05-30-2022, 12:54 AM
drmemory is a tool for memory analysis for programmers.
Overview
Dr. Memory monitors your programs for memory problems such as uninitialized variables, access to freed memory, double frees, memory leaks, and (on Windows) access to un-reserved thread local storage slots. You can write tests to memory at runtime or generate test scripts that can be run in batch mode. Dr. Memory can also analyze stack traces and serialized data to spot memory problems. Dr. Memory can be used in static analysis mode, but also has a dynamic mode which offers many of the same features without having to write your own tests.
Dr. Memory is a static analysis tool that you can use to find memory problems in your code while you write it. You can write tests to memory at runtime or generate tests that you can then execute in a batch mode.
When analyzing a process in static mode, Dr. Memory will find memory problems in your code and report them in a tabular format, along with location information. The location information includes the line of code, assembly instruction, and the offsets in bytes from the start of your code.
When analyzing a process in dynamic mode, Dr. Memory will find memory problems in your code and report them in a tabular format. The location information includes a rough representation of the layout of your process, and the bytes at the location that reference the variable or function that contains the memory problem.
In addition to memory analysis, Dr. Memory can also analyze stack traces and serialized data to spot memory problems.
Dr. Memory can be used in static analysis mode, but also has a dynamic mode which offers many of the same features without having to write your own tests.
Using Dr. Memory
Start Dr. Memory by executing the executable.exe file in the bin/ directory, or start a new process by double clicking on the executable.
You can find more detailed help by launching the help screen. If you'd like to configure the help settings for Dr. Memory, you can do that by selecting Options and then selecting Help/Settings from the context menu.
A window will open with a form for you to change the settings. You can adjust the spacing and resolution of the help text, or set the default encoding for serialized data.
Dr. Memory can be configured to listen for mouse and keyboard events. To do so, select Options and then select Events from the context menu. You can also set the default 70238732e0 sanraff
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Overview
Dr. Memory monitors your programs for memory problems such as uninitialized variables, access to freed memory, double frees, memory leaks, and (on Windows) access to un-reserved thread local storage slots. You can write tests to memory at runtime or generate test scripts that can be run in batch mode. Dr. Memory can also analyze stack traces and serialized data to spot memory problems. Dr. Memory can be used in static analysis mode, but also has a dynamic mode which offers many of the same features without having to write your own tests.
Dr. Memory is a static analysis tool that you can use to find memory problems in your code while you write it. You can write tests to memory at runtime or generate tests that you can then execute in a batch mode.
When analyzing a process in static mode, Dr. Memory will find memory problems in your code and report them in a tabular format, along with location information. The location information includes the line of code, assembly instruction, and the offsets in bytes from the start of your code.
When analyzing a process in dynamic mode, Dr. Memory will find memory problems in your code and report them in a tabular format. The location information includes a rough representation of the layout of your process, and the bytes at the location that reference the variable or function that contains the memory problem.
In addition to memory analysis, Dr. Memory can also analyze stack traces and serialized data to spot memory problems.
Dr. Memory can be used in static analysis mode, but also has a dynamic mode which offers many of the same features without having to write your own tests.
Using Dr. Memory
Start Dr. Memory by executing the executable.exe file in the bin/ directory, or start a new process by double clicking on the executable.
You can find more detailed help by launching the help screen. If you'd like to configure the help settings for Dr. Memory, you can do that by selecting Options and then selecting Help/Settings from the context menu.
A window will open with a form for you to change the settings. You can adjust the spacing and resolution of the help text, or set the default encoding for serialized data.
Dr. Memory can be configured to listen for mouse and keyboard events. To do so, select Options and then select Events from the context menu. You can also set the default 70238732e0 sanraff
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