quantperl$(EXE_EXT): $& perlmain$(OBJ_EXT) $(LIBPERL) $(DYNALOADER) $(static_ext) ext.libs $(PERLEXPORT)
$(SHRPENV) $(LDLIBPTH) quantify $(CC) -o quantperl $(CLDFLAGS) $(CCDLFLAGS) perlmain$(OBJ_EXT) $(DYNALOADER) $(static_ext) $(LLIBPERL) `cat ext.libs` $(libs)
+# Valgrind perl (currently Linux only)
+
+perl.valgrind.config: config.sh
+ @echo "To build perl.valgrind you must Configure -Doptimize=-g -Uusemymalloc, checking..."
+ @$(MAKE) perl.config.dashg
+ @echo "Checking usemymalloc='n' in config.sh..."
+ @grep "^usemymalloc=" config.sh
+ @grep "^usemymalloc='n'" config.sh >/dev/null || exit 1
+ @echo "And of course you have to have valgrind..."
+ valgrind --help >/dev/null || exit 1
+
# Third Degree Perl (Tru64 only)
perl.config.dashg:
test.torture torturetest: test_prep
PERL=./perl TEST_ARGS=-torture $(MAKE) _test
+# Targets for valgrind testing:
+
+test_prep.valgrind: test_prep perl.valgrind
+ PERL=./perl $(MAKE) _test_prep
+
+test.valgrind check.valgrind: test_prep perl.valgrind.config
+ PERL=./perl PERL_DEBUG=PERL_VALGRIND=1 $(MAKE) _test
+
+utest.valgrind ucheck.valgrind: test_prep.valgrind perl.valgrind
+ PERL=./perl PERL_DEBUG=PERL_VALGRIND=1 TEST_ARGS=-utf8 $(MAKE) _test
+
+test_notty.valgrind: test_prep.valgrind perl.valgrind
+ PERL=./perl $(MAKE) PERL_DEBUG=PERL_VALGRIND=1 _test_notty
+
# Targets for Third Degree testing.
test_prep.third: test_prep perl.third
Run F<miniperl> on F<t/base>, F<t/comp>, F<t/cmd>, F<t/run>, F<t/io>,
F<t/op>, and F<t/uni> tests.
+=item test.valgrind check.valgrind utest.valgrind ucheck.valgrind
+
+(Only in Linux) Run all the tests using the memory leak + naughty
+memory access tool "valgrind". The log files will be named
+F<testname.valgrind>.
+
=item test.third check.third utest.third ucheck.third
(Only in Tru64) Run all the tests using the memory leak + naughty
is quite unfriendly for memory debuggers.) It is suggested that you
simply kill away that testing process.
+=head2 valgrind
+
+The excellent valgrind tool can be used to find out both memory leaks
+and illegal memory accesses. As of August 2003 it unfortunately works
+only on x86 (ELF) Linux. The special "test.valgrind" target can be used
+to run the tests under valgrind. Note that in the test script (t/TEST)
+currently (as of Perl 5.8.1) only naughty memory accesses are logged,
+not memory leaks. Found errors are logged in files named F<test.valgrind>.
+Also note that with Perl built with ithreads, the glibc (at least 2.2.5)
+seems to have a bug of its own, where a non-locked POSIX mutex is
+unlocked, and valgrind catches this, for every test-- therefore the
+test script ignores that error.
+
+To get valgrind and for more information see
+
+ http://developer.kde.org/~sewardj/
+
=head2 Compaq's/Digital's/HP's Third Degree
Third Degree is a tool for memory leak detection and memory access checks.
}
# + 3 : we want three dots between the test name and the "ok"
$dotdotdot = $maxlen + 3 ;
+ my $valgrind = 0;
while ($test = shift @tests) {
if ( $infinite{$test} && $type eq 'compile' ) {
# Redefinition happens at compile time
next;
}
- elsif ($test eq "lib/switch.t") {
+ elsif ($test =~ m{lib/Switch/t/}) {
# B::Deparse doesn't support source filtering
next;
}
}
elsif ($type eq 'perl') {
my $perl = $ENV{PERL} || './perl';
- my $redir = ($^O eq 'VMS' ? '2>&1' : '');
+ my $redir = ($^O eq 'VMS' || $ENV{PERL_VALGRIND} ? '2>&1' : '');
+ if ($ENV{PERL_VALGRIND}) {
+ $perl = "valgrind --num-callers=50 --leak-check=yes $perl";
+ }
my $run = "$perl" . _quote_args("$testswitch $switch $utf") . " $test $redir|";
open(RESULTS,$run) or print "can't run '$run': $!.\n";
}
$next = 0;
my $seen_leader = 0;
my $seen_ok = 0;
+ my @valgrind;
while (<RESULTS>) {
next if /^\s*$/; # skip blank lines
if ($verbose) {
print $_;
}
+ if ($ENV{PERL_VALGRIND} && /^==\d+== /) {
+ push @valgrind, $_;
+ next;
+ }
unless (/^\#/) {
if (/^1\.\.([0-9]+)( todo ([\d ]+))?/) {
$max = $1;
}
}
close RESULTS;
+ if ($ENV{PERL_VALGRIND}) {
+ if (@valgrind) {
+ my $skip_pthread_mutex_unlock;
+ for my $i (0..$#valgrind) {
+ local $_ = $valgrind[$i];
+ my $pid;
+ if (/^==(\d+)== pthread_mutex_unlock: mutex is not locked/ &&
+ ($pid = $1) &&
+ $valgrind[$i+2] =~ m{\(in .+/libc.+\.so\)}) {
+ $skip_pthread_mutex_unlock++;
+ } elsif (/^==\d+== ERROR SUMMARY: (\d+) errors? /) {
+ $errors = $1;
+ }
+ }
+ if (defined $errors) {
+ $errors -= $skip_pthread_mutex_unlock;
+ if ($errors) {
+ if (open(V, ">$test.valgrind")) {
+ for (@valgrind) {
+ print V $_;
+ }
+ close V;
+ $valgrind++;
+ } else {
+ warn "$0: Failed to create '$test.valgrind': $!\n";
+ }
+ }
+ }
+ } else {
+ warn "No valgrind output?\n";
+ }
+ }
if ($type eq 'deparse') {
unlink "./$test.dp";
}
($user,$sys,$cuser,$csys) = times;
print sprintf("u=%g s=%g cu=%g cs=%g scripts=%d tests=%d\n",
$user,$sys,$cuser,$csys,$files,$totmax);
+ if ($ENV{PERL_VALGRIND}) {
+ my $s = $valgrind == 1 ? '' : 's';
+ print "$valgrind valgrind report$s created.\n", ;
+ }
}
exit ($bad != 0);