You could identify the exit point of malloc and put a conditional breakpoint there. Such as:
(gdb) tbreak main
Breakpoint 1 at 0x4005c4: file t.c, line 13.
(gdb) r
Starting program: /var/tmp/a.out
main () at t.c:13
13 foo = malloc (64);
(gdb) br *__libc_malloc+211 if $rax==0
Breakpoint 2 at 0x7f26d143ea93
(gdb) n
14 foo = malloc (GIGABYTE*64);
(gdb) p foo
$1 = (void *) 0x21dc010
(gdb) n
Breakpoint 2, 0x00007f26d143ea93 in malloc () from /lib/libc.so.6
Note, I have added a malloc call that succeeds first, to illustrate that the breakpoint only triggers for a NULL return value. The breakpoint address may vary with libc versions, I found it by stepping through malloc with nexti until I hit the ret instruction.
mallocand the resulting value offoo). – NPE Dec 21 '10 at 13:12malloc(), then use a command list to first exitmalloc()and then conditionally continue if$eax != 0? – Georg Fritzsche Dec 21 '10 at 13:55