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- .TH MALLOC 2
- .SH NAME
- malloc, mallocalign, mallocz, free, realloc, calloc, msize, setmalloctag, setrealloctag, getmalloctag, getrealloctag, malloctopoolblock \- memory allocator
- .SH SYNOPSIS
- .B #include <u.h>
- .br
- .B #include <libc.h>
- .PP
- .ta \w'\fLvoid* 'u
- .B
- void* malloc(ulong size)
- .PP
- .B
- void* mallocalign(ulong size, ulong align, long offset, ulong span)
- .PP
- .B
- void* mallocz(ulong size, int clr)
- .PP
- .B
- void free(void *ptr)
- .PP
- .B
- void* realloc(void *ptr, ulong size)
- .PP
- .B
- void* calloc(ulong nelem, ulong elsize)
- .PP
- .B
- ulong msize(void *ptr)
- .PP
- .B
- void setmalloctag(void *ptr, ulong tag)
- .PP
- .B
- ulong getmalloctag(void *ptr)
- .PP
- .B
- void setrealloctag(void *ptr, ulong tag)
- .PP
- .B
- ulong getrealloctag(void *ptr)
- .PP
- .B
- void* malloctopoolblock(void*)
- .PP
- .SH DESCRIPTION
- .I Malloc
- and
- .I free
- provide a simple memory allocation package.
- .I Malloc
- returns a pointer to a new block of at least
- .I size
- bytes.
- The block is suitably aligned for storage of any type of object.
- No two active pointers from
- .I malloc
- will have the same value.
- The call
- .B malloc(0)
- returns a valid pointer rather than null.
- .PP
- The argument to
- .I free
- is a pointer to a block previously allocated by
- .IR malloc ;
- this space is made available for further allocation.
- It is legal to free a null pointer; the effect is a no-op.
- The contents of the space returned by
- .I malloc
- are undefined.
- .I Mallocz
- behaves as
- .IR malloc ,
- except that if
- .I clr
- is non-zero, the memory returned will be zeroed.
- .PP
- .I Mallocalign
- allocates a block of at least
- .I size
- bytes of memory respecting alignment contraints.
- If
- .I align
- is non-zero,
- the returned pointer is aligned to be equal to
- .I offset
- modulo
- .IR align .
- If
- .I span
- is non-zero,
- the
- .IR size -byte
- block allocated will not span a
- .IR span -byte
- boundary.
- .PP
- .I Realloc
- changes the size of the block pointed to by
- .I ptr
- to
- .I size
- bytes and returns a pointer to the (possibly moved)
- block.
- The contents will be unchanged up to the
- lesser of the new and old sizes.
- .I Realloc
- takes on special meanings when one or both arguments are zero:
- .TF "\fLrealloc(0, sz)
- .PD
- .TP
- .B "realloc(0, sz)
- means
- .LR malloc(sz) ;
- returns a pointer to the newly-allocated memory
- .TP
- .B "realloc(ptr, 0)
- means
- .LR free(ptr) ;
- returns null
- .TP
- .B "realloc(0, 0)
- no-op; returns null
- .PD
- .PP
- .I Calloc
- allocates space for
- an array of
- .I nelem
- elements of size
- .IR elsize .
- The space is initialized to zeros.
- .I Free
- frees such a block.
- .PP
- When a block is allocated, sometimes there is some extra unused space at the end.
- .I Msize
- grows the block to encompass this unused space and returns the new number
- of bytes that may be used.
- .PP
- The memory allocator maintains two word-sized fields
- associated with each block, the ``malloc tag'' and the ``realloc tag''.
- By convention, the malloc tag is the PC that allocated the block,
- and the realloc tag the PC that last reallocated the block.
- These may be set or examined with
- .IR setmalloctag ,
- .IR getmalloctag ,
- .IR setrealloctag ,
- and
- .IR getrealloctag .
- When allocating blocks directly with
- .I malloc
- and
- .IR realloc ,
- these tags will be set properly.
- If a custom allocator wrapper is used,
- the allocator wrapper can set the tags
- itself (usually by passing the result of
- .IR getcallerpc (2)
- to
- .IR setmalloctag )
- to provide more useful information about
- the source of allocation.
- .PP
- .I Malloctopoolblock
- takes the address of a block returned by
- .I malloc
- and returns the address of the corresponding
- block allocated by the
- .IR pool (2)
- routines.
- .SH SOURCE
- .B /sys/src/libc/port/malloc.c
- .SH SEE ALSO
- .IR leak (1),
- .I trump
- (in
- .IR acid (1)),
- .IR brk (2),
- .IR getcallerpc (2),
- .IR pool (2)
- .SH DIAGNOSTICS
- .I Malloc, realloc
- and
- .I calloc
- return 0 if there is no available memory.
- .I Errstr
- is likely to be set.
- If the allocated blocks have no malloc or realloc tags,
- .I getmalloctag
- and
- .I getrealloctag
- return
- .BR ~0 .
- .PP
- After including
- .BR pool.h ,
- the call
- .B poolcheck(mainmem)
- can be used to scan the storage arena for inconsistencies
- such as data written beyond the bounds of allocated blocks.
- It is often useful to combine this with with setting
- .EX
- mainmem->flags |= POOL_NOREUSE;
- .EE
- at the beginning of your program.
- This will cause malloc not to reallocate blocks even
- once they are freed;
- .B poolcheck(mainmem)
- will then detect writes to freed blocks.
- .PP
- The
- .I trump
- library for
- .I acid
- can be used to obtain traces of malloc execution; see
- .IR acid (1).
- .SH BUGS
- The different specification of
- .I calloc
- is bizarre.
- .PP
- User errors can corrupt the storage arena.
- The most common gaffes are (1) freeing an already freed block,
- (2) storing beyond the bounds of an allocated block, and (3)
- freeing data that was not obtained from the allocator.
- When
- .I malloc
- and
- .I free
- detect such corruption, they abort.
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