You would use Massif for that (a valgrind tool). The manual link is easy enough to follow, but for future reference, here's how to use it, straight out of the manual:
valgrind --tool=massif prog
This will produce a file that you can analyze with ms_print
. The filename will be massif.out.<numbers>
. Just use ms_print
to get a nice output:
ms_print massif.out.12345
What you're looking for can be found in the end of the output of ms_print
. For this example program (the program they show in the manual):
#include <stdlib.h>
void g(void)
{
malloc(4000);
}
void f(void)
{
malloc(2000);
g();
}
int main(void)
{
int i;
int* a[10];
for (i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
a[i] = malloc(1000);
}
f();
g();
for (i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
free(a[i]);
}
return 0;
}
We can see who allocated what:
->79.81% (8,000B) 0x400589: g (in /home/filipe/dev/a.out)
| ->39.90% (4,000B) 0x40059E: f (in /home/filipe/dev/a.out)
| | ->39.90% (4,000B) 0x4005D7: main (in /home/filipe/dev/a.out)
| |
| ->39.90% (4,000B) 0x4005DC: main (in /home/filipe/dev/a.out)
|
->19.95% (2,000B) 0x400599: f (in /home/filipe/dev/a.out)
| ->19.95% (2,000B) 0x4005D7: main (in /home/filipe/dev/a.out)
|
->00.00% (0B) in 1+ places, all below ms_print's threshold (01.00%)
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