| @@ -1,4 +1,73 @@ | |||||
| sanitizers-cmake | |||||
| ================ | |||||
| # CMake-sanitizers | |||||
| CMake modules to help use sanitizers | |||||
| [](https://github.com/RWTH-ELP/CMake-sanitizers/issues) | |||||
| [](LICENSE) | |||||
| CMake module to enable sanitizers for binary targets. | |||||
| ## Include into your project | |||||
| To use [FindSanitizers.cmake](cmake/FindSanitizers.cmake), simply add this repository as git submodule into your own repository | |||||
| ```Shell | |||||
| mkdir externals | |||||
| git submodule add git://github.com/RWTH-ELP/CMake-sanitizers.git externals/CMake-sanitizers | |||||
| ``` | |||||
| and adding ```externals/cmake-sanitizers/cmake``` to your ```CMAKE_MODULE_PATH``` | |||||
| ```CMake | |||||
| set(CMAKE_MODULE_PATH "${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}/externals/cmake-sanitizers/cmake" ${CMAKE_MODULE_PATH}) | |||||
| ``` | |||||
| If you don't use git or dislike submodules you can copy the files in [cmake directory](cmake) into your repository. *Be careful and keep updates in mind!* | |||||
| Now you can simply run ```find_package``` in your CMake files: | |||||
| ```CMake | |||||
| find_package(Sanitizers) | |||||
| ``` | |||||
| ## Usage | |||||
| You can enable the sanitizers with ``SANITIZE_ADDRESS``, ``SANITIZE_MEMORY``, ``SANITIZE_THREAD`` or ``SANITIZE_UNDEFINED`` options in your CMake configuration. You can do this by passing e.g. ``-DSANITIZE_ADDRESS=On`` on your command line or with your graphical interface. | |||||
| If sanitizers are supported by your compiler, the specified targets will be build with sanitizer support. If your compiler has no sanitizing capabilities (I asume intel compiler doesn't) you'll get a warning but CMake will continue processing and sanitizing will simply just be ignored. | |||||
| #### Compiler issues | |||||
| Different compilers may be using different implementations for sanitizers. If you'll try to sanitize targets with C and Fortran code but don't use gcc & gfortran but clang & gfortran, this will cause linking problems. To avoid this, such problems will be detected and sanitizing will be disabled for these targets. | |||||
| Even C only targets may cause problems in certain situations. Some problems have been seen with AddressSanitizer for preloading or dynamic linking. In such cases you may try the ``SANITIZE_LINK_STATIC`` to link sanitizers for gcc static. | |||||
| ## Build targets with sanitizer support | |||||
| To enable sanitizer support you simply have to add ``add_sanitizers(<TARGET>)`` after defining your target. To provide a sanitizer blacklist file you can use the ``add_sanitizer_blacklist(<FILE>)`` function: | |||||
| ```CMake | |||||
| find_package(Sanitizers) | |||||
| add_sanitizer_blacklist("blacklist.txt") | |||||
| add_executable(some_exe foo.c bar.c) | |||||
| add_sanitizers(some_exe) | |||||
| add_library(some_lib foo.c bar.c) | |||||
| add_sanitizers(some_lib) | |||||
| ``` | |||||
| ## Run your application | |||||
| The sanitizers check your program, while it's running. In some situations (e.g. LD_PRELOAD your target) it might be required to preload the used AddressSanitizer library first. In this case you may use the ``asan-wrapper`` script defined in ``ASan_WRAPPER`` variable to execute your application with ``${ASan_WRAPPER} myexe arg1 ...``. | |||||
| ## Contribute | |||||
| Anyone is welcome to contribute. Simply fork this repository, make your changes **in an own branch** and create a pull-request for your change. Please do only one change per pull-request. | |||||
| You found a bug? Please fill out an [issue](https://github.com/RWTH-ELP/CMake-sanitizers/issues) and include any data to reproduce the bug. | |||||
| #### Contributors | |||||
| * [Matt Arsenault](https://github.com/arsenm) | |||||
| * [Alexander Haase](https://github.com/alehaa) | |||||