You know the situation. The program is prepared for debugging and in all debugging sessions it runs well. But once it is started without debugging the error shows up. A typical example is a memory leak that becomes visible only when we turn off the debugging. If you foresee such situations you can still win. Simply use something equivalent to the following little program:
#include <mcheck.h> #include <signal.h> static void enable (int sig) { mtrace (); signal (SIGUSR1, enable); } static void disable (int sig) { muntrace (); signal (SIGUSR2, disable); } int main (int argc, char *argv[]) { … signal (SIGUSR1, enable); signal (SIGUSR2, disable); … }
I.e., the user can start the memory debugger any time s/he wants if the
program was started with MALLOC_TRACE
set in the environment.
The output will of course not show the allocations which happened before
the first signal but if there is a memory leak this will show up
nevertheless.