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Full Discussion: about ns3
Special Forums IP Networking about ns3 Post 302569762 by Corona688 on Tuesday 1st of November 2011 12:01:10 PM
Old 11-01-2011
It crashed.

Segmentation fault means it tried to access memory addresses that either didn't exist, or the program didn't have permissions to access in that manner. Unfortunately, just "SEGMENTATION FAULT" tells you little about why. It doesn't even tell you where. The OS doesn't care about such things, it just kills things which don't obey them.

It was an unusually helpful error though, in that it told you how to get better information on the segfault.

Don't think this really belongs in 'networking', more of a programming problem.
 

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NJAMDPM(1)						      General Commands Manual							NJAMDPM(1)

NAME
njamdpm - Not Just Another Malloc Debugger Post-Mortem SYNOPSIS
njamdpm [OPTIONS] <HEAP FILE> DESCRIPTION
njamdpm is a companion utility that allows you to examine the persistent heap saved by libnjamd(3) You can do things like query for certain addresses, show memory leaks, and show all past allocated memory. As of NJAMD 0.6.0, gdb(1) is required to make sense of the return addresses. USAGE
Options HEAP FILE The heap file will be in the current directory with a name of the form njamd-<pid>-heap, but only if NJAMD_PERSISTANT_HEAP was in the environment at the time of program execution -a address Search through the heap file for a chunk of memory that contains address. This can be VERY helpful when using gdb. Simply find the address that you accessed to cause the segmentation fault, use njamdpm to look it up in the heap, and viola! You have all sorts of info about the chunk: When it was allocated, when it was freed, how big is is, etc. -d depth When displaying return address info, only display depth return addresses. The max is specified in ./include/lib/njamd.h in the define TRACE_DEPTH (default is 3). -t Trim the heap file down to only the used portion. This is useful if for some reason the program somehow exits without trimming its own heap file down first. Note that when the heap file appears huge it's not actually taking up disk space. -s Dump basic status info about peak memory usage, NJAMD overhead, etc. Useful for determining if you should buy more ram, or write me an angry email :) -l Dump memory leaks in the heap. Also shows you info about where the memory was leaked, along with a total. Do note that this total and the subtotals are aligned bytes. They are aligned to the alignment of your architecture, or as specified by the value the NJAMD_ALIGN environment variable had when the heap was created. -f Dump freed memory in the heap. This option is only available if LIBNJAMD ran without NJAMD_CHK_FREE=none set. Using gdb with njamdpm When a segmentation fault happens, it's because, of course, you accessed an invalid address. So all you need to do is get gdb to give you the address you accessed, and then feed it to njamdpm. Ie if the segfault occurs on a line that does buf[i] = 2, issue print &buf[i] to gdb. Note that libnjamd(3) now has a function __nj_ptr_info that can be called from gdb that performs all this without njamdpm. To get gdb to translate these return addresses into something meaningful, issue info line *0xaddress to obtain the line number of the allocation request, or list *0xaddress to see the adjacent code as well. NOTES
Eventually I hope to add symbol translation right into njamdpm. AUTHORS
Mike Perry <mikepery@fscked.org> SEE ALSO
http://freshmeat.net/appindex/development/debugging.html njamd(3), efence(3), malloc(3), mmap(2), mprotect(2) NJAMD - 5 Oct 2000 NJAMDPM(1)
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