crabgrind
Valgrind Client Request interface for Rust programs
Summary
crabgrind is a small library that enables Rust programs to tap into
Valgrind's tools and environment.
It exposes full set of Valgrind's client requests in Rust, manages the structure, type conversions and enforces static typing where possible.
Usage
Minimum Supported Rust Version: 1.64
First, add crabgrind to Cargo.toml
[]
= "0.2"
Note: This crate is
no_std, dependency free and doesn't needalloc
Build Configuration
We need to build against local Valgrind installation to read C macro
definition, constants, and supported requests.
The build script (build.rs) attempts to locate headers in this order:
- Environment Variable: If
VALGRIND_INCLUDEis set, it is used as the include path. - pkg-config: The system is queried via
pkg-config. - Standard Paths: Using standard include paths.
If headers cannot be located, the crate compiles using dummy headers; any
request will [panic!] at runtime.
Example
Use some of the Client Requests:
use ;
And run under Valgrind
Implementation
Valgrind's client request mechanism is a C implementation
detail, exposed strictly via C macros. Since Rust does not support C
preprocessor, these macros cannot be used directly.
crabgrind wraps the foundational VALGRIND_DO_CLIENT_REQUEST macro via FFI
binding. All higher-level client requests are implemented in Rust on top of this
binding.
The overhead per request, compared to using C macros directly is strictly the
cost of a single function call.
The implementation is independent of any specific Valgrind version. Instead, mismatches between requests and local Valgrind instance are handled at compile-time in a zero-cost way for supported requests.
Features
If you need your builds to be free of Valgrind artifacts, enable the opt-out
feature. This turns every request into no-op.
= { = "0.2", = ["opt-out"] }
Runtime Safety
We are coupled to the Valgrind version present during compilation.
If a request is invoked at runtime that is unsupported by the active Valgrind instance (e.g. running under an older Valgrind), the call panics immediately, showing the version mismatch message and request requirements.
License
crabgrind is distributed under MIT license.
Valgrind itself is a GPL2, however valgrind/*.h headers are distributed
under a BSD-style license, so we can use them without worrying about license
conflicts.