% % $Id$ % This file is part of the FPC documentation. % Copyright (C) 1998, by Michael Van Canneyt % % The FPC documentation is free text; you can redistribute it and/or % modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as % published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the % License, or (at your option) any later version. % % The FPC Documentation 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. See the GNU % Library General Public License for more details. % % You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public % License along with the FPC documentation; see the file COPYING.LIB. If not, % write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, % Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. % \chapter{The HEAPTRC unit.} This chapter describes the HEAPTRC unit for \fpc. It was written by Pierre Muller. \section{Purpose} The HEAPTRC unit can be used to debug your memory allocation/deallocation. It keeps track of the calls to getmem/freemem, and, implicitly, of New/Dispose statements. When the program exits, or when you request it explicitly. It displays the total memory used, and then dumps a list of blocks that were allocated but not freed. It also displays where the memory was allocated. If there are any inconsistencies, such as memory blocks being allocated or freed twice, or a memory block that is released but with wrong size, this will be displayed also. The information that is stored/displayed can be customized using some constants. \section{Usage} All that you need to do is to include \file{heaptrc} in the uses clause of your program. Make sure that it is the first unit in the clause, otherwise memory allocated in initialization code of units that precede the heaptrc unit will not be accounted for, causing an incorrect memory usage report. The following example shows how to use the heaptrc unit. \latex{\lstinputlisting{heapex/heapex.pp}} \html{\input{heapex/heapex.tex}} This is the memory dump shown when running this program: \begin{verbatim} Marked memory at 08052C48 invalid Wrong size : 128 allocated 64 freed 0x0804C29C 0x080509E2 0x080480A4 0x00000000 Heap dump by heaptrc unit 13 memory blocks allocated : 1416/1424 6 memory blocks freed : 708/712 7 unfreed memory blocks : 708 True heap size : 2097152 True free heap : 2096040 Should be : 2096104 Call trace for block 0x08052C48 size 128 0x080509D6 0x080480A4 Call trace for block 0x08052B98 size 128 0x08050992 0x080480A4 Call trace for block 0x08052AE8 size 128 0x08050992 0x080480A4 Call trace for block 0x08052A38 size 128 0x08050992 0x080480A4 Call trace for block 0x08052988 size 128 0x08050992 0x080480A4 Call trace for block 0x080528D8 size 128 0x08050992 0x080480A4 Call trace for block 0x080528A0 size 4 0x08050961 0x080480A4 \end{verbatim} \section{Constants, Types and variables} The \var{FillExtraInfoType} is a procedural type used in the \seep{SetExtraInfo} call. \begin{lstlisting}{} type FillExtraInfoType = procedure(p : pointer); \end{lstlisting}{} The following typed constants allow to fine-tune the standard dump of the memory usage by \seep{DumpHeap}: \begin{lstlisting}{} const tracesize = 8; quicktrace : boolean = true; HaltOnError : boolean = true; keepreleased : boolean = false; \end{lstlisting}{} \var{Tracesize} specifies how many levels of calls are displayed of the call stack during the memory dump. If you specify \var{keepreleased:=True} then half the \var{TraceSize} is reserved for the \var{GetMem} call stack, and the other half is reserved for the \var{FreeMem} call stack. For example, the default value of 8 will cause eight levels of call frames to be dumped for the getmem call if \var{keepreleased} is \var{False}. If \var{KeepReleased} is true, then 4 levels of call frames will be dumped for the \var{GetMem} call and 4 frames wil be dumped for the \var{FreeMem} call. If you want to change this value, you must recode the \file{heaptrc} unit. \var{Quicktrace} determines whether the memory manager checks whether a block that is about to be released is allocated correctly. This is a rather time consuming search, and slows program execution significantly, so by default it is set to \var{False}. If \var{HaltOnError} is set to \var{True} then an illegal call to \var{FreeMem} will cause the memory manager to execute a \var{halt(1)} instruction, causing a memory dump. By Default it is set to \var{True}. If \var{keepreleased} is set to true, then a list of freed memory blocks is kept. This is useful if you suspect that the same memory block is released twice. However, this option is very memory intensive, so use it sparingly, and only when it's really necessary. \section{Functions and procedures} \begin{procedure}{DumpHeap} \Declaration procedure DumpHeap; \Description \var{DumpHeap} dumps to standard output a summary of memory usage. It is called automatically by the heaptrc unit when your program exits (by instaling an exit procedure), but it can be called at any time \Errors None. \SeeAlso \seep{MarkHeap} \end{procedure} \begin{procedure}{MarkHeap} \Declaration procedure MarkHeap; \Description \var{MarkHeap} marks all memory blocks with a special signature. You can use this if you think that you corruped the memory. \Errors None. \SeeAlso \seep{DumpHeap} \end{procedure} \begin{procedure}{SetExtraInfo} \Declaration procedure SetExtraInfo( size : longint;func : FillExtraInfoType); \Description You can use \var{SetExtraInfo} to store extra info in the blocks that the heaptrc unit reserves when tracing getmem calls. \var{Size} indicates the size (in bytes) that the trace mechanism should reserve for your extra information. For each call to \var{getmem}, \var{func} will be called, and passed a pointer to the memory reserved. When dumping the memory summary, the extra info is shown as Longint values. \Errors You can only call \var{SetExtraInfo} if no memroy has been allocated yet. If memory was already allocated prior to the call to \var{SetExtraInfo}, then an error will be displayed on standard error output, and a \seep{DumpHeap} is executed. \SeeAlso \seep{DumpHeap} \end{procedure} \latex{\lstinputlisting{heapex/setinfo.pp}} \html{\input{heapex/setinfo.tex}} % % $Log$ % Revision 1.3 1999-06-25 22:12:16 michael % + Update to version 0.19 of listings package % % Revision 1.2 1998/12/15 23:50:52 michael % * Some updates % % Revision 1.1 1998/12/14 23:17:02 michael % + INitial implementation % %