valparse supports protocol version 4 with Memcheck only, but can be easily modified to support Helgrind and other protocol tools.
valparse can be insalled by running
pip install valparse
Anaconda hosting may be added in the future.
By default, Valgrind output is printed to stderr
. While readable,
Valgrind's unmodified output is not very easily parsable. However, output can be
generated in the form of XML code and redirected to a .xml
file by running
Valgrind with the following options:
valgrind --leak-check=full --xml=yes --xml-file=<xml-file-name> ./<executable> <args>
Some examples of .xml
files generated by Valgrind are included in the
/examples
directory.
Valgrind does not support XML output for fd leaks as of version 3.18.1.
Below is an example of basic valparse
usage:
import valparse
xml_file = valparse.Parser('./test.xml')
if xml_file.hasLeaks() or xml_file.hasErrors():
print("Leaks or errors found!")
-
Error generation for nonexistent/incorrectly formatted TOPLEVEL tags
-
Error generation for nonexistent/incorrectly formatted PROTOCOL tags
-
Basic Valgrind output parsing
- Check for existence of errors or leaks
-
Check for fatal signal
-
Count errors and leaks (if applicable)
-
Error and leak parsing (if applicable)
-
Fatal signal parsing (if applicable)
-
-
Optional user-friendly
.supp
file generation
valparse checks for the existence and correct formatting of the following TOPLEVEL tags:
-
protocolversion (4)
-
protocoltool (memcheck)
valparse checks for the existence and correct formatting of the following PROTOCOL tags:
-
preamble
-
pid
-
ppid
-
tool
-
args
-
status
-
suppcounts
Note: Valgrind supplies an 'errorcounts' tag, but it seems largely unreliable. We've decided to generate this information manually.
The primary function of valparse is to generate usable content from Valgrind output. valparse was created with our grading scripts in mind, so it counts the number of errors, leaks, unique errors, unique leaks, and total bytes leaked. valparse also checks for the presence of a fatal signal.
Within each <suppression>
tag, Valgrind supplies a <rawtext>
tag that can be
used to make .supp
files, but it's cryptic and requires direct editing. We've
assembled this information manually to make it more user-friendly, customizable,
and generally better. valparse supports the dynamic generation of .supp
files, which can be utilised when running Valgrind to suppress certain leaks or
errors. Files can be generated in write (default) or append mode, and users can
specify suppression names as well as .supp
file names.