| .TH efence 3 27-April-1993 | 
 | .SH NAME | 
 | efence \- Electric Fence Malloc Debugger | 
 | .SH SYNOPSIS | 
 | .nf | 
 | .ft B | 
 | #include <stdlib.h> | 
 | .ft | 
 | .fi | 
 | .LP | 
 | .nf | 
 | .ft B | 
 | void * malloc (size_t size); | 
 | .ft | 
 | .fi | 
 | .LP | 
 | .nf | 
 | .ft B | 
 | void free (void *ptr); | 
 | .ft | 
 | .fi | 
 | .LP | 
 | .nf | 
 | .ft B | 
 | void * realloc (void *ptr, size_t size); | 
 | .ft | 
 | .fi | 
 | .LP | 
 | .nf | 
 | .ft B | 
 | void * calloc (size_t nelem, size_t elsize); | 
 | .ft | 
 | .fi | 
 | .LP | 
 | .nf | 
 | .ft B | 
 | void * memalign (size_t alignment, size_t size); | 
 | .ft | 
 | .fi | 
 | .LP | 
 | .nf | 
 | .ft B | 
 | void * valloc (size_t size); | 
 | .ft | 
 | .fi | 
 | .LP | 
 | .nf | 
 | .ft B | 
 | extern int EF_DISABLE_BANNER; | 
 | .ft | 
 | .fi | 
 | .LP | 
 | .nf | 
 | .ft B | 
 | extern int EF_ALIGNMENT; | 
 | .ft | 
 | .fi | 
 | .LP | 
 | .nf | 
 | .ft B | 
 | extern int EF_PROTECT_BELOW; | 
 | .ft | 
 | .fi | 
 | .LP | 
 | .nf | 
 | .ft B | 
 | extern int EF_PROTECT_FREE; | 
 | .ft | 
 | .fi | 
 | .LP | 
 | .nf | 
 | .ft B | 
 | extern int EF_ALLOW_MALLOC_0; | 
 | .ft | 
 | .fi | 
 | .LP | 
 | .nf | 
 | .ft B | 
 | extern int EF_FREE_WIPES; | 
 | .ft | 
 | .fi | 
 | .SH DESCRIPTION | 
 | .I Electric Fence | 
 | helps you detect two common programming bugs: | 
 | software that overruns the boundaries of a malloc() memory | 
 | allocation, and software that touches a memory allocation that has been | 
 | released by free(). Unlike other malloc() debuggers, Electric Fence will | 
 | detect | 
 | .I 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. | 
 | .LP | 
 | 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, stopping 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. | 
 | .LP | 
 | 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 | 
 | .I all | 
 | bugs of this type, you'll have to read and understand the rest of this | 
 | man page. | 
 | .SH USAGE | 
 | Link your program with the library | 
 | .B libefence.a . | 
 | Make sure you are | 
 | .I not | 
 | linking with | 
 | .B -lmalloc, | 
 | .B -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 | 
 | .B -lefence | 
 | argument to the linker, otherwise you'll have to put the path-name for | 
 | .B libefence.a | 
 | in the linker's command line. | 
 | 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. | 
 | On AIX systems, you may have to use the flags | 
 | .br | 
 | .B -bnso | 
 | .B -bnodelcsect | 
 | .B -bI:/lib/syscalls.exp | 
 | .br | 
 | On Sun systems running SunOS 4.X, you'll probably have to use | 
 | .B -Bstatic. | 
 | .LP | 
 | Run your program | 
 | .I using a debugger.  | 
 | It's easier to work this way than to create a | 
 | .B core | 
 | file and post-mortem debug it. Electric Fence can create | 
 | .I 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 program 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. | 
 | .SH GLOBAL AND ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES | 
 | Electric Fence has six configuration switches that can be enabled via | 
 | the shell environment, or by setting the value of global integer variables | 
 | using a debugger. These switches change what bugs Electric Fence will detect, | 
 | so it's important that you know how to use them. | 
 | .TP | 
 | EF_DISABLE_BANNER | 
 | This is an integer which if nonzero specifies that the usual Electric | 
 | Fence banner and copyright notice should not be printed.  This is | 
 | provided for certain circumstances where the banner can be annoying | 
 | (eg, running a regression test suite that also monitors stderr).  Note | 
 | that you should almost certainly not set this in your program, because | 
 | then you might leave Electric Fence linked into the production | 
 | version, which would be very bad. | 
 | .TP | 
 | 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 | 
 | .B int | 
 | you'll have to set this value to 8. This is the case when compiling with the | 
 | .B -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 | 
 | .I its size the multiple of | 
 | .I that value | 
 | that is greater than or equal to the requested size. | 
 | For this reason, you will sometimes want to set EF_ALIGNMENT to 0 (no | 
 | alignment), so that | 
 | you can detect overruns of less than your CPU's word size. Be sure to read | 
 | the section | 
 | .I 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. | 
 | .TP | 
 | 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_PROTECT_BELOW to 1 causes Electric Fence | 
 | to place the inaccessible page | 
 | .I before | 
 | the allocation in the address space, so that under-runs will be detected | 
 | instead of over-runs. | 
 | When EF_PROTECT_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. | 
 | .TP | 
 | EF_PROTECT_FREE | 
 | When EF_PROTECT_FREE is not set (i. e. set to 0), Electric Fence returns free | 
 | memory to a pool and only checks accesses to it until it is reallocated. 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 parameter 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. | 
 | .TP | 
 | 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_ALLOW_MALLOC_0 in the shell environment to an | 
 | integer value, or assign to the global integer variable EF_ALLOW_MALLOC_0 using | 
 | a debugger. | 
 | .TP | 
 | EF_FREE_WIPES | 
 | By default, Electric Fence releases memory without changing the content | 
 | of the released memory block.  IF EF_FREE_WIPES is non-zero, the sofware | 
 | will fill the memory block with 0xbd values before it is released. | 
 | This makes it easier to trigger illegal use of released memory, and eaiser | 
 | to understand why a memory access failed during gdb runs. | 
 | .SH 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 virtual memory | 
 | pages for each allocation. The last page is made inaccessible 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. | 
 | .LP | 
 | It follows that the | 
 | address returned by malloc() is the address of the inaccessible page minus | 
 | the size of the memory allocation. | 
 | Unfortunately, malloc() is required to return | 
 | .I word-aligned | 
 | allocations, since many CPUs can only access a word when its address is aligned. | 
 | The conflict 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. | 
 | .LP | 
 | Electric Fence provides the variable EF_ALIGNMENT so that the user can | 
 | control the default alignment used by malloc(), calloc(), and realloc(). | 
 | 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 segmentation 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. | 
 | .LP | 
 | Another example of software incompatible with | 
 | EF_ALIGNMENT < word-size | 
 | is the strcmp() function and other string functions on SunOS (and probably | 
 | 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 references instead | 
 | of word references. | 
 | .SH INSTRUCTIONS FOR DEBUGGING YOUR PROGRAM | 
 | .TP | 
 | 1. | 
 | Link with libefence.a as explained above. | 
 | .TP | 
 | 2. | 
 | Run your program in a debugger and fix any overruns or accesses to free memory. | 
 | .TP | 
 | 3. | 
 | Quit the debugger. | 
 | .TP | 
 | 4. | 
 | Set EF_PROTECT_BELOW = 1 in the shell environment. | 
 | .TP | 
 | 5. | 
 | Repeat step 2, this time repairing underruns if they occur. | 
 | .TP | 
 | 6. | 
 | Quit the debugger. | 
 | .TP | 
 | 7. | 
 | Read the restrictions in the section on | 
 | .I WORD-ALIGNMENT AND OVERRUN 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. | 
 | .SH 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 manipulate 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. | 
 | .LP | 
 | Don't leave libefence.a linked into production software! Use it only | 
 | for debugging. | 
 | .SH PORTING | 
 | Electric Fence is written for ANSI C. You should be able to port it with | 
 | simple changes to the Makefile and to page.c, | 
 | which contains the memory management primitives . | 
 | Many POSIX platforms will require only a re-compile. | 
 | The operating system facilities required to port Electric Fence are: | 
 | .IP | 
 | A way to allocate memory pages | 
 | .br | 
 | A way to make selected pages inaccessible. | 
 | .br | 
 | A way to make the pages accessible again. | 
 | .br | 
 | A way to detect when a program touches an inaccessible page. | 
 | .br | 
 | A way to print messages. | 
 | .LP | 
 | Please e-mail me a copy of any changes you have to make, so that I can | 
 | merge them into the distribution. | 
 | .SH AUTHOR | 
 | Bruce Perens | 
 | .SH 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 software 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. | 
 | Bruce Perens and/or Pixar will not be liable to any claims resulting | 
 | from the use of this software or the ideas within it. | 
 | The entire responsibility for its use must | 
 | be assumed by the user. If you use it and it results in loss of life | 
 | and/or property, tough. If it leads you on a wild goose chase and you waste | 
 | two weeks debugging something, too bad. | 
 | If you can't deal with the above, please don't use the software! I've written | 
 | this in an attempt to help other people, not to get myself sued or prosecuted. | 
 | .SH LICENSE | 
 | Copyright 1987-1995 Bruce Perens. All rights reserved. | 
 | .br | 
 | 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 published by the Free Software Foundation. A copy of this license is | 
 | distributed 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 | 
 | MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Read the | 
 | file "COPYING" for more details. | 
 | .SH CONTACTING THE AUTHOR | 
 | .nf | 
 | Bruce Perens | 
 | c/o Pixar | 
 | 1001 West Cutting Blvd., Suite 200 | 
 | Richmond, CA 94804 | 
 |  | 
 | Telephone: 510-215-3502 | 
 | Fax: 510-236-0388 | 
 | Internet: Bruce@Pixar.com | 
 | .fi | 
 | .ft | 
 | .SH FILES | 
 | /dev/zero: Source of memory pages (via mmap(2)). | 
 | .SH SEE ALSO | 
 | malloc(3), mmap(2), mprotect(2), swapon(8) | 
 | .SH DIAGNOSTICS | 
 | Segmentation Fault: Examine the offending statement for violation of the | 
 | boundaries of a memory allocation. | 
 | .br | 
 | Bus Error: See the section on | 
 | .I WORD-ALIGNMENT AND OVERRUN DETECTION. | 
 | in this manual page. | 
 | .SH BUGS | 
 | My explanation of the alignment issue could be improved. | 
 | .LP | 
 | Some Sun systems running SunOS 4.1 are reported to signal an access to a | 
 | protected page with | 
 | .B  SIGBUS | 
 | rather than | 
 | .B 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 | 
 | .B PAGE_PROTECTION_VIOLATED_SIGNAL | 
 | as | 
 | .B SIGBUS. | 
 | .LP | 
 | There are, without doubt, other bugs and porting issues. Please contact me via | 
 | e-mail if you have any bug reports, ideas, etc. | 
 | .SH WHAT'S BETTER | 
 | PURIFY, from Purify Systems, does a much better job than Electric Fence, and | 
 | does much more. It's available at this writing on SPARC and HP. | 
 | I'm not affiliated with Purify, I just think it's a wonderful product | 
 | and you should check it out. |