Table Of Contents
Memory Leak Detector
Contents
Information About Memory Leak Detector
Memory Leaks
Memory Leak Detection
How to Use Memory Leak Detector
Displaying Memory Leak Information
Examples
Setting the Memory Debug Incremental Starting Time
Displaying Memory Leak Information Incrementally
Examples
Additional References
Related Documents
Standards
MIBs
RFCs
Technical Assistance
Command Reference
Memory Leak Detector
The Memory Leak Detector feature is a tool that can be used to detect memory leaks on a router that is running Cisco IOS software. The Memory Leak Detector feature is capable of finding leaks in all memory pools, packet buffers, and chunks.
Feature History for Memory Leak Detector
Release
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Modification
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12.3(8)T1
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This feature was introduced.
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12.2(25)S
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This feature was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(25)S.
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Finding Support Information for Platforms and Cisco IOS Software Images
Use Cisco Feature Navigator to find information about platform support and Cisco IOS software image support. Access Cisco Feature Navigator at http://www.cisco.com/go/fn. You must have an account on Cisco.com. If you do not have an account or have forgotten your username or password, click Cancel at the login dialog box and follow the instructions that appear.
Contents
•
Information About Memory Leak Detector
•
How to Use Memory Leak Detector
•
Additional References
•
Command Reference
Information About Memory Leak Detector
Before using the Memory Leak Detector feature, you should understand the following concepts:
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Memory Leaks
•
Memory Leak Detection
Memory Leaks
Memory leaks are static or dynamic allocations of memory that do not serve any useful purpose. Although technology is available for detection of leaks among statically allocated memory, in this document the focus is on memory allocations that are made dynamically.
Memory Leak Detection
From the detection point of view, leaks among the dynamically allocated memory blocks can be classified into the following three types:
•
Type 1 leaks have no references. These blocks of memory can not be accessed.
•
Type 2 leaks are part of one or more cycles of allocations but none of the blocks in these cycles is accessible from outside of the cycles. Blocks within each cycle have references to other elements in the cycle(s). An example of a Type 2 leak is a circular list that is not needed anymore. Though individual elements are reachable, the circular list is not reachable.
•
Type 3 leaks are accessible or reachable but are not needed, for example, elements in data structures that are not needed anymore. A subclass of Type 3 leaks are those where allocations are made but never written to. You can look for these subclass leaks using the show memory debug reference unused command.
The Memory Leak Detector feature provides the technology to detect Type 1 and Type 2 memory leaks.
The Memory Leak Detector feature works in the following two modes:
•
Normal mode—Where memory leak detector uses memory to speed up its operations.
•
Low memory mode—Where memory leak detector runs without attempting to allocate memory.
Low memory mode is considerably slower than the normal mode and can handle only blocks. There is no support for chunks in low memory mode. Low memory mode is useful when there is little or no memory available on the router.
The memory leak detector has a simple interface and can be invoked by the command line interface (CLI) at any time to get a report of memory leaks. For testing purposes, you can perform all tests, then invoke memory leak detector to get a report on leaks. If you are interested only in leaks generated by your test cases alone, memory leak detector has an incremental option, which can be enabled at the start of testing. After testing completes, you can get a report on only the leaks that occurred after the incremental option was enabled.
To reduce false alarms, it is mandatory that memory leak detector be invoked multiple times and that only leaks that consistently appear in all reports be interpreted as leaks. This is especially true for packet buffer leaks.
Note
When submitting defects based on the reports of memory leak detector, please add "memleak-detection" to the attribute field of the defect report.
Warning
Executing memory leak detection commands on a device with a serious memory leak issue may cause loss of connectivity.
How to Use Memory Leak Detector
This section contains the following procedures:
•
Displaying Memory Leak Information
•
Setting the Memory Debug Incremental Starting Time
•
Displaying Memory Leak Information Incrementally
Displaying Memory Leak Information
This task describes how to display detected memory leak information.
SUMMARY STEPS
1.
enable
2.
show memory debug leaks [chunks | largest | lowmem | summary]
DETAILED STEPS
| |
Command or Action
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Purpose
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Step 1
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enable
Example:
Router> enable
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Enables privileged EXEC mode.
• Enter your password if prompted.
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Step 2
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show memory debug leaks
or
show memory debug leaks [chunks]
or
show memory debug leaks [largest]
or
show memory debug leaks [lowmem]
or
show memory debug leaks [summary]
Example:
Router# show memory debug leaks
or
Example:
Router# show memory debug leaks chunks
or
Example:
Router# show memory debug leaks largest
or
Example:
Router# show memory debug leaks lowmem
or
Example:
Router# show memory debug leaks summary
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Invokes normal mode memory leak detection and displays detected memory leaks. It does not detect memory leaks in chunks.
or
(Optional) Invokes normal mode memory leak detection and displays detected memory leaks in chunks.
or
(Optional) Invokes memory leak detection and displays the top ten leaking allocator_pcs and total amount of memory that they have leaked. Additionally, each time this command is invoked it remembers the previous invocation's report and compares it to the current invocation's report.
or
(Optional) Invokes low memory mode memory leak detection and displays detected memory leaks. The amount of time taken for analysis is considerably greater than that of normal mode. The output for this command is similar to the show memory debug leaks command.
or
(Optional) Invokes normal mode memory leak detection and displays detected memory leaks based on allocator_pc and then on the size of the block.
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Examples
This section provides the following output examples:
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Sample Output for the show memory debug leaks Command
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Sample Output for the show memory debug leaks chunks Command
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Sample Output for the show memory debug leaks largest Command
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Sample Output for the show memory debug leaks summary Command
Sample Output for the show memory debug leaks Command
The following example shows output from the show memory debug leaks command with no optional keywords specified:
Router# show memory debug leaks
Address Size Alloc_pc PID Name
Address Size Alloc_pc PID Name
Address Size Alloc_pc PID Name
62DABD28 80 60616750 -2 Init
62DABD78 80 606167A0 -2 Init
62DCF240 88 605B7E70 -2 Init
62DCF298 96 605B7E98 -2 Init
62DCF2F8 88 605B7EB4 -2 Init
62DCF350 96 605B7EDC -2 Init
63336C28 104 60C67D74 -2 Init
63370D58 96 60C656AC -2 Init
633710A0 304 60C656AC -2 Init
63B2BF68 96 60C659D4 -2 Init
63BA3FE0 32832 608D2848 104 Audit Process
63BB4020 32832 608D2FD8 104 Audit Process
Table 1 describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 1 show memory debug leaks Field Descriptions
Field
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Description
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Address
|
Hexadecimal address of the leaked block.
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Size
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Size of the leaked block (in bytes).
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Alloc_pc
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Address of the system call that allocated the block.
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PID
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The process identifier of the process that allocated the block.
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Name
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The name of the process that allocated the block.
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Sample Output for the show memory debug leaks chunks Command
The following example shows output from the show memory debug leaks chunks command:
Router# show memory debug leaks chunks
Address Size Alloc_pc PID Name
Address Size Alloc_pc PID Name
Address Size Alloc_pc PID Name
62DABD28 80 60616750 -2 Init
62DABD78 80 606167A0 -2 Init
62DCF240 88 605B7E70 -2 Init
62DCF298 96 605B7E98 -2 Init
62DCF2F8 88 605B7EB4 -2 Init
62DCF350 96 605B7EDC -2 Init
63336C28 104 60C67D74 -2 Init
63370D58 96 60C656AC -2 Init
633710A0 304 60C656AC -2 Init
63B2BF68 96 60C659D4 -2 Init
63BA3FE0 32832 608D2848 104 Audit Process
63BB4020 32832 608D2FD8 104 Audit Process
62D80DA8 16 62D7BFD0 (Managed Chunk )
62D80DB8 16 62D7BFD0 (Managed Chunk )
62D80DC8 16 62D7BFD0 (Managed Chunk )
62D80DD8 16 62D7BFD0 (Managed Chunk )
62D80DE8 16 62D7BFD0 (Managed Chunk )
62E8FD60 216 62E8F888 (IPC Message He)
Table 2 describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 2 show memory debug leaks chunks Field Descriptions
Field
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Description
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Address
|
Hexadecimal address of the leaked block.
|
Size
|
Size of the leaked block (in bytes).
|
Alloc_pc
|
Address of the system call that allocated the block.
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PID
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The process identifier of the process that allocated the block.
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Name
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The name of the process that allocated the block.
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Size
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(Chunk Elements) Size of the leaked element (bytes).
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Parent
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(Chunk Elements) Parent chunk of the leaked chunk.
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Name
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(Chunk Elements) The name of the leaked chunk.
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Sample Output for the show memory debug leaks largest Command
The following example shows output from the show memory debug leaks largest command:
Router# show memory debug leaks largest
608D2848 32776 inconclusive
608D2FD8 32776 inconclusive
60C656AC 288 inconclusive
The following example shows output from the second invocation of the show memory debug leaks largest command:
Router# show memory debug leaks largest
Sample Output for the show memory debug leaks summary Command
The following example shows output from the show memory debug leaks summary command:
Router# show memory debug leaks summary
Alloc PC Size Blocks Bytes What
Alloc PC Size Blocks Bytes What
Alloc PC Size Blocks Bytes What
0x605B7E70 0000000032 0000000001 0000000032 Init
0x605B7E98 0000000040 0000000001 0000000040 Init
0x605B7EB4 0000000032 0000000001 0000000032 Init
0x605B7EDC 0000000040 0000000001 0000000040 Init
0x60616750 0000000024 0000000001 0000000024 Init
0x606167A0 0000000024 0000000001 0000000024 Init
0x608D2848 0000032776 0000000001 0000032776 Audit Process
0x608D2FD8 0000032776 0000000001 0000032776 Audit Process
0x60C656AC 0000000040 0000000001 0000000040 Init
0x60C656AC 0000000248 0000000001 0000000248 Init
0x60C659D4 0000000040 0000000001 0000000040 Init
0x60C67D74 0000000048 0000000001 0000000048 Init
Table 3 describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 3 show memory debug leaks summary Field Descriptions
Field
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Description
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Alloc PC
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Address of the system call that allocated the block.
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Size
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Size of the leaked block.
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Blocks
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Number of blocks leaked.
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Bytes
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Total amount of memory leaked.
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What
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Name of the process that owns the block.
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Setting the Memory Debug Incremental Starting Time
This task describes how to set the starting time for incremental analysis of memory leaks. For incremental analysis, you can define a starting point by using the set memory debug incremental starting-time command. When the starting time is set, only memory allocated after the starting time will be considered for reporting as leaks.
SUMMARY STEPS
1.
enable
2.
set memory debug incremental starting-time
DETAILED STEPS
| |
Command or Action
|
Purpose
|
Step 1
|
enable
Example:
Router> enable
|
Enables privileged EXEC mode.
• Enter your password if prompted.
|
Step 2
|
set memory debug incremental starting-time
Example:
Router# set memory debug incremental
starting-time
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Sets the starting time for incremental analysis to the time when the command is issued.
|
Displaying Memory Leak Information Incrementally
This task describes how to display memory leak information after a starting time has been established.
SUMMARY STEPS
1.
enable
2.
set memory debug incremental starting-time
3.
show memory debug incremental {allocations | leaks [lowmem] | status}
DETAILED STEPS
| |
Command or Action
|
Purpose
|
Step 1
|
enable
Example:
Router> enable
|
Enables privileged EXEC mode.
• Enter your password if prompted.
|
Step 2
|
set memory debug incremental starting-time
Example:
Router# set memory debug incremental
starting-time
|
Sets the starting time for incremental analysis to the time when the command is issued.
|
Step 3
|
show memory debug incremental allocations
or
show memory debug incremental leaks
or
show memory debug incremental leaks lowmem
or
show memory debug incremental status
Example:
Router# show memory debug incremental
allocations
or
Example:
Router# show memory debug incremental leaks
or
Example:
Router# show memory debug incremental leaks
lowmem
or
Example:
Router# show memory debug incremental status
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Displays all the memory blocks that were allocated after the issue of a set memory debug incremental starting-time command. The displayed memory blocks are just memory allocations, they are not necessarily leaks.
or
Displays output similar to the show memory debug leaks command, except that it displays only memory that was leaked after the issue of a set memory debug incremental starting-time command.
or
Forces memory leak detection to work in low memory mode. The output for this command is similar to the show memory debug leaks command, except that it displays only memory that was leaked after the issue of a set memory debug incremental starting-time command.
• In low memory mode, the analysis time is considerably greater than it is in normal mode.
• You can use this command when you already know that normal mode memory leak detection will fail (perhaps by an unsuccessful previous attempt to invoke normal mode memory leak detection).
or
Displays whether a starting point for incremental analysis has been set and the elapsed time since then.
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Examples
This section provides the following output examples:
•
Sample Output for the show memory debug incremental allocations Command
•
Sample Output for the show memory debug incremental status Command
Sample Output for the show memory debug incremental allocations Command
The following example shows output from the show memory debug incremental command when entered with the allocations keyword:
Router# show memory debug incremental allocations
Address Size Alloc_pc PID Name
62DA4E98 176 608CDC7C 44 CDP Protocol
62DA4F48 88 608CCCC8 44 CDP Protocol
62DA4FA0 88 606224A0 3 Exec
62DA4FF8 96 606224A0 3 Exec
635BF040 96 606224A0 3 Exec
63905E50 200 606A4DA4 69 Process Events
Sample Output for the show memory debug incremental status Command
The following example shows output from the show memory debug incremental command entered with the status keyword:
Router# show memory debug incremental status
Incremental debugging is enabled
Time elapsed since start of incremental debugging: 00:00:10
Additional References
The following sections provide references related to Memory Leak Detector.
Related Documents
Related Topic
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Document Title
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Additional commands: complete command syntax, command mode, defaults, usage guidelines, and examples
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The Cisco IOS Configuration Fundamentals and Network Management Command Reference, Release 12.3 T
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Standards
Standards
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Title
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No new or modified standards are supported by this feature, and support for existing standards has not been modified by this feature.
|
—
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MIBs
MIBs
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MIBs Link
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No new or modified MIBs are supported by this feature, and support for existing MIBs has not been modified by this feature.
|
To locate and download MIBs for selected platforms, Cisco IOS releases, and feature sets, use Cisco MIB Locator found at the following URL:
http://www.cisco.com/go/mibs
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RFCs
RFCs
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Title
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No new or modified RFCs are supported by this feature, and support for existing RFCs has not been modified by this feature.
|
—
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Technical Assistance
Description
|
Link
|
Technical Assistance Center (TAC) home page, containing 30,000 pages of searchable technical content, including links to products, technologies, solutions, technical tips, and tools. Registered Cisco.com users can log in from this page to access even more content.
|
http://www.cisco.com/public/support/tac/home.shtml
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Command Reference
The following commands are introduced or modified in the feature or features documented in this module. For information about these commands, see the Cisco IOS Configuration Fundamentals Command Reference at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/ios/fundamentals/command/reference/cf_book.html. For information about all Cisco IOS commands, go to the Command Lookup Tool at http://tools.cisco.com/Support/CLILookup or to the Cisco IOS Master Commands List.
•
set memory debug incremental starting-time
•
show memory debug incremental
•
show memory debug leaks
Any Internet Protocol (IP) addresses used in this document are not intended to be actual addresses. Any examples, command display output, and figures included in the document are shown for illustrative purposes only. Any use of actual IP addresses in illustrative content is unintentional and coincidental.
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.