| Malloc Debug |
| ============ |
| |
| Malloc debug is a method of debugging native memory problems. It can help |
| detect memory corruption, memory leaks, and use after free issues. |
| |
| This documentation describes how to enable this feature on API level 24 or later |
| versions of the Android OS. (See the "Examples" section.) |
| |
| The documentation for malloc debug on older versions of Android is |
| [here](README_marshmallow_and_earlier.md). |
| |
| When malloc debug is enabled, it works by adding a shim layer that replaces |
| the normal allocation calls. The replaced calls are: |
| |
| * `malloc` |
| * `free` |
| * `calloc` |
| * `realloc` |
| * `posix_memalign` |
| * `memalign` |
| * `aligned_alloc` |
| * `malloc_usable_size` |
| |
| On 32 bit systems, these two deprecated functions are also replaced: |
| |
| * `pvalloc` |
| * `valloc` |
| |
| Any errors detected by the library are reported in the log. |
| |
| NOTE: There is a small behavioral change beginning in P for realloc. |
| Before, a realloc from one size to a smaller size would not update the |
| backtrace related to the allocation. Starting in P, every single realloc |
| call changes the backtrace for the pointer no matter whether the pointer |
| returned has changed or not. |
| |
| |
| Controlling Malloc Debug Behavior |
| --------------------------------- |
| Malloc debug is controlled by individual options. Each option can be enabled |
| individually, or in a group of other options. Every single option can be |
| combined with every other option. |
| |
| Option Descriptions |
| ------------------- |
| ### front\_guard[=SIZE\_BYTES] |
| Enables a small buffer placed before the allocated data. This is an attempt |
| to find memory corruption occuring to a region before the original allocation. |
| On first allocation, this front guard is written with a specific pattern (0xaa). |
| When the allocation is freed, the guard is checked to verify it has not been |
| modified. If any part of the front guard is modified, an error will be reported |
| in the log indicating what bytes changed. |
| |
| If the backtrace option is also enabled, then any error message will include |
| the backtrace of the allocation site. |
| |
| If SIZE\_BYTES is present, it indicates the number of bytes in the guard. |
| The default is 32 bytes, the max bytes is 16384. SIZE\_BYTES will be |
| padded so that it is a multiple of 8 bytes on 32 bit systems and 16 bytes |
| on 64 bit systems to make sure that the allocation returned is aligned |
| properly. |
| |
| This option adds a special header to all allocations that contains the guard |
| and information about the original allocation. |
| |
| Example error: |
| |
| 04-10 12:00:45.621 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: +++ ALLOCATION 0x12345678 SIZE 100 HAS A CORRUPTED FRONT GUARD |
| 04-10 12:00:45.622 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: allocation[-32] = 0x00 (expected 0xaa) |
| 04-10 12:00:45.622 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: allocation[-15] = 0x02 (expected 0xaa) |
| |
| ### rear\_guard[=SIZE\_BYTES] |
| Enables a small buffer placed after the allocated data. This is an attempt |
| to find memory corruption occuring to a region after the original allocation. |
| On first allocation, this rear guard is written with a specific pattern (0xbb). |
| When the allocation is freed, the guard is checked to verify it has not been |
| modified. If any part of the rear guard is modified, an error will be reported |
| in the log indicating what bytes changed. |
| |
| If SIZE\_BYTES is present, it indicates the number of bytes in the guard. |
| The default is 32 bytes, the max bytes is 16384. |
| |
| This option adds a special header to all allocations that contains |
| information about the original allocation. |
| |
| Example error: |
| |
| 04-10 12:00:45.621 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: +++ ALLOCATION 0x12345678 SIZE 100 HAS A CORRUPTED REAR GUARD |
| 04-10 12:00:45.622 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: allocation[130] = 0xbf (expected 0xbb) |
| 04-10 12:00:45.622 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: allocation[131] = 0x00 (expected 0xbb) |
| |
| ### guard[=SIZE\_BYTES] |
| Enables both a front guard and a rear guard on all allocations. |
| |
| If SIZE\_BYTES is present, it indicates the number of bytes in both guards. |
| The default is 32 bytes, the max bytes is 16384. |
| |
| ### backtrace[=MAX\_FRAMES] |
| Enable capturing the backtrace of each allocation site. |
| This option will slow down allocations by an order of magnitude. If the |
| system runs too slowly with this option enabled, decreasing the maximum number |
| of frames captured will speed the allocations up. |
| |
| Note that any backtrace frames that occur within the malloc backtrace library |
| itself are not recorded. |
| |
| If MAX\_FRAMES is present, it indicates the maximum number of frames to |
| capture in a backtrace. The default is 16 frames, the maximumum value |
| this can be set to is 256. |
| |
| Before P, this option adds a special header to all allocations that contains |
| the backtrace and information about the original allocation. After that, this |
| option will not add a special header. |
| |
| As of P, this option will also enable dumping backtrace heap data to a |
| file when the process receives the signal SIGRTMAX - 17 ( which is 47 on |
| Android devices). The format of this dumped data is the same format as |
| that dumped when running am dumpheap -n. The default is to dump this data |
| to the file /data/local/tmp/backtrace\_heap.**PID**.txt. This is useful when |
| used with native only executables that run for a while since these processes |
| are not spawned from a zygote process. |
| |
| Note that when the signal is received, the heap is not dumped until the next |
| malloc/free occurs. |
| |
| ### backtrace\_enable\_on\_signal[=MAX\_FRAMES] |
| Enable capturing the backtrace of each allocation site. If the |
| backtrace capture is toggled when the process receives the signal |
| SIGRTMAX - 19 (which is 45 on Android devices). When this |
| option is used alone, backtrace capture starts out disabled until the signal |
| is received. If both this option and the backtrace option are set, then |
| backtrace capture is enabled until the signal is received. |
| |
| If MAX\_FRAMES is present, it indicates the maximum number of frames to |
| capture in a backtrace. The default is 16 frames, the maximumum value |
| this can be set to is 256. |
| |
| Before P, this option adds a special header to all allocations that contains |
| the backtrace and information about the original allocation. After that, this |
| option will not add a special header. |
| |
| ### backtrace\_dump\_on\_exit |
| As of P, when the backtrace option has been enabled, this causes the backtrace |
| dump heap data to be dumped to a file when the program exits. If the backtrace |
| option has not been enabled, this does nothing. The default is to dump this |
| to the file named /data/local/tmp/backtrace\_heap.**PID**.exit.txt. |
| |
| The file location can be changed by setting the backtrace\_dump\_prefix |
| option. |
| |
| ### backtrace\_dump\_prefix |
| As of P, when one of the backtrace options has been enabled, this sets the |
| prefix used for dumping files when the signal SIGRTMAX - 17 is received or when |
| the program exits and backtrace\_dump\_on\_exit is set. |
| |
| The default is /data/local/tmp/backtrace\_heap. |
| |
| When this value is changed from the default, then the filename chosen |
| on the signal will be backtrace\_dump\_prefix.**PID**.txt. The filename chosen |
| when the program exits will be backtrace\_dump\_prefix.**PID**.exit.txt. |
| |
| ### backtrace\_min\_size=ALLOCATION\_SIZE\_BYTES |
| As of U, setting this in combination with the backtrace option means |
| that only allocations of a size greater than or equal to |
| **ALLOCATION\_SIZE\_BYTES** will be backtraced. When used in combination |
| with the backtrace\_max\_size option, then allocations greater than or |
| equal to backtrace\_min\_size and less than or equal to |
| backtrace\_max\_size will be backtraced. The backtrace\_size option |
| overrides this option, and should not be used at the same time. |
| |
| This option can also be used in combination with other tools such |
| as [libmemunreachable](https://android.googlesource.com/platform/system/memory/libmemunreachable/+/main/README.md) |
| to only get backtraces for sizes of allocations listed as being leaked. |
| |
| ### backtrace\_max\_size=ALLOCATION\_SIZE\_BYTES |
| As of U, setting this in combination with the backtrace option means |
| that only allocations of a size less than or equal to |
| **ALLOCATION\_SIZE\_BYTES** will be backtraced. When used in combination |
| with the backtrace\_min\_size option, then allocations greater than or |
| equal to backtrace\_min\_size and less than or equal to |
| backtrace\_max\_size will be backtraced. The backtrace\_size option |
| overrides this option, and should not be used at the same time. |
| |
| This option can also be used in combination with other tools such |
| as [libmemunreachable](https://android.googlesource.com/platform/system/memory/libmemunreachable/+/main/README.md) |
| to only get backtraces for sizes of allocations listed as being leaked. |
| |
| ### backtrace\_size=ALLOCATION\_SIZE\_BYTES |
| As of U, setting this in combination with the backtrace option means |
| that only allocations of size **ALLOCATION\_SIZE\_BYTES** will be backtraced. |
| This option overrides the backtrace\_min\_size and the backtrace\_max\_size. |
| |
| This option can also be used in combination with other tools such |
| as [libmemunreachable](https://android.googlesource.com/platform/system/memory/libmemunreachable/+/main/README.md) |
| to only get backtraces for sizes of allocations listed as being leaked. |
| |
| ### backtrace\_full |
| As of Q, any time that a backtrace is gathered, a different algorithm is used |
| that is extra thorough and can unwind through Java frames. This will run |
| slower than the normal backtracing function. |
| |
| ### bt, bt\_dmp\_on\_ex, bt\_dmp\_pre, bt\_en\_on\_sig, bt\_full, bt\_max\_sz, bt\_min\_sz, bt\_sz |
| As of U, add shorter aliases for backtrace related options to avoid property length restrictions. |
| |
| | Alias | Option | |
| |:----------------|:------------------------------| |
| | bt | backtrace | |
| | bt\_dmp\_on\_ex | backtrace\_dump\_on\_exit | |
| | bt\_dmp\_pre | backtrace\_dump\_prefix | |
| | bt\_en\_on\_sig | backtrace\_enable\_on\_signal | |
| | bt\_full | backtrace\_full | |
| | bt\_max\_sz | backtrace\_max\_size | |
| | bt\_min\_sz | backtrace\_min\_size | |
| | bt\_sz | backtrace\_size | |
| |
| ### check\_unreachable\_on\_signal |
| As of API level 34, this option will trigger a check for unreachable memory |
| in a process. Specifically, if the signal SIGRTMAX - 16 (which is 48 on |
| Android devices). The best way to see the exact signal being used is to |
| enable the verbose option then look at the log for the message: |
| |
| Run: 'kill -48 <PID>' to check for unreachable memory. |
| |
| When the signal is received, the actual unreachable check only triggers |
| on the next allocation that happens in the process (malloc/free, etc). |
| |
| If a process is not doing any allocations, it can be forced to trigger when |
| running: |
| |
| debuggerd -b <PID> |
| |
| **NOTE**: The unreachable check can fail for protected processes, so it |
| might be necessary to run: |
| |
| setenforce 0 |
| |
| To get the unreachable data. |
| |
| ### fill\_on\_alloc[=MAX\_FILLED\_BYTES] |
| Any allocation routine, other than calloc, will result in the allocation being |
| filled with the value 0xeb. When doing a realloc to a larger size, the bytes |
| above the original usable size will be set to 0xeb. |
| |
| If MAX\_FILLED\_BYTES is present, it will only fill up to the specified number |
| of bytes in the allocation. The default is to fill the entire allocation. |
| |
| ### fill\_on\_free[=MAX\_FILLED\_BYTES] |
| When an allocation is freed, fill it with 0xef. |
| |
| If MAX\_FILLED\_BYTES is present, it will only fill up to the specified number |
| of bytes in the allocation. The default is to fill the entire allocation. |
| |
| ### fill[=MAX\_FILLED\_BYTES] |
| This enables both the fill\_on\_alloc option and the fill\_on\_free option. |
| |
| If MAX\_FILLED\_BYTES is present, it will only fill up to the specified number |
| of bytes in the allocation. The default is to fill the entire allocation. |
| |
| ### expand\_alloc[=EXPAND\_BYTES] |
| Add an extra amount to allocate for every allocation. |
| |
| If XX is present, it is the number of bytes to expand the allocation by. |
| The default is 16 bytes, the max bytes is 16384. |
| |
| ### free\_track[=ALLOCATION\_COUNT] |
| When a pointer is freed, do not free the memory right away, but add it to |
| a list of freed allocations. In addition to being added to the list, the |
| entire allocation is filled with the value 0xef, and the backtrace at |
| the time of the free is recorded. The backtrace recording is completely |
| separate from the backtrace option, and happens automatically if this |
| option is enabled. By default, a maximum of 16 frames will be recorded, |
| but this value can be changed using the free\_track\_backtrace\_num\_frames |
| option. It can also be completely disabled by setting the option to zero. |
| See the full description of this option below. |
| |
| When the list is full, an allocation is removed from the list and is |
| checked to make sure that none of the contents have been modified since |
| being placed on the list. When the program terminates, all of the allocations |
| left on the list are verified. |
| |
| If ALLOCATION\_COUNT is present, it indicates the total number of allocations |
| in the list. The default is to record 100 freed allocations, the max |
| allocations to record is 16384. |
| |
| Before P, this option adds a special header to all allocations that contains |
| the backtrace and information about the original allocation. After that, this |
| option will not add a special header. |
| |
| Example error: |
| |
| 04-15 12:00:31.304 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: +++ ALLOCATION 0x12345678 USED AFTER FREE |
| 04-15 12:00:31.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: allocation[20] = 0xaf (expected 0xef) |
| 04-15 12:00:31.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: allocation[99] = 0x12 (expected 0xef) |
| 04-15 12:00:31.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: Backtrace at time of free: |
| 04-15 12:00:31.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: #00 pc 00029310 /system/lib/libc.so |
| 04-15 12:00:31.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: #01 pc 00021438 /system/lib/libc.so (newlocale+160) |
| 04-15 12:00:31.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: #02 pc 000a9e38 /system/lib/libc++.so |
| 04-15 12:00:31.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: #03 pc 000a28a8 /system/lib/libc++.so |
| |
| In addition, there is another type of error message that can occur if |
| an allocation has a special header applied, and the header is corrupted |
| before the verification occurs. This is the error message that will be found |
| in the log: |
| |
| 04-15 12:00:31.604 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: +++ ALLOCATION 0x12345678 HAS CORRUPTED HEADER TAG 0x1cc7dc00 AFTER FREE |
| |
| ### free\_track\_backtrace\_num\_frames[=MAX\_FRAMES] |
| This option only has meaning if free\_track is set. It indicates how many |
| backtrace frames to capture when an allocation is freed. |
| |
| If MAX\_FRAMES is present, it indicates the number of frames to capture. |
| If the value is set to zero, then no backtrace will be captured when the |
| allocation is freed. The default is to record 16 frames, the max number of |
| frames to to record is 256. |
| |
| ### leak\_track |
| Track all live allocations. When the program terminates, all of the live |
| allocations will be dumped to the log. If the backtrace option was enabled, |
| then the log will include the backtrace of the leaked allocations. This |
| option is not useful when enabled globally because a lot of programs do not |
| free everything before the program terminates. |
| |
| Before P, this option adds a special header to all allocations that contains |
| the backtrace and information about the original allocation. After that, this |
| option will not add a special header. |
| |
| Example leak error found in the log: |
| |
| 04-15 12:35:33.304 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: +++ APP leaked block of size 100 at 0x2be3b0b0 (leak 1 of 2) |
| 04-15 12:35:33.304 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: Backtrace at time of allocation: |
| 04-15 12:35:33.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: #00 pc 00029310 /system/lib/libc.so |
| 04-15 12:35:33.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: #01 pc 00021438 /system/lib/libc.so (newlocale+160) |
| 04-15 12:35:33.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: #02 pc 000a9e38 /system/lib/libc++.so |
| 04-15 12:35:33.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: #03 pc 000a28a8 /system/lib/libc++.so |
| 04-15 12:35:33.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: +++ APP leaked block of size 24 at 0x7be32380 (leak 2 of 2) |
| 04-15 12:35:33.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: Backtrace at time of allocation: |
| 04-15 12:35:33.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: #00 pc 00029310 /system/lib/libc.so |
| 04-15 12:35:33.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: #01 pc 00021438 /system/lib/libc.so (newlocale+160) |
| 04-15 12:35:33.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: #02 pc 000a9e38 /system/lib/libc++.so |
| 04-15 12:35:33.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: #03 pc 000a28a8 /system/lib/libc++.so |
| |
| ### log\_allocator\_stats\_on\_signal |
| As of API level 35, this option will trigger a call to: |
| |
| mallopt(M_LOG_STATS, 0); |
| |
| When a process receives the signal SIGRTMAX - 15 (which is 49 on Android |
| devices). The mallopt call is not async safe and is not called from the |
| signal handler directly. Instead, the next time any allocation call occurs, |
| the mallopt is called. |
| |
| ### record\_allocs[=TOTAL\_ENTRIES] |
| Keep track of every allocation/free made on every thread and dump them |
| to a file when the signal SIGRTMAX - 18 (which is 46 on Android devices) |
| is received. |
| |
| If TOTAL\_ENTRIES is set, then it indicates the total number of |
| allocation/free records that can be retained. If the number of records |
| reaches the TOTAL\_ENTRIES value, then any further allocations/frees are |
| not recorded. The default value is 8,000,000 and the maximum value this |
| can be set to is 50,000,000. |
| |
| Once the signal is received, and the current records are written to the |
| file, all current records are deleted. Any allocations/frees occuring while |
| the data is being dumped to the file are ignored. |
| |
| **NOTE**: This option is not available until the O release of Android. |
| |
| The allocation data is written in a human readable format. Every line begins |
| with the THREAD\_ID returned by gettid(), which is the thread that is making |
| the allocation/free. If a new thread is created, no special line is added |
| to the file. However, when a thread completes, a special entry is added to |
| the file indicating this. |
| |
| The thread complete line is: |
| |
| **THREAD\_ID**: thread\_done 0x0 |
| |
| Example: |
| |
| 187: thread_done 0x0 |
| |
| Below is how each type of allocation/free call ends up in the file dump. |
| |
| pointer = malloc(size) |
| |
| **THREAD\_ID**: malloc pointer size |
| |
| Example: |
| |
| 186: malloc 0xb6038060 20 |
| |
| free(pointer) |
| |
| **THREAD\_ID**: free pointer |
| |
| Example: |
| |
| 186: free 0xb6038060 |
| |
| pointer = calloc(nmemb, size) |
| |
| **THREAD\_ID**: calloc pointer nmemb size |
| |
| Example: |
| |
| 186: calloc 0xb609f080 32 4 |
| |
| new\_pointer = realloc(old\_pointer, size) |
| |
| **THREAD\_ID**: realloc new\_pointer old\_pointer size |
| |
| Example: |
| |
| 186: realloc 0xb609f080 0xb603e9a0 12 |
| |
| pointer = memalign(alignment, size) |
| |
| **THREAD\_ID**: memalign pointer alignment size |
| |
| pointer = aligned\_alloc(alignment, size) |
| |
| **THREAD\_ID**: memalign pointer alignment size |
| |
| posix\_memalign(&pointer, alignment, size) |
| |
| **THREAD\_ID**: memalign pointer alignment size |
| |
| Example: |
| |
| 186: memalign 0x85423660 16 104 |
| |
| pointer = valloc(size) |
| |
| **THREAD\_ID**: memalign pointer 4096 size |
| |
| Example: |
| |
| 186: memalign 0x85423660 4096 112 |
| |
| pointer = pvalloc(size) |
| |
| **THREAD\_ID**: memalign pointer 4096 <b>SIZE\_ROUNDED\_UP\_TO\_4096</b> |
| |
| Example: |
| |
| 186: memalign 0x85423660 4096 8192 |
| |
| ### record\_allocs\_file[=FILE\_NAME] |
| This option only has meaning if record\_allocs is set. It indicates the |
| file where the recorded allocations will be found. |
| |
| If FILE\_NAME is set, then it indicates where the record allocation data |
| will be placed. |
| |
| **NOTE**: This option is not available until the O release of Android. |
| |
| ### record\_allocs\_on\_exit |
| This option only has meaning if record\_allocs is set. It indicates that |
| when the process terminates, the record file should be created |
| automatically. |
| |
| The only caveat to this option is that when the process terminates, |
| the file that will contain the records will be the normal file name |
| with **.PID** appended. Where PID is the pid of the process that has |
| terminated. This is to avoid cases where a number of processes exit |
| at the same time and attempt to write to the same file. |
| |
| **NOTE**: This option is not available until the V release of Android. |
| |
| ### verify\_pointers |
| Track all live allocations to determine if a pointer is used that does not |
| exist. This option is a lightweight way to verify that all |
| free/malloc\_usable\_size/realloc calls are passed valid pointers. |
| |
| Example error: |
| |
| 04-15 12:00:31.304 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: +++ ALLOCATION 0x12345678 UNKNOWN POINTER (free) |
| 04-15 12:00:31.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: Backtrace at time of failure: |
| 04-15 12:00:31.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: #00 pc 00029310 /system/lib/libc.so |
| 04-15 12:00:31.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: #01 pc 00021438 /system/lib/libc.so (newlocale+160) |
| 04-15 12:00:31.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: #02 pc 000a9e38 /system/lib/libc++.so |
| 04-15 12:00:31.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: #03 pc 000a28a8 /system/lib/libc++.so |
| |
| Where the name of the function varies depending on the function that called |
| with a bad pointer. Only three functions do this checking: free, |
| malloc\_usable\_size, realloc. |
| |
| **NOTE**: This option is not available until the P release of Android. |
| |
| ### abort\_on\_error |
| When malloc debug detects an error, abort after sending the error |
| log message. |
| |
| **NOTE**: If leak\_track is enabled, no abort occurs if leaks have been |
| detected when the process is exiting. |
| |
| ### verbose |
| As of API level 29, all info messages will be turned off by default. For example, |
| in API level 28 and older, enabling malloc debug would result in this message |
| in the log: |
| |
| 08-16 15:54:16.060 26947 26947 I libc : /system/bin/app_process64: malloc debug enabled |
| |
| In API level 29, this message will not be displayed because these info messages |
| slow down process start up. However, if you want to re-enable these messages, |
| add the verbose option. All of the "Run XXX" messages are also silenced unless |
| the verbose option is specified. This is an example of the type |
| of messages that are no longer displayed: |
| |
| 09-10 01:03:50.070 557 557 I malloc_debug: /system/bin/audioserver: Run: 'kill -47 557' to dump the backtrace. |
| |
| Additional Errors |
| ----------------- |
| There are a few other error messages that might appear in the log. |
| |
| ### Use After Free |
| 04-15 12:00:31.304 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: +++ ALLOCATION 0x12345678 USED AFTER FREE (free) |
| 04-15 12:00:31.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: Backtrace of original free: |
| 04-15 12:00:31.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: #00 pc 00029310 /system/lib/libc.so |
| 04-15 12:00:31.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: #01 pc 00021438 /system/lib/libc.so (newlocale+160) |
| 04-15 12:00:31.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: #02 pc 000a9e38 /system/lib/libc++.so |
| 04-15 12:00:31.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: #03 pc 000a28a8 /system/lib/libc++.so |
| 04-15 12:00:31.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: Backtrace at time of failure: |
| 04-15 12:00:31.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: #00 pc 00029310 /system/lib/libc.so |
| 04-15 12:00:31.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: #01 pc 00021438 /system/lib/libc.so (newlocale+160) |
| 04-15 12:00:31.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: #02 pc 000a9e38 /system/lib/libc++.so |
| 04-15 12:00:31.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: #03 pc 000a28a8 /system/lib/libc++.so |
| |
| This indicates that code is attempting to free an already freed pointer. The |
| name in parenthesis indicates that the application called the function |
| *free* with the bad pointer. |
| |
| For example, this message: |
| |
| 04-15 12:00:31.304 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: +++ ALLOCATION 0x12345678 USED AFTER FREE (realloc) |
| |
| Would indicate that the application called the *realloc* function |
| with an already freed pointer. |
| |
| ### Invalid Tag |
| 04-15 12:00:31.304 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: +++ ALLOCATION 0x12345678 HAS INVALID TAG 1ee7d000 (malloc_usable_size) |
| 04-15 12:00:31.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: Backtrace at time of failure: |
| 04-15 12:00:31.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: #00 pc 00029310 /system/lib/libc.so |
| 04-15 12:00:31.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: #01 pc 00021438 /system/lib/libc.so (newlocale+160) |
| 04-15 12:00:31.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: #02 pc 000a9e38 /system/lib/libc++.so |
| 04-15 12:00:31.305 7412 7412 E malloc_debug: #03 pc 000a28a8 /system/lib/libc++.so |
| |
| This indicates that a function (malloc\_usable\_size) was called with |
| a pointer that is either not allocated memory, or that the memory of |
| the pointer has been corrupted. |
| |
| As with the other error message, the function in parenthesis is the |
| function that was called with the bad pointer. |
| |
| Backtrace Heap Dump Format |
| ========================== |
| |
| This section describes the format of the backtrace heap dump. This data is |
| generated by am dumpheap -n or, as of P, by the signal or on exit. |
| |
| The data has this header: |
| |
| Android Native Heap Dump v1.0 |
| |
| Total memory: XXXX |
| Allocation records: YYYY |
| Backtrace size: ZZZZ |
| |
| Total memory is the total of all of the currently live allocations. |
| Allocation records is the total number of allocation records. |
| Backtrace size is the maximum number of backtrace frames that can be present. |
| |
| Following this header are two different sections, the first section is the |
| allocation records, the second section is the map data. |
| |
| The allocation record data has this format: |
| |
| z ZYGOTE_CHILD_ALLOC sz ALLOCATION_SIZE num NUM_ALLOCATIONS bt FRAMES |
| |
| ZYGOTE\_CHILD\_ALLOC is either 0 or 1. 0 means this was allocated by the |
| zygote process or in a process not spawned from the zygote. 1 means this |
| was allocated by an application after it forked off from the zygote process. |
| |
| ALLOCATION\_SIZE is the size of the allocation. |
| NUM\_ALLOCATIONS is the number of allocations that have this size and have the |
| same backtrace. |
| FRAMES is a list of instruction pointers that represent the backtrace of the |
| allocation. |
| |
| Example: |
| |
| z 0 sz 400 num 1 bt 0000a230 0000b500 |
| z 1 sz 500 num 3 bt 0000b000 0000c000 |
| |
| The first allocation record was created by the zygote of size 400 only one |
| with this backtrace/size and a backtrace of 0xa230, 0xb500. |
| The second allocation record was create by an application spawned from the |
| zygote of size 500, where there are three of these allocation with the same |
| backtrace/size and a backtrace of 0xb000, 0xc000. |
| |
| The final section is the map data for the process: |
| |
| MAPS |
| 7fe9181000-7fe91a2000 rw-p 00000000 00:00 0 /system/lib/libc.so |
| . |
| . |
| . |
| END |
| |
| The map data is simply the output of /proc/PID/maps. This data can be used to |
| decode the frames in the backtraces. |
| |
| There are now multiple versions of the file: |
| |
| API level 28 produces version v1.1 of the heap dump. |
| |
| Android Native Heap Dump v1.1 |
| |
| The only difference between v1.0 and v1.1 is that the NUM\_ALLOCATIONS |
| value is always accurate in v1.1. A previous version of malloc debug set |
| NUM\_ALLOCATIONS to an incorrect value. For heap dump v1.0, the |
| NUM\_ALLOCATIONS value should be treated as always 1 no matter what is |
| actually present. |
| |
| API level 29 introduces v1.2 of the heap dump. The new header looks like this: |
| |
| Android Native Heap Dump v1.2 |
| |
| Build fingerprint: 'google/taimen/taimen:8.1.0/OPM2.171026.006.C1/4769658:user/release-keys' |
| |
| The new line fingerprint line is the contents of the ro.build.fingerprint |
| property. |
| |
| The new version no longer 0 pads the backtrace addresses. In v1.0/v1.1: |
| |
| z 0 sz 400 num 1 bt 0000a230 0000b500 |
| |
| While v1.2: |
| |
| z 0 sz 400 num 1 bt a230 b500 |
| |
| In addition, when the new option backtrace\_full is used, another line will |
| be added to every backtrace line. The line will be: |
| |
| bt_info {"MAP_NAME" RELATIVE_TO_MAP_PC "FUNCTION_NAME" FUNCTION_OFFSET} ... |
| |
| For each backtrace pc, there will be one element in braces. |
| |
| MAP\_NAME is the name of the map in which the backtrace pc exists. If there is |
| no valid map name, this will be empty. |
| RELATIVE\_TO\_MAP\_PC is the hexadecimal value of the relative pc to the map. |
| FUNCTION\_NAME the name of the function for this pc. If there is no valid |
| function name, then it will be empty. |
| FUNCTION\_OFFSET the hexadecimal offset from the beginning of the function. If |
| the FUNCTION\_NAME is empty, then this value will always be zero. |
| |
| An example of this new format: |
| |
| z 0 sz 400 num 1 bt a2a0 b510 |
| bt_info {"/system/libc.so" 2a0 "abort" 24} {"/system/libutils.so" 510 "" 0} |
| |
| In this example, the first backtrace frame has a pc of 0xa2a0 and is in the |
| map named /system/libc.so which starts at 0xa000. The relative pc is 0x2a0, |
| and it is in the function abort + 0x24. |
| The second backtrace frame has a pc of 0xb510 and is in the map named |
| /system/libutils.so which starts at 0xb000. The relative pc is 0x510 and |
| it is in an unknown function. |
| |
| Examples |
| ======== |
| |
| ### For platform developers |
| |
| Enable backtrace tracking of all allocation for all processes: |
| |
| adb shell stop |
| adb shell setprop libc.debug.malloc.options backtrace |
| adb shell start |
| |
| Enable backtrace tracking for a specific process (ls): |
| |
| adb shell setprop libc.debug.malloc.options backtrace |
| adb shell setprop libc.debug.malloc.program ls |
| adb shell ls |
| |
| Enable backtrace tracking for the zygote and zygote based processes: |
| |
| adb shell stop |
| adb shell setprop libc.debug.malloc.program app_process |
| adb shell setprop libc.debug.malloc.options backtrace |
| adb shell start |
| |
| Enable multiple options (backtrace and guard): |
| |
| adb shell stop |
| adb shell setprop libc.debug.malloc.options "\"backtrace guard\"" |
| adb shell start |
| |
| Note: The two levels of quoting in the adb shell command is necessary. |
| The outer layer of quoting is for the shell on the host, to ensure that the |
| inner layer of quoting is sent to the device, to make 'backtrace guard' |
| a single argument. |
| |
| Enable malloc debug using an environment variable (pre-O Android release): |
| |
| adb shell |
| # setprop libc.debug.malloc.env_enabled 1 |
| # setprop libc.debug.malloc.options backtrace |
| # export LIBC_DEBUG_MALLOC_ENABLE=1 |
| # ls |
| |
| Enable malloc debug using an environment variable (API level 26 or later): |
| |
| adb shell |
| # export LIBC_DEBUG_MALLOC_OPTIONS=backtrace |
| # ls |
| |
| Any process spawned from this shell will run with malloc debug enabled |
| using the backtrace option. |
| |
| adb shell stop |
| adb shell setprop libc.debug.malloc.options backtrace |
| adb shell start |
| adb shell am dumpheap -n <PID_TO_DUMP> /data/local/tmp/heap.txt |
| |
| It is possible to use the backtrace\_enable\_on\_signal option as well, |
| but, obviously, it must be enabled through the signal before the file will |
| contain any data. |
| |
| ### For app developers |
| |
| App developers should check the NDK documentation about |
| [wrap.sh](https://developer.android.com/ndk/guides/wrap-script.html) |
| for the best way to use malloc debug in API level 26 or later on non-rooted |
| devices. |
| |
| **NOTE**: Android 12 introduced a bug that can cause the wrap.\<APP\> property to |
| no longer work. Use the commands below so that the wrap.\<APP\> instructions will work: |
| |
| adb shell setprop dalvik.vm.force-java-zygote-fork-loop true |
| adb shell stop |
| adb shell start |
| |
| If you do have a rooted device, you can enable malloc debug for a specific |
| program/application (API level 26 or later): |
| |
| adb shell setprop wrap.<APP> '"LIBC_DEBUG_MALLOC_OPTIONS=backtrace logwrapper"' |
| |
| If you need to enable multiple options using this method, then you can set |
| them like so: |
| |
| adb shell setprop wrap.<APP> '"LIBC_DEBUG_MALLOC_OPTIONS=backtrace\ leak_track\ fill logwrapper"' |
| |
| For example, to enable malloc debug for the google search box (API level 26 or later): |
| |
| adb shell setprop wrap.com.google.android.googlequicksearchbox '"LIBC_DEBUG_MALLOC_OPTIONS=backtrace logwrapper"' |
| adb shell am force-stop com.google.android.googlequicksearchbox |
| |
| If you are setting multiple options and the app does not appear to start |
| properly, check the logcat looking for this message |
| (`adb logcat -d | grep "malloc debug"`): |
| |
| 08-16 15:54:16.060 26947 26947 I libc : /system/bin/app_process64: malloc debug enabled |
| |
| If you do not see this message, then the wrap property was not set correctly. |
| Run: |
| |
| adb shell getprop | grep wrap |
| |
| And verify that any spaces are properly escaped. |
| |
| NOTE: On pre-O versions of the Android OS, property names had a length limit |
| of 32. This meant that to create a wrap property with the name of the app, it |
| was necessary to truncate the name to fit. On O, property names can be |
| an order of magnitude larger, so there should be no need to truncate the name |
| at all. |
| |
| To detect leaks while an app is running: |
| |
| adb shell dumpsys meminfo --unreachable <PID_OF_APP> |
| |
| Without also enabling malloc debug, this command will only tell |
| you whether it can detect leaked memory, not where those leaks are |
| occurring. If you enable malloc debug with the backtrace option for your |
| app before running the dumpsys command, you'll get backtraces showing |
| where the memory was allocated. |
| |
| For backtraces from your app to be useful, you'll want to keep the |
| symbols in your app's shared libraries rather than stripping them. That |
| way you'll see the location of the leak directly without having to use |
| something like the <code>ndk-stack</code> tool. |