Release notes for Purify version 2002a.06.00 HP-UX Contents ======== o Changes from previous releases o Supported systems o Restrictions and known issues New in This Release =================== - Bug fixes and compatibility with OS patches. - Modified Support for Change Request Management Systems, including Rational's ClearQuest and ClearDDTS. Please see the online help for more details. - Support for aCC 3.31 and 3.33 compiler - Support for ld/dld version 11.30 - Support for dlopen, dlclose, dlsym, dlget calls in 32-bit applications. You can make calls to the above dynamic library routines in 32-bit applications, and Purify will make sure those libraries are instrumented as well for error checking. - Two new options -lib-path-length and -replace-path have been added to Purify. These options help one to relocate the cache. For information on the options and how to move the cache, please refer to the online documentation. - Purify_home has been re-organized so that 32-bit and 64-bit components reside in the same directory. There is no longer a need to link 32 and 64 bit homes, or put them in your path. Please see the section "Restrictions and Known Issues" for more details. New in Purify 2002.05.00 ========================= - Bug fixes and compatibility with OS patches. - Support for gcc 2.95.2 and 2.95.3 compilers. - Support for aCC 3.27 and 3.30 compilers. - This release supports the LD_PRELOAD environment variable. This feature is available on HP-UX 11.00, AR0301(DART52) or later releases (ld and linker tools patch PHSS_22478). Please see the section "Restrictions and Known Issues" for known issues with LD_PRELOAD usage. New in Purify 2001a.04.00 ========================= - Bug fixes and compatibility with OS patches. - HTML-based online help system. See the "HTML Help" topic in the Restrictions and Known Issues section. - New product versioning system. This release is the successor of: Purify 5.2 for HP-UX - This release supports HP-UX 11.11. - This release does not support HP-UX 10.01 and 10.10. - This release supports objdebug style debug information generated by cc and aCC compilers. This feature is supported on HP-UX versions 11.00 and higher only. With the +objdebug option to the compiler, extra debug information is placed into each object file to help the debugger locate the object file and to quickly find global types and constants. New in Purify 5.2 ================= - Bug fixes and compatibility with OS patches. - This release uses a new FlexLm based licensing. Read the new installation guide before installing the product. Use rs_install instead of pure_install for the installation. - This is the last release to support HP-UX 10.01 and HP-UX 10.10. New in Purify 5.1 ================= - HP-UX 9.x is no longer supported. - Support for Cygnus GNUPro 98r2 compilers. New in Purify 5.0.1 =================== - Bug fixes and compatibility with OS patches. - 32-bit Purify 5.0.1 may be used with 32-bit PureCoverage 5.0.1. - This is the last release to support HP-UX 9.x. Apex Ada is no longer supported. New in Purify 5.0 ================= - This version supports "wide mode" applications on HP-UX 11.00: programs using 64-bit pointers, compiled with the option +DA2.0W. Please read the Restrictions section for important information about 64-bit development. - Bug fixes and compatibility with OS patches. New in Purify 4.4 ================= - Bug fixes and compatibility with OS patches. - Supports FLEXlm based licensing when installed as part of RSDSU. New in Purify 4.3 ================= - Support for Apex 3.0.0 Ada and C++ on Solaris and HP-UX. In addition to support for code generated by the Apex 3.0.0 C++ and Ada compilers, this release provides Apex GUI integration in the form of the Purify Viewer Edit, Debug, Check-in, Check-out, and JIT debugging features. New In Purify 4.2 ================= - bug fixes ================================================== Supported systems ================= Operating system and Hardware ----------------------------- Purify has been tested with HP-UX versions 10.20, 11.00 and 11.11 from Hewlett Packard. Purify also supports 64-bit wide-mode programs on HPUX 11.00 and 11.11. A wide-mode program is one that uses 64-bit longs and pointers, built with the compiler option "+DA2.0W." Compilers --------- Purify has been tested with the following compilers: - Bundled cc. - ANSI cc. - C++. - aCC versions 3.27, 3.30, 3.31, and 3.33. - GNU gcc and g++ versions 2.8.1, 2.95.X - Cygnus GNUpro v.98r2 Threads ------- Purify supports these threads packages: - DCE threads (either libdce or libcma). - HP-UX kernel threads. ================================================== Restrictions and Known Issues ============================= Licensing Troubleshooting ------------------------- - When Purify is properly installed, a .lm_license_file file is created in the product home directory to allow Purify to locate your licenses even when LM_LICENSE_FILE is not set appropriately in the user's environment. If you get a message such as: Error: Unable to open /product_home/.lm_license_file. Your installation is incomplete. Did you run rs_install? ... Check your product home directory to see if .lm_license_file exists and is readable by you. If the file does not exist, your installation is incomplete. You may need to re-run rs_install or license_setup. If the permissions are incorrect, change them so that the file is readable by all expected users of Purify. - If you manually change the location of your licenses (e.g. without using license_setup), the .lm_license_file will not be updated and you will not be able to checkout a license unless you set the env var LM_LICENSE_FILE to point to the new location. You should always use license_setup to make changes to your licenses. - Be sure you install the products that correspond to your license(s). Do not install PurifyPlus unless you have a PurifyPlus license. To check your license, locate the "INCREMENT" line(s) in your license file (*.dat) or license update file (*.upd). The license feature name is the first word on the line after "INCREMENT". For example: INCREMENT PurifyPlusUNIX rational 5.0 10-jan-2001 1 1234556789012 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ If you do not see "PurifyPlusUNIX" on the increment line, you do not have a PurifyPlus license and should not install PurifyPlus. HTML Help --------- As of version 2001a.04.00, the online help has been replaced by a more robust HTML based help system. The new online help incorporates all the information from the product user manual. The following restrictions and notes apply to using the HTML help system: - The only supported browser for the HTML based help system is Netscape Navigator, versions 4.7.x. The HTML based help system does not work with pre 4.7 versions or with 6.x versions. - You may view the help in stand-alone mode by pointing your browser to the following: product_home/UI/html/punix.htm (Where "product_home" is the installation location of Purify. e.g. the result of the -printhomedir option.) - Netscape must be on your path when you run your instrumented program. Your path is used to locate the browser. - The first time you request help from a viewer, a new netscape session will be started, even if you already have netscape running. This session will be re-used by subsequent help requests unless you re-use the launched browser for another purpose. If you close the browser, a new browser will be launched upon the next help request. - The new help system uses Javascript. On some platforms, the MOZILLA_HOME environment variable must be set in order for Javascript based web pages to work properly. If you experience Java related problems with the help: Make sure your netscape installation directory is on your path and that MOZILLA_HOME is either not set at all (we will set it for you) or is set to the same installation directory. If MOZILLA_HOME is set but does not point to the same netscape installation as the netscape on your path, the help may not work correctly. If MOZILLA_HOME is not set at all, Purify will attempt to set it when we start netscape. But we will be unable to set it correctly if the netscape found on your path does not resolve to an actual installation directory. For example, if netscape actually references a wrapper script in /usr/local/bin. In this case, you will need to set MOZILLA_HOME explicitly. See the Netscape release notes for more information on MOZILLA_HOME. - Use the Help->Help Topics menu item to access the top level of the help system. - Context sensitive help is available on leaf menu items and on buttons ONLY. For information about a window, use the Help->On Window menu item. - PDF versions of the Purify Quick Reference card is available in the doc/pdf section of your installation, if you have installed PDF documentation. Otherwise, see the corresponding area of your installation CD. 64-bit Development ---------------------------- - Purify supports both 32-bit and 64-bit application development, and will select the correct mode of operation automatically based on inputs. The product banner will report the mode of operation during instrumentation and at runtime. However, the "-version" option will always report 32-bit mode; the product version is the same for both modes. - Starting in version 2002a.06.00, the product home directory has been reorganized to support both 32 and 64-bit development. This organization should be transparent for all 32-bit users and most 64-bit users. However, the location of the Purify stubs library is different for 64-bit applications: 32-bit libraries have been moved to the lib32 sub-directory: purifyhome/lib32/purify_stubs.a purifyhome/lib32/libpurify_stubs.a To preserve backward compatibility, the following links are provided in purifyhome: purifyhome/purify_stubs.a purifyhome/libpurify_stubs.a 32-bit API users are encouraged to use the libraries from the lib32 sub-directory, and not from purifyhome. 64-bit API users must link against the equivalent library in the lib64 sub-directory: purifyhome/lib64/purify_stubs.a purifyhome/lib64/libpurify_stubs.a The API header file has not moved and is shared for both development modes. General ------- - Purify does not display line numbers for error messages accurately if the code is compiled with both debug and optimization flags. - If Purify is run in "/tmp" or "/usr/tmp" or "/var/tmp" the generated instrumented *.o files are deleted in these directories. So please do not use commands like : Purify cc -nolink ld file.o in "/tmp" or "/usr/tmp" or "/var/tmp" . However there is a work-around for this , You can use the option "-save-tmp-files" to tell Purify not to delete the generated objects. So using: Purify -save-tmp-files cc -nolink ld file.o will generate the instrumented file_pure_*.o in "/tmp" or "/usr/tmp" or "/var/tmp". Otherwise you can use -always-use-cache-dir so that the generated file_pure*.o is generated in cache-dir where it is not deleted (Note: if cache-directory is installed in "/tmp","/usr/tmp","/var/tmp" the generated *_pure_*.o in cache are not deleted , so you can have the cache-directory safely in "/tmp","/usr/tmp","/var/tmp") - Purify may not work properly with applications that use Java 1.2 libraries. For details, please search the solutions knowledge base at: http://eservice.rational.com/solutions Or contact Rational Technical Support. - Archive libraries containing both 32-bit and 64-bit libraries are not supported. All components of a link must be of the same ELF type. - gcc/g++ 2.8.1 is supported, but there are known problems with C++ shared libraries containing gcc/g++ produced objects files containing exception handling code. - If you are running your application on a different machine from the one on which it was built, please ensure that both the machines have the same operating system. Further, the system libraries on the two machines should be identical. Otherwise, Purify might generate a warning message. For more details on how to build and run on different machines, please please see solution #5829 at: http://eservice.rational.com/solutions Or contact Rational Technical Support and reference Solution #5829. - The SPARCWorks incremental linker, ild, is automatically disabled by Purify due to an incompatibility with file naming conventions. - Purify does not have SDK / XDK support, a feature available with the HPUX Compiler Tool chain from the AR1201 release. - Purify does not support filtered libraries. - Instrumented programs now always use immediate binding for the initial load of shared libraries and for any dynamic loads using shl_load(). This change was made due to a problem in HP dld patches from June 1998 for HP-UX 11.00 and August 1998 for HP-UX 10.20, which caused the instrumented application to hang after a call to shl_load(). One known instance of this problem occurs when you use getservbyname() because it loads network protocols using shl_load(). Linker and dld patches available after 3/99 don't have this problem. If the user has an earlier patch, an upgrade is strongly recommended. - Purify will not run on short (14-character) file systems. - Operating system revisions below 10.20 are no longer supported. - The PA-RISC 1.0 CPU is no longer supported. - Profile Based Optimization is not supported. - Applications which link to over 50 large dynamic libraries may experience reduced startup times by setting the runtime option -lazy-dld-maps=1. - For 32-bit applications Purify does not support shared libraries built with +init/+fini linker options. Using LD_PRELOAD ------------------------------- - For 64-bit applications, use of environment variable LD_PRELOAD is supported only with instrumented shared libraries. If any of of the libraries in the LD_PRELOAD environment variable are not instrumented, the application may crash. - For 64-bit applications running on HP-UX 11.00 or later systems with a version of dld which does not support LD_PRELOAD, the instrumented application will give an error message and quit, if the environment variable LD_PRELOAD is set and contains any uninstrumented shared libraries. In this case, unsetting the environment variable LD_PRELOAD will cause the application to execute normally. - For 32-bit applications running on HP-UX 11.00 or later systems with a version of dld which does not support LD_PRELOAD, the instrumented application will check the environment variable LD_PRELOAD and instrument any uninstrumented libraries given in the LD_PRELOAD value. This instrumentation is harmless and does not affect the functionality of the program in anyway. To prevent this unnecessary instrumentation, users should unset the environment variable LD_PRELOAD before running the application. - Invoking the viewer with "purify -view" or "purify -version" when LD_PRELOAD is set may sometimes cause the viewer to crash. This can be overcome by unsetting LD_PRELOAD and then invoking Purify. - For 32-bit applications using LD_PRELOAD environment variable, a Zero Page Read error may appear in some of the cases when dld is unable to find a shared library specified in LD_PRELOAD. This error can be ignored. To prevent this error from occurring, users can verify that all the libraries used in LD_PRELOAD environment variable are accessible to the dynamic loader program. One simple way to ensure that the file is accessible is, to specify the absolute pathname of the shared library in the LD_PRELOAD value. Using 32-bit vs 64-bit Purify ------------------------------- Purify supports both 32- and 64-bit development. "Wide" mode, or 64-bit applications are those compiled with the +DA2.0W option - apps using 64-bit pointers. "Narrow" mode applications are traditional 32-bit programs. Both are installed on the same file system, but the 64-bit version can only be used on 64-bit HP-UX 11.x systems. From version 2002a, the 32-bit and 64-bit products are in one install directory, so there is no need to put both install directories in your path, or link install directories. Purify will auto-select the correct wide or narrow mode version. If you attempt to use the 64-bit Purify using -ptr64 on a non 11.x systems, execution will fail. It only runs on HP-UX 11.x and later. - Restrictions on the HP-UX 11.00-wide (64-bit) version of Purify: - Static data checking is not supported. - Using Purify with old versions of the HP-UX linker may cause the install test to fail with an error from the linker saying the "+nodynhash" option is not recognized. You should obtain a newer linker from HP. This option is support by 64-bit linkers from 07-Jan-1999 and later. You may also workaround this problem by include the following in your PUREOPTIONS environment variable: -force-no-dynhash=no The default setting of this option (to "yes") is used to workaround an HP bug in newer linkers. - Shared-library "fini" sections (static destructors) do not run. - shl_unload and dlclose are not implemented. When a program attempts to unload a shared library, the call will appear to succeed, but the library will not actually be closed or unloaded. Also, C++ "static destructors" are not run for the library. - There is a bug in strlen in the 64-bit libc which causes the example program "hello.c" to get numerous UMR's instead of only one, as you might expect. - The open-file summary does not include the file position for 64-bit programs. - A breakpoint at purify_stop_here does not show a proper stack traceback. - Errors involving large amounts of memory do not report properly. For instance, an FMR when copying a 17MB freed memory block would report as a 1MB FMR. - When you want to set a breakpoint on purify_stop_here using HP's wdb (or gdb) debugger, use this command: b *purify_stop_here When you stop at purify_stop_here in the debugger, the debugger's stack trace will not be correct: You won't see the stack trace for you program, only for Purify's runtime libraries. The easiest way to get around this is to set a temporary breakpoint at the address which is in register r15 using this wdb command: tb *$r15 Then, you can use the "continue" command to stop in your program at the instruction that caused the Purify error report. - When a Japanese locale is specified using the LANG environment variable, instrumentation of archive libraries may fail with the message: Error: Child process exited with status = 1. This is caused by an 'ar' failure in this locale. A workaround is to unsetenv LANG before instrumenting. User Interface -------------- - If a large number of items are selected, "Expand all" followed by "Collapse all" can crash some unpatched versions of the OpenWindows 3.0 server. This occurs if you are displaying on a SUN workstation. - If you expand or collapse messages while the "Continue" or "Reset" buttons are displayed, the buttons may subsequently be incorrectly positioned. - The "Edit" and "Coverage" toolbar items may be slow to respond. - If EDITOR is set to vuepad (/usr/vue/bin/vuepad), the edit button will be unable to position the editor window to the correct line. This is a vuepad limitation. The workaround is to use a more capable editor. - The Purify GUI menus and buttons become inaccessible if either the NumLock or ScrollLock key is activated. The workaround is to switch them off, or add the following line(s) to your $HOME/.Xdefaults file. ! Ignore the NumLock and ScrollLock keys on ! mouse buttons Purify*ignoreModifierMask: Mod3|Mod2 This second workaround will take effect for a new Purify viewer after you restart your X-session or run a command like 'xrdb -merge $HOME/.Xdefaults'. Compilers --------- - The GNU gcc extensions are not tested against Purify. Most gcc extensions will probably work fine. Known limitations at present include problems with nested functions (e.g.: making a pointer to a nested function and attempting to call through it will not work). - C revisions 9.61 through 9.65 - These compilers generate incorrect debugging information for some functions. Programs compiled using these compilers may not be debuggable after translation. In this case Purify may produce a message beginning "Failure relocating..." HP patch PHSS_4923 corrects this problem. - Exception handling g++ 2.7.2 exceptions are not supported. - Aggressive Loading - Some compilers load data from memory but ignore the data that has been read. Purify will signal a UMR if the loaded data is uninitialized. In some sense this is a false error report because the uninitialized data can not affect your program. Purify'ing X Applications ------------------------- - When running a Purify'd X application, there is a potential for deadlock if your application causes Purify to generate a message while the application is holding the X lock, since Purify will be unable to generate the message, and the application is blocked until the message is delivered. To avoid this kind of problem, you should run your application on a different X server than the Purify UI or Purify stderr output, or you should use the -log-file= or -view-file= options to specify a file to capture messages for inspection after your application is finished. A convenient way to debug on two displays is to pre-start the Purify Viewer on one display ("slave"), and then start the application on the other display ("master"): % purify -display slave:0 -view a.out.X & % a.out.X -display master:0 The two commands must be executed on the same computer, but it could be the workstation associated with either display, or altogether another computer remote from both displays. The application will connect to the already started Purify Viewer, and messages will not conflict with the X display interactions of the application under test. Debuggers --------- - XDB & Softdebug - Use purifyhome/purify_xdb to invoke xdb on an instrumented program. - An instrumented program receives a signal 18 (death of child) during its initialization. Place "z 18 sir" in your ~/.xdbrc file to suppress this warning. Failure to suppress the warning will sometimes cause xdb to fail. - XDB, when debugging a program that uses shared libraries, reads the symbol table from /lib/dld.sl. However, Purify has changed your program to use an instrumented version of dld.sl. The symptom of this mismatch is the message: Wait...loading shared-library map tables. xdb panic: Mapped addresses for dld overlap text segment for dld There is a simple workaround for this problem and we've implemented it in the shell script purifyhome/purify_xdb. Whenever you use xdb on an instrumented program use this script to invoke xdb. - Typing ^C while running an instrumented program under xdb requires caution. There is a high probability that the interrupt will occur inside the code Purify has added to your application. If this is the case, you must single step or set a breakpoint and continue before you attempt to call any subroutines (the Purify API is an example). - The XDB single stepping command, 's' sometimes fails to find the next source line. When this happens, usually near a subroutine call, program execution continues until the next breakpoint. The 'S' command is always reliable. - DDE - Distributed Debugging Environment - The DDE debugger at release 2.10 has been used with instrumented programs. The shell script: purifyhome/purify_dde implements one of the workarounds. - Instrumented programs get a SIGCHLD signal at program initialization. One workaround is to just hit "go" when the program stops. The following commands added to a .dderc file also help: prop system -on alias `after_debug delete intercept signal SIGCHLD; \ prop system -off; \ breakpoint -in main -entry -exit; \ go - Attaching to a running process JIT debugging may fail to attach to your application if the executable resides on an NFS file system mounted without the "nointr" option. The HP Debugger reference manual says: "If you get a Permission denied error message when you attach to a running process, it is likely that you are running either the debugger or the target process over an NFS link and that the relevant file system is mounted with the default intr option. You must mount the file system with the nointr option to resolve this problem. Use a command like the following to mount the file system containing the debugger: mount -o nointr[,other_options] \ system:/opt/langtools /tools Use a command like the following to mount the file system containing the target process: mount -o nointr[,other_options] \ system:/test_area /test It is probably easier to create an auxiliary mount for the file system than to unmount and remount it." Old Style Fixups ---------------- Purify does not support a type of relocation information known as "old style fixups". These were generated by HP-UX system software before release 3.0. If Purify detects old style fixups the message: Object file has incompatible format (may be older than HP-UX 3.0) is generated. We have seen this problem with HP's libsql.a and some of Oracle's Oracle6 libraries. There is a simple workaround. Given a problem object module (or modules) the workaround is to have /bin/ld build a new object module. Suppose the old object modules are called `foo.o' and `bar.o'. Issuing the command: % ld -r -o new_foo.o foo.o % ld -r -o new_bar.o bar.o or % ld -r -o foo_and_bar.o foo.o bar.o would generate a new object module where the old style fixups have been removed. In the case of an archive file the following script will create a new archive given the full pathname of the original: #!/bin/sh # Remove old fixups from an archive. # Supply original .a name as first argument. cd /tmp lib=new_`basename $1` ar x $1 rm -f $lib for member in `ar t $1` ; do ld -r -o _$member $member ar q $lib _$member rm $member _$member done echo Created `pwd`/$lib Threads ------- - Call chains describing when memory was malloced or freed do not always include the thread id. - The Purify API functions purify_map_pool() and purify_map_pool_id() are not MT safe. - Customers using unsupported threads packages should contact Rational Software technical support (support@rational.com) to ensure compatibility. Unsupported Features -------------------- - SBR and SBW errors are not reported on HP-UX. Copyright Notice ---------------- The following copyright applies to portions of the ClearQuest integration and HTML based help system. Copyright 1996 Netscape Communications Corporation, all rights reserved. Created: Jamie Zawinski (jwz@netscape.com), 24-Dec-94. Permission to use, copy, modify, distribute, and sell this software and its documentation for any purpose is hereby granted without fee, provided that the above copyright notice appear in all copies and that both that copyright notice and this permission notice appear in supporting documentation. No representations are made about the suitability of this software for any purpose. It is provided "as is" without express or implied warranty.