/src/abseil-cpp/absl/debugging/leak_check.h
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1 | | // Copyright 2018 The Abseil Authors. |
2 | | // |
3 | | // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); |
4 | | // you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. |
5 | | // You may obtain a copy of the License at |
6 | | // |
7 | | // https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 |
8 | | // |
9 | | // Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software |
10 | | // distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, |
11 | | // WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. |
12 | | // See the License for the specific language governing permissions and |
13 | | // limitations under the License. |
14 | | // |
15 | | // ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
16 | | // File: leak_check.h |
17 | | // ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
18 | | // |
19 | | // This file contains functions that affect leak checking behavior within |
20 | | // targets built with the LeakSanitizer (LSan), a memory leak detector that is |
21 | | // integrated within the AddressSanitizer (ASan) as an additional component, or |
22 | | // which can be used standalone. LSan and ASan are included (or can be provided) |
23 | | // as additional components for most compilers such as Clang, gcc and MSVC. |
24 | | // Note: this leak checking API is not yet supported in MSVC. |
25 | | // Leak checking is enabled by default in all ASan builds. |
26 | | // |
27 | | // https://clang.llvm.org/docs/LeakSanitizer.html |
28 | | // https://github.com/google/sanitizers/wiki/AddressSanitizerLeakSanitizer |
29 | | // |
30 | | // GCC and Clang both automatically enable LeakSanitizer when AddressSanitizer |
31 | | // is enabled. To use the mode, simply pass `-fsanitize=address` to both the |
32 | | // compiler and linker. An example Bazel command could be |
33 | | // |
34 | | // $ bazel test --copt=-fsanitize=address --linkopt=-fsanitize=address ... |
35 | | // |
36 | | // GCC and Clang auto support a standalone LeakSanitizer mode (a mode which does |
37 | | // not also use AddressSanitizer). To use the mode, simply pass |
38 | | // `-fsanitize=leak` to both the compiler and linker. Since GCC does not |
39 | | // currently provide a way of detecting this mode at compile-time, GCC users |
40 | | // must also pass -DLEAK_SANITIZER to the compiler. An example Bazel command |
41 | | // could be |
42 | | // |
43 | | // $ bazel test --copt=-DLEAK_SANITIZER --copt=-fsanitize=leak |
44 | | // --linkopt=-fsanitize=leak ... |
45 | | // |
46 | | // ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
47 | | #ifndef ABSL_DEBUGGING_LEAK_CHECK_H_ |
48 | | #define ABSL_DEBUGGING_LEAK_CHECK_H_ |
49 | | |
50 | | #include <cstddef> |
51 | | |
52 | | #include "absl/base/config.h" |
53 | | |
54 | | namespace absl { |
55 | | ABSL_NAMESPACE_BEGIN |
56 | | |
57 | | // HaveLeakSanitizer() |
58 | | // |
59 | | // Returns true if a leak-checking sanitizer (either ASan or standalone LSan) is |
60 | | // currently built into this target. |
61 | | bool HaveLeakSanitizer(); |
62 | | |
63 | | // LeakCheckerIsActive() |
64 | | // |
65 | | // Returns true if a leak-checking sanitizer (either ASan or standalone LSan) is |
66 | | // currently built into this target and is turned on. |
67 | | bool LeakCheckerIsActive(); |
68 | | |
69 | | // DoIgnoreLeak() |
70 | | // |
71 | | // Implements `IgnoreLeak()` below. This function should usually |
72 | | // not be called directly; calling `IgnoreLeak()` is preferred. |
73 | | void DoIgnoreLeak(const void* ptr); |
74 | | |
75 | | // IgnoreLeak() |
76 | | // |
77 | | // Instruct the leak sanitizer to ignore leak warnings on the object referenced |
78 | | // by the passed pointer, as well as all heap objects transitively referenced |
79 | | // by it. The passed object pointer can point to either the beginning of the |
80 | | // object or anywhere within it. |
81 | | // |
82 | | // Example: |
83 | | // |
84 | | // static T* obj = IgnoreLeak(new T(...)); |
85 | | // |
86 | | // If the passed `ptr` does not point to an actively allocated object at the |
87 | | // time `IgnoreLeak()` is called, the call is a no-op; if it is actively |
88 | | // allocated, leak sanitizer will assume this object is referenced even if |
89 | | // there is no actual reference in user memory. |
90 | | // |
91 | | template <typename T> |
92 | 0 | T* IgnoreLeak(T* ptr) { |
93 | 0 | DoIgnoreLeak(ptr); |
94 | 0 | return ptr; |
95 | 0 | } |
96 | | |
97 | | // FindAndReportLeaks() |
98 | | // |
99 | | // If any leaks are detected, prints a leak report and returns true. This |
100 | | // function may be called repeatedly, and does not affect end-of-process leak |
101 | | // checking. |
102 | | // |
103 | | // Example: |
104 | | // if (FindAndReportLeaks()) { |
105 | | // ... diagnostic already printed. Exit with failure code. |
106 | | // exit(1) |
107 | | // } |
108 | | bool FindAndReportLeaks(); |
109 | | |
110 | | // LeakCheckDisabler |
111 | | // |
112 | | // This helper class indicates that any heap allocations done in the code block |
113 | | // covered by the scoped object, which should be allocated on the stack, will |
114 | | // not be reported as leaks. Leak check disabling will occur within the code |
115 | | // block and any nested function calls within the code block. |
116 | | // |
117 | | // Example: |
118 | | // |
119 | | // void Foo() { |
120 | | // LeakCheckDisabler disabler; |
121 | | // ... code that allocates objects whose leaks should be ignored ... |
122 | | // } |
123 | | // |
124 | | // REQUIRES: Destructor runs in same thread as constructor |
125 | | class LeakCheckDisabler { |
126 | | public: |
127 | | LeakCheckDisabler(); |
128 | | LeakCheckDisabler(const LeakCheckDisabler&) = delete; |
129 | | LeakCheckDisabler& operator=(const LeakCheckDisabler&) = delete; |
130 | | ~LeakCheckDisabler(); |
131 | | }; |
132 | | |
133 | | // RegisterLivePointers() |
134 | | // |
135 | | // Registers `ptr[0,size-1]` as pointers to memory that is still actively being |
136 | | // referenced and for which leak checking should be ignored. This function is |
137 | | // useful if you store pointers in mapped memory, for memory ranges that we know |
138 | | // are correct but for which normal analysis would flag as leaked code. |
139 | | void RegisterLivePointers(const void* ptr, size_t size); |
140 | | |
141 | | // UnRegisterLivePointers() |
142 | | // |
143 | | // Deregisters the pointers previously marked as active in |
144 | | // `RegisterLivePointers()`, enabling leak checking of those pointers. |
145 | | void UnRegisterLivePointers(const void* ptr, size_t size); |
146 | | |
147 | | ABSL_NAMESPACE_END |
148 | | } // namespace absl |
149 | | |
150 | | #endif // ABSL_DEBUGGING_LEAK_CHECK_H_ |