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Sanitize Your Code

Consider using a code sanitizer to check for some of the more mundane, but nevertheless real, bugs and inefficiencies in your library.

All the tools listed have different strengths and are useful in different scenarios, so you might want to use several of them in combination.

AddressSanitizer

Clang AddressSanitizer (ASan) is a fast memory error detector built into LLVM/Clang, gcc and other compilers. As such, it works on Windows, Linux, and MacOS. It can detect out-of-bounds accesses to heap, stack, and globals, use-after-free and use-after-return bugs, and other memory-related errors. AddressSanitizer is generally faster than Valgrind and can be used in continuous integration without significantly slowing down the test suite.

  • To use ASAN, pass the -fsanitize=address switch to Clang, or set the address-sanitizer=on B2 flag. Under CMake, you need to add the flags manually.

  • The LeakSanitizer (LSan) runs with ASAN, and is a memory leak detector. It’s integrated into AddressSanitizer.

The sanitizer suite also includes:

  • UndefinedBehaviorSanitizer (UBSan), which is a runtime undefined behavior detector that can catch misaligned or null pointers, integer overflows, and invalid bit shifts. Set -fsanitize=undefined in Clang, or undefined-sanitizer=on in B2. For details on the usage and output, refer to Clang UndefinedBehaviorSanitizer.

  • MemorySanitizer (MSan) detects uninitialized reads. This tool is similar to Valgrind, but it’s generally faster and can catch some bugs that Valgrind might miss. The New Library CI Framework doesn’t include any build for MSAN, and B2 doesn’t have a feature for it, so for either you need to manually specify the setting: -fsanitize=memory in Clang, or memory-santizer=on in B2. Refer to Clang MemorySanitizer.

  • ThreadSanitizer (TSan) detects data races. It’s available in Clang and gcc. Set -fsanitize=thread in Clang, or thread-sanitizer=on in B2. Refer to Clang ThreadSanitizer.

Valgrind

For Linux based systems, Valgrind is an open-source software tool suite that helps in debugging memory management and threading bugs, and profiling programs. It is often used to detect memory leaks and uninitialised memory blocks in C++ programs, among other things.

Here’s how you can set it up for your project:

  1. Depending on your OS, the command will differ. For Ubuntu or Debian, you can use:

    sudo apt-get install valgrind

    For CentOS or Fedora, you can use:

    sudo yum install valgrind
  2. After Valgrind is installed, you can use it to run your program. Here’s an example:

    valgrind --leak-check=yes ./your_program

    The --leak-check=yes option tells Valgrind to perform memory leak checks. Your program runs as usual, but with Valgrind checking its memory usage in the background.

Setting up Valgrind in a CI environment depends on your CI system and might look something like this:

  1. In your CI configuration file, such as .github/workflows/workflow.yml for GitHub Actions, you would add a step to install Valgrind in your build environment.

  2. Next, in your script steps, instead of running your test executable directly, you’d use Valgrind to run it. This will generate a report of any memory issues detected by Valgrind.

    NOTE

    Valgrind can significantly slow down your program, so it might not be suitable for all CI use cases, especially for large projects or tests that need to run quickly.