Release notes for Valgrind ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ If you are building a binary package of Valgrind for distribution, please read README_PACKAGERS. It contains some important information. If you are developing Valgrind, please read README_DEVELOPERS. It contains some useful information. For instructions on how to build/install, see the end of this file. Valgrind works on most, reasonably recent Linux setups. If you have problems, consult FAQ.txt to see if there are workarounds. Executive Summary ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Valgrind is a GPL'd system for debugging and profiling x86-Linux programs. With the tools that come with Valgrind, you can automatically detect many memory management and threading bugs, avoiding hours of frustrating bug-hunting, making your programs more stable. You can also perform detailed profiling to help speed up your programs. The Valgrind distribution includes five tools: two memory error detectors, a thread error detector, a cache profiler and a heap profiler. Several other tools have been built with Valgrind. To give you an idea of what Valgrind tools do, when a program is run under the supervision of the first memory error detector tool, all reads and writes of memory are checked, and calls to malloc/new/free/delete are intercepted. As a result, it can detect problems such as: Use of uninitialised memory Reading/writing memory after it has been free'd Reading/writing off the end of malloc'd blocks Reading/writing inappropriate areas on the stack Memory leaks -- where pointers to malloc'd blocks are lost forever Passing of uninitialised and/or unaddressible memory to system calls Mismatched use of malloc/new/new [] vs free/delete/delete [] Overlaps of arguments to strcpy() and related functions Some abuses of the POSIX pthread API Problems like these can be difficult to find by other means, often lying undetected for long periods, then causing occasional, difficult-to-diagnose crashes. When one of these errors occurs, you can attach GDB to your program, so you can poke around and see what's going on. Valgrind is closely tied to details of the CPU, operating system and to a less extent, compiler and basic C libraries. This makes it difficult to make it portable, so I have chosen at the outset to concentrate on what I believe to be a widely used platform: x86/Linux. Valgrind is licensed under the GNU General Public License, version 2. Read the file COPYING in the source distribution for details. Documentation ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A comprehensive user guide is supplied. Point your browser at $PREFIX/share/doc/valgrind/manual.html, where $PREFIX is whatever you specified with --prefix= when building. Building and installing it ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ To install from CVS : 0. Check out the code from CVS, following the instructions at http://developer.kde.org/source/anoncvs.html. The 'modulename' is "valgrind". 1. cd into the source directory. 2. Run ./autogen.sh to setup the environment (you need the standard autoconf tools to do so). To install from a tar.bz2 distribution: 3. Run ./configure, with some options if you wish. The standard options are documented in the INSTALL file. The only interesting one is the usual --prefix=/where/you/want/it/installed. 4. Do "make". 5. Do "make install", possibly as root if the destination permissions require that. 6. See if it works. Try "valgrind --tool=memcheck ls -l". Either this works, or it bombs out with some complaint. In that case, please let us know (see valgrind.kde.org/bugs.html). Important! Do not move the valgrind installation into a place different from that specified by --prefix at build time. This will cause things to break in subtle ways, mostly when Valgrind handles fork/exec calls. Julian Seward (jseward@acm.org) Nick Nethercote (njn25@cam.ac.uk) Jeremy Fitzhardinge (jeremy@goop.org)