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  2. Segmentation fault - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Segmentation_fault

    Segmentation faults can also occur independently of page faults: illegal access to a valid page is a segmentation fault, but not an invalid page fault, and segmentation faults can occur in the middle of a page (hence no page fault), for example in a buffer overflow that stays within a page but illegally overwrites memory.

  3. GNU Debugger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Debugger

    The GNU Debugger (GDB) is a portable debugger that runs on many Unix-like systems and works for many programming languages, including Ada, Assembly, C, C++, D, Fortran, Haskell, Go, Objective-C, OpenCL C, Modula-2, Pascal, Rust, [2] and partially others.

  4. List of debuggers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_debuggers

    Allinea DDT - a graphical debugger supporting for parallel/multi-process and multithreaded applications, for C/C++ and F90. DDD is the standard front-end from the GNU Project. It is a complex tool that works with most common debuggers (GDB, jdb, Python debugger, Perl debugger, Tcl, and others) natively or with some external programs (for PHP).

  5. Bus error - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bus_error

    The GDB debugger shows that the immediate value 0x2a is being stored at the location stored in the EAX register, using X86 assembly language. This is an example of register indirect addressing. Printing the low order bits of the address shows that it is not aligned to a word boundary ("dword" using x86 terminology).

  6. C signal handling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C_signal_handling

    In the C Standard Library, signal processing defines how a program handles various signals while it executes. A signal can report some exceptional behavior within the program (such as division by zero), or a signal can report some asynchronous event outside the program (such as someone striking an interactive attention key on a keyboard).

  7. Valgrind - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valgrind

    Valgrind (/ ˈ v æ l ɡ r ɪ n d /) [6] is a programming tool for memory debugging, memory leak detection, and profiling.. Valgrind was originally designed to be a freely licensed memory debugging tool for Linux on x86, but has since evolved to become a generic framework for creating dynamic analysis tools such as checkers and profilers.

  8. Memory debugger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memory_debugger

    A memory debugger is a debugger for finding software memory problems such as memory leaks and buffer overflows. These are due to bugs related to the allocation and deallocation of dynamic memory . Programs written in languages that have garbage collection , such as managed code , might also need memory debuggers, e.g. for memory leaks due to ...

  9. Algorithmic program debugging - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Algorithmic_program_debugging

    Algorithmic debugging (also called declarative debugging) is a debugging technique that compares the results of sub-computations with what the programmer intended. The technique constructs an internal representation of all computations and sub-computations performed during the execution of a buggy program and then asks the programmer about the correctness of such computations.