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AddressSanitizer (ASan) for the Linux Workload in Visual Studio 2019

 4 years ago
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Erika

May 8th, 2019

In Visual Studio 2019 version 16.1 Preview 3 we have integrated AddressSanitizer (ASan) into Visual Studio for Linux projects. ASan is a runtime memory error detector for C/C++ that catches the following errors:

  • Use after free (dangling pointer reference)
  • Heap buffer overflow
  • Stack buffer overflow
  • Use after return
  • Use after scope
  • Initialization order bugs

You can enable ASan for MSBuild-based Linux projects andCMake projects that target aremote Linux system or WSL (Windows Subsystem for Linux) . If you are just getting started with cross-platform development, I recommend following this walk-through to get started with Visual Studio’s native support for WSL .

ASan detects errors that are encountered during program execution and stops execution on the first detected error. When you run a program that has ASan enabled under the debugger, you will see the following error message (detailing the type of error and location) at the line where the error occurred:

JjIVFbr.png!web

You can also view the full ASan output (including where the corrupted memory was allocated/deallocated) in the Debug pane of the output window.

Getting started with ASan in Visual Studio

In order to use ASan in Visual Studio, you need to install the debug symbols for ASan (libasan-dbg) on your remote Linux machine or WSL installation. The version of libasan-dbg that you load depends on the version of GCC you have installed on your Linux machine:

ASan version GCC version libasan0 gcc-4.8 libasan2 gcc-5 libasan3 gcc-6 libasan4 gcc-7 libasan5 gcc-8

You can determine the version of GCC you have on your Linux machine or WSL installation with the following command:

gcc --version

You can also view the version of libasan-dbg you will need by looking at the Debug pane of the output window. The version of ASan that is loaded corresponds to the version of libasan-dbg you will need on your Linux machine. You can search for the following line (ctrl + F) in the Debug pane of the output window:

Loaded '/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libasan.so.4'. Symbols loaded.

In this example, my Linux machine (Ubuntu 18.04) is using libasan4.

You can install the ASan debug bits on Linux distros that use apt with the following command (this command installs version 4):

sudo apt-get install libasan4-dbg

If you have enabled ASan in Visual Studio, then we will prompt you to install the debug symbols for ASan at the top of the Debug pane of the output window.

Enable ASan for MSBuild-based Linux projects

You can enable ASan for MSBuild-based Linux projects in the project’s Property Pages. Right-click on the project in the Solution Explorer and select “Properties” to open the project’s Property Pages, then navigate to Configuration Properties > C/C++ > Sanitizers. ASan is enabled via compiler and linker flags and requires recompilation in order to work.

AFFzqiv.png!web

You can also pass optional ASan runtime flags by navigating to Configuration Properties > Debugging > AddressSanitizer Runtime Flags.

Enable ASan for Visual Studio CMake projects

You can enable ASan for CMake configurations targeting a remote Linux machine or WSL in the CMake Settings Editor . In the “General” section of the editor you will see the following two properties to enable ASan and pass optional runtime flags: nQBVNzi.png!web

Again, ASan is enabled via compiler and linker flags and requires recompilation in order to work.

Give us your feedback!

If you have feedback on ASan for the Linux Workload or anything regarding our Linux support in Visual Studio, we would love to hear from you. We can be reached via the comments below or via email ( [email protected] ). If you encounter other problems with Visual Studio or MSVC or have a suggestion, you can use the Report a Problem tool in Visual Studio or head over to  Visual Studio Developer Community . You can also find us on Twitter ( @VisualC ) and ( @erikasweet_ ).


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