inside of 400-byte region [0x7f7ddab8c080,0x7f7ddab8c210) freed by thread T0 here: #0 0x404704 in operator delete[](void*) ??:0 #1 0x403c53 in main example_UseAfterFree.cc:4 #2 0x7f7ddabcac4d in __libc_start_main ??:0 previously allocated by thread T0 here: #0 0x404544 in operator new[](unsigned long) ??:0 #1 0x403c43 in main example_UseAfterFree.cc:2 #2 0x7f7ddabcac4d in __libc_start_main ??:0 ==9442== ABORTING </pre> <h3 id="has_feature">__has_feature(address_sanitizer)</h3> In some cases one may need to execute different code depending on whether AddressSanitizer is enabled. <a href="LanguageExtensions.html#__has_feature_extension">__has_feature</a> can be used for this purpose. <pre> #if defined(__has_feature) # if __has_feature(address_sanitizer) code that builds only under AddressSanitizer # endif #endif </pre> <h3 id="no_address_safety_analysis">__attribute__((no_address_safety_analysis))</h3> Some code should not be instrumentated by AddressSanitizer. One may use the function attribute <a href="LanguageExtensions.html#address_sanitizer"> <tt>no_address_safety_analysis</tt></a> to disable instrumentation of a particular function. This attribute may not be supported by other compilers, so we suggest to use it together with <tt>__has_feature(address_sanitizer)</tt>. Note: currently, this attribute will be lost if the function is inlined. <h2 id="platforms">Supported Platforms</h2> AddressSanitizer is supported on <ul><li>Linux x86_64 (tested on Ubuntu 10.04). <li>MacOS 10.6, 10.7 and 10.8 (i386/x86_64). </ul> Support for Linux i386/ARM is in progress (it may work, but is not guaranteed too). <h2 id="limitations">Limitations</h2> <ul> <li> AddressSanitizer uses more real memory than a native run. How much -- depends on the allocations sizes. The smaller the allocations you make the bigger the overhead. <li> AddressSanitizer uses more stack memory. We have seen up to 3x increase. <li> On 64-bit platforms AddressSanitizer maps (but not reserves) 16+ Terabytes of virtual address space. This means that tools like <tt>ulimit</tt> may not work as usually expected. <li> Static linking is not supported. </ul> <h2 id="status">Current Status</h2> AddressSanitizer is fully functional on supported platforms starting from LLVM 3.1. The test suite is integrated into CMake build (can be run with "make check-asan" command). <h2 id="moreinfo">More Information</h2> <a href="http://code.google.com/p/address-sanitizer/">http://code.google.com/p/address-sanitizer</a>. </div> </body> </html>