Retro68/gcc/libsanitizer/include/sanitizer/lsan_interface.h
2018-12-28 16:30:48 +01:00

89 lines
3.7 KiB
C++

//===-- sanitizer/lsan_interface.h ------------------------------*- C++ -*-===//
//
// This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source
// License. See LICENSE.TXT for details.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
//
// This file is a part of LeakSanitizer.
//
// Public interface header.
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
#ifndef SANITIZER_LSAN_INTERFACE_H
#define SANITIZER_LSAN_INTERFACE_H
#include <sanitizer/common_interface_defs.h>
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
// Allocations made between calls to __lsan_disable() and __lsan_enable() will
// be treated as non-leaks. Disable/enable pairs may be nested.
void __lsan_disable();
void __lsan_enable();
// The heap object into which p points will be treated as a non-leak.
void __lsan_ignore_object(const void *p);
// Memory regions registered through this interface will be treated as sources
// of live pointers during leak checking. Useful if you store pointers in
// mapped memory.
// Points of note:
// - __lsan_unregister_root_region() must be called with the same pointer and
// size that have earlier been passed to __lsan_register_root_region()
// - LSan will skip any inaccessible memory when scanning a root region. E.g.,
// if you map memory within a larger region that you have mprotect'ed, you can
// register the entire large region.
// - the implementation is not optimized for performance. This interface is
// intended to be used for a small number of relatively static regions.
void __lsan_register_root_region(const void *p, size_t size);
void __lsan_unregister_root_region(const void *p, size_t size);
// Check for leaks now. This function behaves identically to the default
// end-of-process leak check. In particular, it will terminate the process if
// leaks are found and the exitcode runtime flag is non-zero.
// Subsequent calls to this function will have no effect and end-of-process
// leak check will not run. Effectively, end-of-process leak check is moved to
// the time of first invocation of this function.
// By calling this function early during process shutdown, you can instruct
// LSan to ignore shutdown-only leaks which happen later on.
void __lsan_do_leak_check();
// Check for leaks now. Returns zero if no leaks have been found or if leak
// detection is disabled, non-zero otherwise.
// This function may be called repeatedly, e.g. to periodically check a
// long-running process. It prints a leak report if appropriate, but does not
// terminate the process. It does not affect the behavior of
// __lsan_do_leak_check() or the end-of-process leak check, and is not
// affected by them.
int __lsan_do_recoverable_leak_check();
// The user may optionally provide this function to disallow leak checking
// for the program it is linked into (if the return value is non-zero). This
// function must be defined as returning a constant value; any behavior beyond
// that is unsupported.
// To avoid dead stripping, you may need to define this function with
// __attribute__((used))
int __lsan_is_turned_off();
// This function may be optionally provided by user and should return
// a string containing LSan runtime options. See lsan_flags.inc for details.
const char *__lsan_default_options();
// This function may be optionally provided by the user and should return
// a string containing LSan suppressions.
const char *__lsan_default_suppressions();
#ifdef __cplusplus
} // extern "C"
namespace __lsan {
class ScopedDisabler {
public:
ScopedDisabler() { __lsan_disable(); }
~ScopedDisabler() { __lsan_enable(); }
};
} // namespace __lsan
#endif
#endif // SANITIZER_LSAN_INTERFACE_H