NAME
leaks
—
Search a process's memory for
unreferenced malloc buffers
SYNOPSIS
leaks |
[options] pid | partial-executable-name | memory-graph-file |
leaks |
[options] -atExit --
command |
Options:
[-list
]
[-groupByType
] [-nostacks
]
[-nosources
] [-quiet
]
[-exclude
symbol]
[-outputGraph
path]
[-fullContent
]
[-readonlyContent
]
[-noContent
]
[-diffFrom=<memgraph>
]
[-traceTree
address]
[-referenceTree
]
[-autoreleasePools
]
[-debug=<mode>
]
DESCRIPTION
leaks
identifies leaked memory -- memory
that the application has allocated, but has been lost and cannot be freed.
Specifically, leaks
examines a specified process's
memory for values that may be pointers to malloc-allocated buffers. Any
buffer reachable from a pointer in writable global memory (e.g., __DATA
segments), a register, or on the stack is assumed to be memory in use. Any
buffer reachable from a pointer in a reachable malloc-allocated buffer is
also assumed to be in use. The buffers which are not reachable are leaks;
the buffers could never be freed because no pointer exists in memory to the
buffer, and thus free() could never be called for these buffers. Such
buffers waste memory; removing them can reduce swapping and memory usage.
Leaks are particularly dangerous for long-running programs, for eventually
the leaks could fill memory and cause the application to crash.
leaks
requires one argument -- either the
process ID or the full or partial executable name of the process to examine,
or the pathname of a memory graph file generated by
leaks
or the Xcode Memory Graph Debugger. (Unless
the -atExit
--
command argument is given, see below for more
details.)
Once the leaked buffers have been identified,
leaks
analyzes them to find "root leaks"
(those which are not referenced by any other buffer) and "root
cycles" (cycles of objects which reference or retain each other, but
which are not referenced by any other buffer outside the cycle). Then, it
identifies the tree of buffers which are referenced by those root leaks and
root cycles, if any. leaks
then prints each such
"leak tree".
If the MallocStackLogging environment variable was set when the
application was launched, leaks
also prints a stack
trace describing where the buffer was allocated.
MEMORY GRAPH FILES
A memory graph file archives the memory state of a process for
further analysis at a later time, on a different machine, or by other
people. It includes information about all VM and malloc nodes in the
process, and the references between them. Memory graph files can be
generated by leaks
using the
-outputGraph
option (and the
-fullContent
option if desired), or by examining a
live process with the Xcode Memory Graph Debugger then using the Export
Memory Graph menu item from the File menu. The standard filename suffix for
memory graph files is ".memgraph". These files can be used as
input to various commands including leaks,
heap,
stringdups,
vmmap,
malloc_history,
footprint,
and the Xcode Memory Graph Debugger.
OPTIONS
-list
- Print the leaks as a list ("classic"-style) rather than as a tree. Warning: this option may be removed in the future.
-groupByType
- When printing a tree of leaked objects, group the children of a node in the tree by type, rather than showing individual instances.
-nostacks
- Do not print backtraces of leaked blocks even if the target process has the MallocStackLogging environment variable set.
-nosources
- Do not print sourceFile:lineNumber in backtraces. This can improve performance when examining a process with a huge number of debug symbols.
-quiet
- Do not print process description header or binary image list.
-exclude
symbol- Exclude leaked blocks whose backtraces include the specified symbol. This option can be repeated for multiple symbols. This allows ignoring leaks that, for example, are allocated in libraries for which you do not have source code.
-outputGraph
path- Generate a memory graph file containing information about all VM and
malloc nodes, and the references between them. path
can be a path to a file, or just a directory name; in the latter case a
filename with the ".memgraph" suffix will be generated.
By default (for security) when generating a memory graph file, descriptions of the content of some objects will be included but ONLY if they are backed by read-only memory in Mach-O binary images or the dyld shared cache. To store full content pass the
-fullContent
flag. -fullContent
- When generating a memory graph file, include descriptions of the content
of various objects, as would be shown by
heap <pid> -addresses all
, and as needed bystringdups <pid>
. (Full content is the default when targeting a live process, without generating a memory graph file.) -readonlyContent
- When running leaks against a live target process, print descriptions of the content of memory only if they are backed by read-only memory. (Read-only content is the default when generating memory graph files.)
-noContent
- Do not print the descriptions of the content of leaked memory, or save descriptions of allocation memory into memory graph files. Although that information can be useful for recognizing the contents of the buffer and understanding why it might be leaked, it could expose confidential information from the process if you, for example, file bug reports with that output included.
-diffFrom=<memgraph>
- Show only the new leaks since the specified memgraph.
-traceTree
address- Print a reverse tree of references, from the given block up to the process 'roots' (e.g., global data, registers, or locations on stacks) to the given block. This is useful for determining what is holding onto a buffer such that it has not been freed, and is similar to the information shown in the Xcode Memory Graph Debugger.
-referenceTree
- Print a top-down tree of all malloc allocations and dynamically-allocated
VM regions in the process. This can be useful for getting an overall sense
of how memory is held by the process. The
-groupByType
argument can also be passed to summarize the data.In this reference tree mode, each allocation only appears once in the output. Some attempt is made to prioritize which reference to an allocation should be considered as the "owning" allocation to decide where in the tree to show the allocation, but since allocations often have several or numerous references to them (some of which may be false or stale references) and only one can be the "parent" in this reference tree output, sometimes allocations are shown in the wrong place in the tree.
-autoreleasePools
- Print the contents of all autorelease pools of all threads of the process, and trees of memory that are only held by those allocations. If the autorelease pool got popped then that additional memory that is only held by autorelease pool entries would get released.
-debug=[mode]
- This flag offers several additional more detailed modes of output,
intended for debugging and deeper investigations. Use
-debug=help
to get more information about various debug modes. -atExit
--
command- Launches the specified command and runs
leaks
when that process exits. The-atExit
argument should be the last argument, followed by -- and the command to launch. For example:$ leaks -quiet -atExit -- /bin/ls -lt /tmp/
Using
-atExit
will automatically set MallocStackLogging=lite for the specified command so that stack backtraces can be shown for leaked allocations. To use a different setting of that env var, such as YES or NO, you can set the env var prior to running leaks. For example:$ MallocStackLogging=YES leaks -quiet -atExit -- /bin/ls -lt /tmp/
ENVIRONMENT
The leaks
command may detect more leaks if
the target process is run with the MallocScribble environment variable. If
this variable is set then when malloc blocks are deallocated they are filled
with 0x55 bytes, thus overwriting any "stale" data such as
pointers remaining in those blocks. This reduces the number of false
pointers remaining in the process memory.
EXIT STATUS
The leaks
command exits with one of the
following values:
0
- No leaks were detected.
1
- One or more leaks were detected.
>1
- An error occurred.
SEE ALSO
malloc(3), heap(1), malloc_history(1), stringdups(1), vmmap(1), footprint(1), DevToolsSecurity(1)
The Xcode Memory Graph Debuggger graphically shows malloc blocks and VM regions (both leaked and non-leaked), and the references between them.
The Xcode developer tools also include Instruments, a graphical
application that can give information similar to that provided by
leaks.
The Allocations instrument graphically
displays dynamic, real-time information about the object and memory use in
an application, including backtraces of where the allocations occurred. The
Leaks instrument performs memory leak analysis.