From 7696594d2dea7a10fbcba177866de94eee115e7d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: cvs2fossil Date: Fri, 2 Jun 2000 23:44:07 +0000 Subject: Created branch ajuba-ajuba2-2-0-synthetic --- doc/DumpActiveMemory.3 | 68 ----------------------------------------- doc/Init.3 | 37 ----------------------- doc/TCL_MEM_DEBUG.3 | 81 ------------------------------------------------- doc/memory.n | 82 -------------------------------------------------- 4 files changed, 268 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 doc/DumpActiveMemory.3 delete mode 100644 doc/Init.3 delete mode 100644 doc/TCL_MEM_DEBUG.3 delete mode 100644 doc/memory.n diff --git a/doc/DumpActiveMemory.3 b/doc/DumpActiveMemory.3 deleted file mode 100644 index 02b8d81..0000000 --- a/doc/DumpActiveMemory.3 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,68 +0,0 @@ -'\" -'\" Copyright (c) 1992-1999 Karl Lehenbauer and Mark Diekhans. -'\" Copyright (c) 2000 by Scriptics Corporation. -'\" All rights reserved. -'\" -'\" RCS: @(#) $Id: DumpActiveMemory.3,v 1.2 2000/04/28 00:47:48 ericm Exp $ -'\" -.so man.macros -.TH "Tcl_DumpActiveMemory" 3 8.1 Tcl "Tcl Library Procedures" -.BS -.SH NAME -Tcl_DumpActiveMemory, Tcl_InitMemory, Tcl_ValidateAllMemory \- Validated memory allocation interface. -.SH SYNOPSIS -.nf -\fB#include \fR -.sp -int -\fBTcl_DumpActiveMemory\fR(\fIfileName\fR) -.sp -void -\fBTcl_InitMemory\fR(\fIinterp\fR) -.sp -void -\fBTcl_ValidateAllMemory\fR(\fIfileName, line\fR) - -.SH ARGUMENTS -.AP Tcl_Interp *interp in -Tcl interpreter in which to add commands. -.AP char *fileName in -For \fBTcl_DumpActiveMemory\fR, name of the file to which memory -information will be written. For \fBTcl_ValidateAllMemory\fR, name of -the file from which the call is being made (normally \fB__FILE__\fR). -.AP int line in -Line number at which the call to \fBTcl_ValidateAllMemory\fR is made -(normally \fB__LINE__\fR). -.BE - -.SH DESCRIPTION -These functions provide access to Tcl memory debugging information. -They are only available when Tcl has been compiled with -\fBTCL_MEM_DEBUG\fR defined at compile-time. -.PP -\fBTcl_DumpActiveMemory\fR will output a list of all currently -allocated memory to the specified file. The information output for -each allocated block of memory is: starting and ending addresses -(excluding guard zone), size, source file where \fBckalloc\fR was -called to allocate the block and line number in that file. It is -especially useful to call \fBTcl_DumpActiveMemory\fR after the Tcl -interpreter has been deleted. -.PP -\fBTcl_InitMemory\fR adds the Tcl \fBmemory\fR command to the -interpreter given by \fIinterp\fR. It is called by \fBTcl_Main\fR -when Tcl has been compiled with \fBTCL_MEM_DEBUG\fR defined. -.PP -\fBTcl_ValidateAllMemory\fR forces a validation of the guard zones of -all currently allocated blocks of memory. Normally validation of a -block occurs when its freed, unless full validation is enabled, in -which case validation of all blocks occurs when \fBckalloc\fR and -\fBckfree\fR are called. This function forces the validation to occur -at any point. - -.SH "SEE ALSO" -TCL_MEM_DEBUG, memory - -.SH KEYWORDS -memory, debug - - diff --git a/doc/Init.3 b/doc/Init.3 deleted file mode 100644 index 8066fd3..0000000 --- a/doc/Init.3 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,37 +0,0 @@ -'\" -'\" Copyright (c) 1998-2000 by Scriptics Corporation. -'\" All rights reserved. -'\" -'\" RCS: @(#) $Id: Init.3,v 1.1 2000/04/28 00:47:48 ericm Exp $ -'\" -.so man.macros -.TH Tcl_Init 3 8.0 Tcl "Tcl Library Procedures" -.BS -.SH NAME -Tcl_Init \- find and source initialization script -.SH SYNOPSIS -.nf -\fB#include \fR -.sp -int -\fBTcl_Init\fR(\fIinterp\fR) -.SH ARGUMENTS -.AP Tcl_Interp *interp in -Interpreter to initialize. -.BE - -.SH DESCRIPTION -.PP -\fBTcl_Init\fR is a helper procedure that finds and \fBsource\fR's the -\fBinit.tcl\fR script, which should exist somewhere on the Tcl library -path. On Macintosh systems, it additionally checks for an \fBInit\fR -resource and sources the contents of that resource if \fBinit.tcl\fR -cannot be found. -.PP -\fBTcl_Init\fR is typically called from \fBTcl_AppInit\fR procedures. - -.SH "SEE ALSO" -Tcl_AppInit, Tcl_Main - -.SH KEYWORDS -application, initialization, interpreter diff --git a/doc/TCL_MEM_DEBUG.3 b/doc/TCL_MEM_DEBUG.3 deleted file mode 100644 index 6b1ec78..0000000 --- a/doc/TCL_MEM_DEBUG.3 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,81 +0,0 @@ -'\" -'\" Copyright (c) 1992-1999 Karl Lehenbauer and Mark Diekhans. -'\" Copyright (c) 2000 by Scriptics Corporation. -'\" All rights reserved. -'\" -'\" RCS: @(#) $Id: TCL_MEM_DEBUG.3,v 1.2 2000/04/28 00:47:49 ericm Exp $ -'\" -.so man.macros -.TH TCL_MEM_DEBUG 3 8.1 Tcl "Tcl Library Procedures" -.BS -.SH NAME -TCL_MEM_DEBUG \- Compile-time flag to enable Tcl memory debugging. - -.SH DESCRIPTION -When Tcl is compiled with \fBTCL_MEM_DEBUG\fR defined, a powerful set -of memory debugging aids are included in the compiled binary. This -includes C and Tcl functions which can aid with debugging -memory leaks, memory allocation overruns, and other memory related -errors. - -.SH ENABLING MEMORY DEBUGGING -.PP -To enable memory debugging, Tcl should be recompiled from scratch with -\fBTCL_MEM_DEBUG\fR defined. This will also compile in a non-stub -version of \fBTcl_InitMemory\fR to add the \fBmemory\fR command to Tcl. -.PP -\fBTCL_MEM_DEBUG\fR must be either left defined for all modules or undefined -for all modules that are going to be linked together. If they are not, link -errors will occur, with either \fBTclDbCkfree\fR and \fBTcl_DbCkalloc\fR or -\fBTcl_Ckalloc\fR and \fBTcl_Ckfree\fR being undefined. -.PP -Once memory debugging support has been compiled into Tcl, the C -functions \fBTcl_ValidateAllMemory\fR, and \fBTcl_DumpActiveMemory\fR, -and the Tcl \fBmemory\fR command can be used to validate and examine -memory usage. - -.SH GUARD ZONES -.PP -When memory debugging is enabled, whenever a call to \fBckalloc\fR is -made, slightly more memory than requested is allocated so the memory debugging -code can keep track of the allocated memory, and eight-byte ``guard -zones'' are placed in front of and behind the space that will be -returned to the caller. (The size of the guard zone is defined by the -C #define \fBGUARD_SIZE\fR in \fIbaseline/src/ckalloc.c\fR -- it can -be extended if you suspect large overwrite problems, at some cost in -performance.) A known pattern is written into the guard zones and, on -a call to \fBckfree\fR, the guard zones of the space being freed are -checked to see if either zone has been modified in any way. If one -has been, the guard bytes and their new contents are identified, and a -``low guard failed'' or ``high guard failed'' message is issued. The -``guard failed'' message includes the address of the memory packet and -the file name and line number of the code that called \fBckfree\fR. -This allows you to detect the common sorts of one-off problems, where -not enough space was allocated to contain the data written, for -example. - -.SH DEBUGGING DIFFICULT MEMORY CORRUPTION PROBLEMS -.PP -Normally, Tcl compiled with memory debugging enabled will make it easy -to isolate a corruption problem. Turning on memory validation with -the memory command can help isolate difficult problems. If you -suspect (or know) that corruption is occurring before the Tcl -interpreter comes up far enough for you to issue commands, you can set -\fBMEM_VALIDATE\fR define, recompile tclCkalloc.c and rebuild Tcl. -This will enable memory validation from the first call to -\fBckalloc\fR, again, at a large performance impact. -.PP -If you are desperate and validating memory on every call to -\fBckalloc\fR and \fBckfree\fR isn't enough, you can explicitly call -\fBTcl_ValidateAllMemory\fR directly at any point. It takes a \fIchar -*\fR and an \fIint\fR which are normally the filename and line number -of the caller, but they can actually be anything you want. Remember -to remove the calls after you find the problem. - -.SH "SEE ALSO" -memory, Tcl_ValidateAllMemory, Tcl_DumpActiveMemory - -.SH KEYWORDS -memory, debug - - diff --git a/doc/memory.n b/doc/memory.n deleted file mode 100644 index 3f7ca66..0000000 --- a/doc/memory.n +++ /dev/null @@ -1,82 +0,0 @@ -'\" -'\" Copyright (c) 1992-1999 by Karl Lehenbauer and Mark Diekhans -'\" Copyright (c) 2000 by Scriptics Corporation. -'\" All rights reserved. -'\" -'\" RCS: @(#) $Id: memory.n,v 1.2 2000/04/28 00:47:49 ericm Exp $ -'\" -.so man.macros -.TH memory n 8.1 Tcl "Tcl Built-In Commands" -.BS -.SH NAME -memory \- Control Tcl memory debugging capabilities. -.SH SYNOPSIS -\fBmemory \fIoption \fR?\fIarg arg ...\fR? - -.SH DESCRIPTION -.PP -The \fBmemory\fR command gives the Tcl developer control of Tcl's memory -debugging capabilities. The memory command has several suboptions, which are -described below. It is only available when Tcl has been compiled with -memory debugging enabled (when \fBTCL_MEM_DEBUG\fR is defined at -compile time). -.TP -\fBmemory info\fR -Produces a report containing the total allocations and frees since -Tcl began, the current packets allocated (the current -number of calls to \fBckalloc\fR not met by a corresponding call -to \fBckfree\fR), the current bytes allocated, and the maximum number -of packets and bytes allocated. -.TP -\fBmemory trace [on|off]\fR -.br -Turns memory tracing on or off. When memory tracing is on, every call -to \fBckalloc\fR causes a line of trace information to be written to -\fIstderr\fR, consisting of the word \fIckalloc\fR, followed by the -address returned, the amount of memory allocated, and the C filename -and line number of the code performing the allocation. For example: -.CS -ckalloc 40e478 98 tclProc.c 1406 -.CE -Calls to \fBckfree\fR are traced in the same manner. -.TP -\fBmemory validate [on|off]\fR -Turns memory validation on or off. When memory validation is enabled, -on every call to \fBckalloc\fR or \fBckfree\fR, the guard zones are -checked for every piece of memory currently in existence that was -allocated by \fBckalloc\fR. This has a large performance impact and -should only be used when overwrite problems are strongly suspected. -The advantage of enabling memory validation is that a guard zone -overwrite can be detected on the first call to \fBckalloc\fR or -\fBckfree\fR after the overwrite occurred, rather than when the -specific memory with the overwritten guard zone(s) is freed, which may -occur long after the overwrite occurred. -.TP -\fBmemory trace_on_at_malloc\fR \fIcount\fR -Enable memory tracing after \fIcount\fR \fBckalloc\fR's have been performed. -For example, if you enter \fBmemory trace_on_at_malloc 100\fR, -after the 100th call to \fBckalloc\fR, memory trace information will begin -being displayed for all allocations and frees. Since there can be a lot -of memory activity before a problem occurs, judicious use of this option -can reduce the slowdown caused by tracing (and the amount of trace information -produced), if you can identify a number of allocations that occur before -the problem sets in. The current number of memory allocations that have -occurred since Tcl started is printed on a guard zone failure. -.TP -\fBmemory break_on_malloc\fR \fIcount\fR -After the \fBcount\fR allocations have been performed, \fBckalloc\fR's -output a message to this effect and that it is now attempting to enter -the C debugger. Tcl will then issue a \fISIGINT\fR signal against itself. -If you are running Tcl under a C debugger, it should then enter the debugger -command mode. -.TP -\fB memory display\fR \fIfile\fR -Write a list of all currently allocated memory to the specified file. - -.SH "SEE ALSO" -ckalloc, ckfree, Tcl_ValidateAllMemory, Tcl_DumpActiveMemory, TCL_MEM_DEBUG - -.SH KEYWORDS -memory, debug - - -- cgit v0.12