299 lines
11 KiB
ReStructuredText
299 lines
11 KiB
ReStructuredText
================
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AddressSanitizer
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================
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.. contents::
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:local:
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Introduction
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============
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AddressSanitizer is a fast memory error detector. It consists of a compiler
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instrumentation module and a run-time library. The tool can detect the
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following types of bugs:
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* Out-of-bounds accesses to heap, stack and globals
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* Use-after-free
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* Use-after-return (runtime flag `ASAN_OPTIONS=detect_stack_use_after_return=1`)
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* Use-after-scope (clang flag `-fsanitize-address-use-after-scope`)
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* Double-free, invalid free
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* Memory leaks (experimental)
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Typical slowdown introduced by AddressSanitizer is **2x**.
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How to build
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============
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Build LLVM/Clang with `CMake <https://llvm.org/docs/CMake.html>`_.
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Usage
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=====
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Simply compile and link your program with ``-fsanitize=address`` flag. The
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AddressSanitizer run-time library should be linked to the final executable, so
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make sure to use ``clang`` (not ``ld``) for the final link step. When linking
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shared libraries, the AddressSanitizer run-time is not linked, so
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``-Wl,-z,defs`` may cause link errors (don't use it with AddressSanitizer). To
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get a reasonable performance add ``-O1`` or higher. To get nicer stack traces
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in error messages add ``-fno-omit-frame-pointer``. To get perfect stack traces
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you may need to disable inlining (just use ``-O1``) and tail call elimination
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(``-fno-optimize-sibling-calls``).
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.. code-block:: console
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% cat example_UseAfterFree.cc
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int main(int argc, char **argv) {
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int *array = new int[100];
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delete [] array;
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return array[argc]; // BOOM
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}
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# Compile and link
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% clang++ -O1 -g -fsanitize=address -fno-omit-frame-pointer example_UseAfterFree.cc
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or:
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.. code-block:: console
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# Compile
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% clang++ -O1 -g -fsanitize=address -fno-omit-frame-pointer -c example_UseAfterFree.cc
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# Link
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% clang++ -g -fsanitize=address example_UseAfterFree.o
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If a bug is detected, the program will print an error message to stderr and
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exit with a non-zero exit code. AddressSanitizer exits on the first detected error.
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This is by design:
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* This approach allows AddressSanitizer to produce faster and smaller generated code
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(both by ~5%).
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* Fixing bugs becomes unavoidable. AddressSanitizer does not produce
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false alarms. Once a memory corruption occurs, the program is in an inconsistent
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state, which could lead to confusing results and potentially misleading
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subsequent reports.
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If your process is sandboxed and you are running on OS X 10.10 or earlier, you
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will need to set ``DYLD_INSERT_LIBRARIES`` environment variable and point it to
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the ASan library that is packaged with the compiler used to build the
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executable. (You can find the library by searching for dynamic libraries with
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``asan`` in their name.) If the environment variable is not set, the process will
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try to re-exec. Also keep in mind that when moving the executable to another machine,
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the ASan library will also need to be copied over.
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Symbolizing the Reports
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=========================
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To make AddressSanitizer symbolize its output
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you need to set the ``ASAN_SYMBOLIZER_PATH`` environment variable to point to
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the ``llvm-symbolizer`` binary (or make sure ``llvm-symbolizer`` is in your
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``$PATH``):
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.. code-block:: console
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% ASAN_SYMBOLIZER_PATH=/usr/local/bin/llvm-symbolizer ./a.out
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==9442== ERROR: AddressSanitizer heap-use-after-free on address 0x7f7ddab8c084 at pc 0x403c8c bp 0x7fff87fb82d0 sp 0x7fff87fb82c8
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READ of size 4 at 0x7f7ddab8c084 thread T0
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#0 0x403c8c in main example_UseAfterFree.cc:4
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#1 0x7f7ddabcac4d in __libc_start_main ??:0
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0x7f7ddab8c084 is located 4 bytes inside of 400-byte region [0x7f7ddab8c080,0x7f7ddab8c210)
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freed by thread T0 here:
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#0 0x404704 in operator delete[](void*) ??:0
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#1 0x403c53 in main example_UseAfterFree.cc:4
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#2 0x7f7ddabcac4d in __libc_start_main ??:0
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previously allocated by thread T0 here:
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#0 0x404544 in operator new[](unsigned long) ??:0
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#1 0x403c43 in main example_UseAfterFree.cc:2
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#2 0x7f7ddabcac4d in __libc_start_main ??:0
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==9442== ABORTING
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If that does not work for you (e.g. your process is sandboxed), you can use a
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separate script to symbolize the result offline (online symbolization can be
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force disabled by setting ``ASAN_OPTIONS=symbolize=0``):
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.. code-block:: console
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% ASAN_OPTIONS=symbolize=0 ./a.out 2> log
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% projects/compiler-rt/lib/asan/scripts/asan_symbolize.py / < log | c++filt
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==9442== ERROR: AddressSanitizer heap-use-after-free on address 0x7f7ddab8c084 at pc 0x403c8c bp 0x7fff87fb82d0 sp 0x7fff87fb82c8
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READ of size 4 at 0x7f7ddab8c084 thread T0
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#0 0x403c8c in main example_UseAfterFree.cc:4
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#1 0x7f7ddabcac4d in __libc_start_main ??:0
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...
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Note that on macOS you may need to run ``dsymutil`` on your binary to have the
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file\:line info in the AddressSanitizer reports.
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Additional Checks
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=================
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Initialization order checking
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-----------------------------
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AddressSanitizer can optionally detect dynamic initialization order problems,
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when initialization of globals defined in one translation unit uses
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globals defined in another translation unit. To enable this check at runtime,
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you should set environment variable
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``ASAN_OPTIONS=check_initialization_order=1``.
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Note that this option is not supported on macOS.
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Memory leak detection
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---------------------
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For more information on leak detector in AddressSanitizer, see
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:doc:`LeakSanitizer`. The leak detection is turned on by default on Linux,
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and can be enabled using ``ASAN_OPTIONS=detect_leaks=1`` on macOS;
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however, it is not yet supported on other platforms.
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Issue Suppression
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=================
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AddressSanitizer is not expected to produce false positives. If you see one,
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look again; most likely it is a true positive!
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Suppressing Reports in External Libraries
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-----------------------------------------
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Runtime interposition allows AddressSanitizer to find bugs in code that is
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not being recompiled. If you run into an issue in external libraries, we
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recommend immediately reporting it to the library maintainer so that it
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gets addressed. However, you can use the following suppression mechanism
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to unblock yourself and continue on with the testing. This suppression
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mechanism should only be used for suppressing issues in external code; it
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does not work on code recompiled with AddressSanitizer. To suppress errors
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in external libraries, set the ``ASAN_OPTIONS`` environment variable to point
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to a suppression file. You can either specify the full path to the file or the
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path of the file relative to the location of your executable.
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.. code-block:: bash
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ASAN_OPTIONS=suppressions=MyASan.supp
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Use the following format to specify the names of the functions or libraries
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you want to suppress. You can see these in the error report. Remember that
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the narrower the scope of the suppression, the more bugs you will be able to
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catch.
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.. code-block:: bash
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interceptor_via_fun:NameOfCFunctionToSuppress
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interceptor_via_fun:-[ClassName objCMethodToSuppress:]
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interceptor_via_lib:NameOfTheLibraryToSuppress
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Conditional Compilation with ``__has_feature(address_sanitizer)``
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-----------------------------------------------------------------
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In some cases one may need to execute different code depending on whether
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AddressSanitizer is enabled.
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:ref:`\_\_has\_feature <langext-__has_feature-__has_extension>` can be used for
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this purpose.
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.. code-block:: c
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#if defined(__has_feature)
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# if __has_feature(address_sanitizer)
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// code that builds only under AddressSanitizer
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# endif
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#endif
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Disabling Instrumentation with ``__attribute__((no_sanitize("address")))``
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--------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Some code should not be instrumented by AddressSanitizer. One may use
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the attribute ``__attribute__((no_sanitize("address")))`` (which has
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deprecated synonyms `no_sanitize_address` and
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`no_address_safety_analysis`) to disable instrumentation of a
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particular function. This attribute may not be supported by other
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compilers, so we suggest to use it together with
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``__has_feature(address_sanitizer)``.
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The same attribute used on a global variable prevents AddressSanitizer
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from adding redzones around it and detecting out of bounds accesses.
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Suppressing Errors in Recompiled Code (Blacklist)
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-------------------------------------------------
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AddressSanitizer supports ``src`` and ``fun`` entity types in
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:doc:`SanitizerSpecialCaseList`, that can be used to suppress error reports
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in the specified source files or functions. Additionally, AddressSanitizer
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introduces ``global`` and ``type`` entity types that can be used to
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suppress error reports for out-of-bound access to globals with certain
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names and types (you may only specify class or struct types).
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You may use an ``init`` category to suppress reports about initialization-order
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problems happening in certain source files or with certain global variables.
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.. code-block:: bash
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# Suppress error reports for code in a file or in a function:
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src:bad_file.cpp
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# Ignore all functions with names containing MyFooBar:
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fun:*MyFooBar*
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# Disable out-of-bound checks for global:
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global:bad_array
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# Disable out-of-bound checks for global instances of a given class ...
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type:Namespace::BadClassName
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# ... or a given struct. Use wildcard to deal with anonymous namespace.
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type:Namespace2::*::BadStructName
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# Disable initialization-order checks for globals:
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global:bad_init_global=init
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type:*BadInitClassSubstring*=init
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src:bad/init/files/*=init
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Suppressing memory leaks
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------------------------
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Memory leak reports produced by :doc:`LeakSanitizer` (if it is run as a part
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of AddressSanitizer) can be suppressed by a separate file passed as
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.. code-block:: bash
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LSAN_OPTIONS=suppressions=MyLSan.supp
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which contains lines of the form `leak:<pattern>`. Memory leak will be
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suppressed if pattern matches any function name, source file name, or
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library name in the symbolized stack trace of the leak report. See
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`full documentation
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<https://github.com/google/sanitizers/wiki/AddressSanitizerLeakSanitizer#suppressions>`_
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for more details.
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Limitations
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===========
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* AddressSanitizer uses more real memory than a native run. Exact overhead
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depends on the allocations sizes. The smaller the allocations you make the
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bigger the overhead is.
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* AddressSanitizer uses more stack memory. We have seen up to 3x increase.
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* On 64-bit platforms AddressSanitizer maps (but not reserves) 16+ Terabytes of
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virtual address space. This means that tools like ``ulimit`` may not work as
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usually expected.
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* Static linking of executables is not supported.
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Supported Platforms
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===================
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AddressSanitizer is supported on:
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* Linux i386/x86\_64 (tested on Ubuntu 12.04)
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* macOS 10.7 - 10.11 (i386/x86\_64)
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* iOS Simulator
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* Android ARM
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* NetBSD i386/x86\_64
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* FreeBSD i386/x86\_64 (tested on FreeBSD 11-current)
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* Windows 8.1+ (i386/x86\_64)
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Ports to various other platforms are in progress.
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Current Status
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==============
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AddressSanitizer is fully functional on supported platforms starting from LLVM
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3.1. The test suite is integrated into CMake build and can be run with ``make
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check-asan`` command.
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The Windows port is functional and is used by Chrome and Firefox, but it is not
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as well supported as the other ports.
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More Information
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================
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`<https://github.com/google/sanitizers/wiki/AddressSanitizer>`_
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