CMake module to enable sanitizers for binary targets.
To use FindSanitizers.cmake, simply add this repository as git submodule into your own repository
mkdir externals
git submodule add git://github.com/arsenm/sanitizers-cmake.git externals/sanitizers-cmake
and adding externals/sanitizers-cmake/cmake
to your CMAKE_MODULE_PATH
set(CMAKE_MODULE_PATH "${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}/externals/sanitizers-cmake/cmake" ${CMAKE_MODULE_PATH})
If you don't use git or dislike submodules you can copy the files in cmake directory into your repository. Be careful and keep updates in mind!
Now you can simply run find_package
in your CMake files:
find_package(Sanitizers)
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.
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.
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 sanitizer_add_blacklist_file(<FILE>)
function:
find_package(Sanitizers)
sanitizer_add_blacklist_file("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)
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 ...
.
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 and include any data to reproduce the bug.