Commit c8148c88 authored by Sasha Goldshtein's avatar Sasha Goldshtein

Added option to display only top N stacks by size

parent dcee30d3
......@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
.SH NAME
memleak \- Print a summary of outstanding allocations and their call stacks to detect memory leaks. Uses Linux eBPF/bcc.
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B memleak [-h] [-p PID] [-t] [-a] [-o OLDER] [-c COMMAND] [-s SAMPLE_RATE] [-d STACK_DEPTH] [INTERVAL] [COUNT]
.B memleak [-h] [-p PID] [-t] [-a] [-o OLDER] [-c COMMAND] [-s SAMPLE_RATE] [-d STACK_DEPTH] [-T TOP] [INTERVAL] [COUNT]
.SH DESCRIPTION
memleak traces and matches memory allocation and deallocation requests, and
collects call stacks for each allocation. memleak can then print a summary
......@@ -11,6 +11,9 @@ of which call stacks performed allocations that weren't subsequently freed.
When tracing a specific process, memleak instruments malloc and free from libc.
When tracing all processes, memleak instruments kmalloc and kfree.
memleak may introduce significant overhead when tracing processes that allocate
and free many blocks very quickly. See the OVERHEAD section below.
The stack depth is limited to 10 by default (+1 for the current instruction pointer),
but it can be controlled using the \-d switch if deeper stacks are required.
......@@ -45,6 +48,10 @@ Record roughly every SAMPLE_RATE-th allocation to reduce overhead.
Capture STACK_DEPTH frames (or less) when obtaining allocation call stacks.
The default value is 10.
.TP
\-t TOP
Print only the top TOP stacks (sorted by size).
The default value is 10.
.TP
INTERVAL
Print a summary of oustanding allocations and their call stacks every INTERVAL seconds.
The default interval is 5 seconds.
......@@ -61,6 +68,11 @@ Print user outstanding allocation stacks and allocation details for the process
#
.B memleak -p 1005 -a
.TP
Sample roughly every 5th allocation (~20%) of the call stacks and print the top 5
stacks 10 times before quitting.
#
.B memleak -s 5 --top=5 10
.TP
Run ./allocs and print outstanding allocation stacks for that process:
#
.B memleak -c "./allocs"
......
......@@ -2,6 +2,7 @@
from bcc import BPF
from time import sleep
from datetime import datetime
import argparse
import subprocess
import ctypes
......@@ -192,6 +193,8 @@ parser.add_argument("-s", "--sample-rate", default=1, type=int,
help="sample every N-th allocation to decrease the overhead")
parser.add_argument("-d", "--stack-depth", default=10, type=int,
help="maximum stack depth to capture")
parser.add_argument("-T", "--top", type=int, default=10,
help="display only this many top allocating stacks (by size)")
args = parser.parse_args()
......@@ -204,6 +207,7 @@ min_age_ns = 1e6 * args.older
sample_every_n = args.sample_rate
num_prints = args.count
max_stack_size = args.stack_depth + 2
top_stacks = args.top
if command is not None:
print("Executing '%s' and tracing the resulting process." % command)
......@@ -235,7 +239,8 @@ decoder = StackDecoder(pid, bpf_program)
def print_outstanding():
stacks = {}
print("*** Outstanding allocations:")
print("[%s] Top %d stacks with outstanding allocations:" %
(datetime.now().strftime("%H:%M:%S"), top_stacks))
allocs = bpf_program.get_table("allocs")
for address, info in sorted(allocs.items(), key=lambda a: a[1].size):
if Time.monotonic_time() - min_age_ns < info.timestamp_ns:
......@@ -249,8 +254,8 @@ def print_outstanding():
if args.show_allocs:
print("\taddr = %x size = %s" %
(address.value, info.size))
for stack, (count, size) in sorted(stacks.items(),
key=lambda s: s[1][1]):
to_show = sorted(stacks.items(), key=lambda s: s[1][1])[-top_stacks:]
for stack, (count, size) in to_show:
print("\t%d bytes in %d allocations from stack\n\t\t%s" %
(size, count, stack.replace(";", "\n\t\t")))
......
......@@ -151,7 +151,7 @@ USAGE message:
# ./memleak.py -h
usage: memleak.py [-h] [-p PID] [-t] [-a] [-o OLDER] [-c COMMAND]
[-s SAMPLE_RATE] [-d STACK_DEPTH]
[-s SAMPLE_RATE] [-d STACK_DEPTH] [-T TOP]
[interval] [count]
Trace outstanding memory allocations that weren't freed.
......@@ -177,6 +177,7 @@ optional arguments:
sample every N-th allocation to decrease the overhead
-d STACK_DEPTH, --stack_depth STACK_DEPTH
maximum stack depth to capture
-T TOP, --top TOP display only this many top allocating stacks (by size)
EXAMPLES:
......
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