Provided by: libdmalloc-dev_5.5.2-14build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       dmalloc - program used to set the environment for debugging using the dmalloc debugging library.

SYNOPSIS

       dmalloc [options]

DESCRIPTION

       This  manual  page  documents  the dmalloc command.  It was written for the Debian GNU/Linux distribution
       based, almost verbatim, on the original documentation provided by the library in  GNU  Info  format;  see
       below.

       The dmalloc program is designed to assist in the setting of the environment variable DMALLOC_OPTIONS.  It
       is designed to print the shell commands necessary to make the appropriate  changes  to  the  environment.
       Unfortunately,  it  cannot  make the changes on its own so the output from dmalloc should be sent through
       the `eval' shell command which will do the commands.

       With shells that have aliasing or macro capabilities: csh, bash, ksh, tcsh,  zsh,  etc.,  setting  up  an
       alias  to  dmalloc  to  do  the  eval  call  is recommended.  Csh/tcsh users (for example) should put the
       following in their `.cshrc' file:

       alias dmalloc 'eval `\dmalloc -C *`'

       Bash and Zsh users on the other hand should put the following in their `.zshrc' file:

       function dmalloc { eval `command dmalloc -b $*` }

       This allows the user to execute the dmalloc command as `dmalloc arguments'.

       The most basic usage for the program is `dmalloc [-bC] tag'.
        The `-b' or `-C' (either but not both flags used at a time) are for generating Bourne or  C  shell  type
       commands  respectively.   dmalloc  will try and use the `SHELL' environment variable to determine whether
       bourne or C shell commands should be generated but you may want to explicitly specify the correct flag.

       The tag argument to dmalloc should match a line from the user's run-time configuration file or should  be
       one of the built-in tags.  If no tag is specified and no other option-commands used, dmalloc will display
       the current settings of the environment variable.  It is useful to specify one  of  the  verbose  options
       when doing this.

       To  find  out  the  usage  for the debug malloc program try dmalloc --usage-long.  The standardized usage
       message that will be displayed is one of the many  features  of  the  argv  library  included  with  this
       package.   It  is available via ftp from `ftp.letters.com' in the `/src/argv' directory.  See `argv.info'
       there for more information.

OPTIONS

       -a     address Set the  `addr'  part  of  the  DMALLOC_OPTIONS  variable  to  address  (or  alternatively
              address:number).

       -b     Output Bourne shell type commands.

       -C     Output C shell type commands.

       -c     Clear/unset  all  of  the settings not specified with other arguments.  Clear will never unset the
              `debug' setting.  Use -d 0 or a tag to `none' to achieve this.

       -d     bitmask Set the `debug' part of the DMALLOC_OPTIONS env variable to the bitmask value which should
              be in hex.  This is overridden (and unnecessary) if a tag is specified.

       -D     List  all  of  the debug-tokens.  Useful for finding a token to be used with the -p or -m options.
              Use with -v or -V verbose options.

       -e     errno Print the dmalloc error string that corresponds to the error number errno.

       -f     filename Use this configuration file instead of the RC file ~/.dmallocrc.

       -i     number Set the checking interval to number.

       -k     Keep the settings when using a tag.  This overrides -r .

       -l     filename Set the log-file to filename.

       -L     Output the debug-value not in hex but by individual debug-tokens in long form.

       -m     token(s) Remove (minus) the debug capabilities of token(s) from the current debug setting or  from
              the selected tag (or -d value).  Multiple -m's can be specified.

       -n     Without changing the environment, output the commands resulting from the supplied options.

       -p     token(s)  Add  (plus)  the  debug  capabilities of token(s) to the current debug setting or to the
              selected tag (or -d value).  Multiple -p's can be specified.

       -r     Remove (unset) all settings when using a tag.  This is useful when you are returning to a standard
              development  tag and want the logfile, address, and interval settings to be cleared automatically.
              If you want this behavior by default, this can be put into the dmalloc alias.

       -s     number Set the  `start'  part  of  the  DMALLOC_OPTIONS  env  variable  to  number  (alternatively
              `file:line').

       -S     Output the debug-value not in hex but by individual debug-tokens in short form.

       -t     List all of the tags in the rc-file.  Use with -v or -V verbose options.

       -v     Give verbose output.  Especially useful when dumping current settings or listing all of the tags.

       If  no  arguments are specified, dmalloc dumps out the current settings that you have for the environment
       variable.  For example:

            Debug-Flags  '0x40005c7' (runtime)
            Address      0x1f008, count = 3
            Interval     100
            Logpath      'malloc'
            Start-File   not-set

       With a -v option and no arguments, dmalloc dumps out the current  settings  in  a  verbose  manner.   For
       example:

            Debug-Flags  '0x40005c7' (runtime)
               log-stats, log-non-free, log-blocks, log-unknown,
               log-bad-space, check-fence, catch-null
            Address      0x1f008, count = 10
            Interval     100
            Logpath      'malloc'
            Start-File   not-set

SEE ALSO

       The    documentation   for   the   library   is   in   GNU   Info   format.   Please   check   the   file
       /usr/share/info/dmalloc.info.gz for more details.

FILES

       /usr/share/info/dmalloc.info.gz
              The real documentation for the dmalloc library.

       ~/.dmallocrc
              User's configuration file.

AUTHOR

       This manual page was written by Luis Francisco González <luisgh@debian.org>,  for  the  Debian  GNU/Linux
       system  (but  may  be used by others).  The library was written by Gray Watson.  Please see the copyright
       file in /usr/share/doc/libdmalloc-dev for details.

                                                                                                      DMALLOC(1)