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malloc-2.8.1.c
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/*
This is a version (aka dlmalloc) of malloc/free/realloc written by
Doug Lea and released to the public domain, as explained at
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/publicdomain. Send questions,
comments, complaints, performance data, etc to [email protected]
* Version 2.8.1 Wed Jun 8 16:11:46 2005 Doug Lea (dl at gee)
Note: There may be an updated version of this malloc obtainable at
ftp://gee.cs.oswego.edu/pub/misc/malloc.c
Check before installing!
* Quickstart
This library is all in one file to simplify the most common usage:
ftp it, compile it (-O3), and link it into another program. All of
the compile-time options default to reasonable values for use on
most platforms. You might later want to step through various
compile-time and dynamic tuning options.
For convenience, an include file for code using this malloc is at:
ftp://gee.cs.oswego.edu/pub/misc/malloc-2.8.0.h
You don't really need this .h file unless you call functions not
defined in your system include files. The .h file contains only the
excerpts from this file needed for using this malloc on ANSI C/C++
systems, so long as you haven't changed compile-time options about
naming and tuning parameters. If you do, then you can create your
own malloc.h that does include all settings by cutting at the point
indicated below. Note that you may already by default be using a C
library containing a malloc that is based on some version of this
malloc (for example in linux). You might still want to use the one
in this file to customize settings or to avoid overheads associated
with library versions.
* Vital statistics:
Supported pointer/size_t representation: 4 or 8 bytes
size_t MUST be an unsigned type of the same width as
pointers. (If you are using an ancient system that declares
size_t as a signed type, or need it to be a different width
than pointers, you can use a previous release of this malloc
(e.g. 2.7.2) supporting these.)
Alignment: 8 bytes (default)
This suffices for nearly all current machines and C compilers.
However, you can define MALLOC_ALIGNMENT to be wider than this
if necessary (up to 128bytes), at the expense of using more space.
Minimum overhead per allocated chunk: 4 or 8 bytes (if 4byte sizes)
8 or 16 bytes (if 8byte sizes)
Each malloced chunk has a hidden word of overhead holding size
and status information, and additional cross-check word
if FOOTERS is defined.
Minimum allocated size: 4-byte ptrs: 16 bytes (including overhead)
8-byte ptrs: 32 bytes (including overhead)
Even a request for zero bytes (i.e., malloc(0)) returns a
pointer to something of the minimum allocatable size.
The maximum overhead wastage (i.e., number of extra bytes
allocated than were requested in malloc) is less than or equal
to the minimum size, except for requests >= mmap_threshold that
are serviced via mmap(), where the worst case wastage is about
32 bytes plus the remainder from a system page (the minimal
mmap unit); typically 4096 or 8192 bytes.
Security: static-safe; optionally more or less
The "security" of malloc refers to the ability of malicious
code to accentuate the effects of errors (for example, freeing
space that is not currently malloc'ed or overwriting past the
ends of chunks) in code that calls malloc. This malloc
guarantees not to modify any memory locations below the base of
heap, i.e., static variables, even in the presence of usage
errors. The routines additionally detect most improper frees
and reallocs. All this holds as long as the static bookkeeping
for malloc itself is not corrupted by some other means. This
is only one aspect of security -- these checks do not, and
cannot, detect all possible programming errors.
If FOOTERS is defined nonzero, then each allocated chunk
carries an additional check word to verify that it was malloced
from its space. These check words are the same within each
execution of a program using malloc, but differ across
executions, so externally crafted fake chunks cannot be
freed. This improves security by rejecting frees/reallocs that
could corrupt heap memory, in addition to the checks preventing
writes to statics that are always on. This may further improve
security at the expense of time and space overhead. (Note that
FOOTERS may also be worth using with MSPACES.)
By default detected errors cause the program to abort (calling
"abort()"). You can override this to instead proceed past
errors by defining PROCEED_ON_ERROR. In this case, a bad free
has no effect, and a malloc that encounters a bad address
caused by user overwrites will ignore the bad address by
dropping pointers and indices to all known memory. This may
be appropriate for programs that should continue if at all
possible in the face of programming errors, although they may
run out of memory because dropped memory is never reclaimed.
If you don't like either of these options, you can define
CORRUPTION_ERROR_ACTION and USAGE_ERROR_ACTION to do anything
else. And if if you are sure that your program using malloc has
no errors or vulnerabilities, you can define INSECURE to 1,
which might (or might not) provide a small performance improvement.
Thread-safety: NOT thread-safe unless USE_LOCKS defined
When USE_LOCKS is defined, each public call to malloc, free,
etc is surrounded with either a pthread mutex or a win32
spinlock (depending on WIN32). This is not especially fast, and
can be a major bottleneck. It is designed only to provide
minimal protection in concurrent environments, and to provide a
basis for extensions. If you are using malloc in a concurrent
program, consider instead using ptmalloc, which is derived from
a version of this malloc. (See http://www.malloc.de).
System requirements: Any combination of MORECORE and/or MMAP/MUNMAP
This malloc can use unix sbrk or any emulation (invoked using
the CALL_MORECORE macro) and/or mmap/munmap or any emulation
(invoked using CALL_MMAP/CALL_MUNMAP) to get and release system
memory. On most unix systems, it tends to work best if both
MORECORE and MMAP are enabled. On Win32, it uses emulations
based on VirtualAlloc. It also uses common C library functions
like memset.
Compliance: I believe it is compliant with the Single Unix Specification
(See http://www.unix.org). Also SVID/XPG, ANSI C, and probably
others as well.
* Overview of algorithms
This is not the fastest, most space-conserving, most portable, or
most tunable malloc ever written. However it is among the fastest
while also being among the most space-conserving, portable and
tunable. Consistent balance across these factors results in a good
general-purpose allocator for malloc-intensive programs.
In most ways, this malloc is a best-fit allocator. Generally, it
chooses the best-fitting existing chunk for a request, with ties
broken in approximately least-recently-used order. (This strategy
normally maintains low fragmentation.) However, for requests less
than 256bytes, it deviates from best-fit when there is not an
exactly fitting available chunk by preferring to use space adjacent
to that used for the previous small request, as well as by breaking
ties in approximately most-recently-used order. (These enhance
locality of series of small allocations.) And for very large requests
(>= 256Kb by default), it relies on system memory mapping
facilities, if supported. (This helps avoid carrying around and
possibly fragmenting memory used only for large chunks.)
All operations (except malloc_stats and mallinfo) have execution
times that are bounded by a constant factor of the number of bits in
a size_t, not counting any clearing in calloc or copying in realloc,
or actions surrounding MORECORE and MMAP that have times
proportional to the number of non-contiguous regions returned by
system allocation routines, which is often just 1.
The implementation is not very modular and seriously overuses
macros. Perhaps someday all C compilers will do as good a job
inlining modular code as can now be done by brute-force expansion,
but now, enough of them seem not to.
Some compilers issue a lot of warnings about code that is
dead/unreachable only on some platforms, and also about intentional
uses of negation on unsigned types. All known cases of each can be
ignored.
For a longer but out of date high-level description, see
http://gee.cs.oswego.edu/dl/html/malloc.html
* MSPACES
If MSPACES is defined, then in addition to malloc, free, etc.,
this file also defines mspace_malloc, mspace_free, etc. These
are versions of malloc routines that take an "mspace" argument
obtained using create_mspace, to control all internal bookkeeping.
If ONLY_MSPACES is defined, only these versions are compiled.
So if you would like to use this allocator for only some allocations,
and your system malloc for others, you can compile with
ONLY_MSPACES and then do something like...
static mspace mymspace = create_mspace(0,0); // for example
#define mymalloc(bytes) mspace_malloc(mymspace, bytes)
(Note: If you only need one instance of an mspace, you can instead
use "USE_DL_PREFIX" to relabel the global malloc.)
You can similarly create thread-local allocators by storing
mspaces as thread-locals. For example:
static __thread mspace tlms = 0;
void* tlmalloc(size_t bytes) {
if (tlms == 0) tlms = create_mspace(0, 0);
return mspace_malloc(tlms, bytes);
}
void tlfree(void* mem) { mspace_free(tlms, mem); }
Unless FOOTERS is defined, each mspace is completely independent.
You cannot allocate from one and free to another (although
conformance is only weakly checked, so usage errors are not always
caught). If FOOTERS is defined, then each chunk carries around a tag
indicating its originating mspace, and frees are directed to their
originating spaces.
------------------------- Compile-time options ---------------------------
WIN32 default: defined if _WIN32 defined
Defining WIN32 sets up defaults for MS environment and compilers.
Otherwise defaults are for unix.
MALLOC_ALIGNMENT default: 8
Controls the minimum alignment for malloc'ed chunks. It must be a
power of two and at least 8, even on machines for which smaller
alignments would suffice. It may be defined as larger than this
though. Note however that code and data structures are optimized for
the case of 8-byte alignment.
MSPACES default: 0 (false)
If true, compile in support for independent allocation spaces.
This is only supported if HAVE_MMAP is true.
ONLY_MSPACES default: 0 (false)
If true, only compile in mspace versions, not regular versions.
USE_LOCKS default: 0 (false)
Causes each call to each public routine to be surrounded with
pthread or WIN32 mutex lock/unlock. (If set true, this can be
overridden on a per-mspace basis for mspace versions.)
FOOTERS default: 0
If true, provide extra checking and dispatching by placing
information in the footers of allocated chunks. This adds
space and time overhead.
INSECURE default: 0
If true, omit checks for usage errors and heap space overwrites.
USE_DL_PREFIX default: NOT defined
Causes compiler to prefix all public routines with the string 'dl'.
This can be useful when you only want to use this malloc in one part
of a program, using your regular system malloc elsewhere.
ABORT default: defined as abort()
Defines how to abort on failed checks. On most systems, a failed
check cannot die with an "assert" or even print an informative
message, because the underlying print routines in turn call malloc,
which will fail again. Generally, the best policy is to simply call
abort(). It's not very useful to do more than this because many
errors due to overwriting will show up as address faults (null, odd
addresses etc) rather than malloc-triggered checks, so will also
abort. Also, most compilers know that abort() does not return, so
can better optimize code conditionally calling it.
PROCEED_ON_ERROR default: defined as 0 (false)
Controls whether detected bad addresses cause them to bypassed
rather than aborting. If set, detected bad arguments to free and
realloc are ignored. And all bookkeeping information is zeroed out
upon a detected overwrite of freed heap space, thus losing the
ability to ever return it from malloc again, but enabling the
application to proceed. If PROCEED_ON_ERROR is defined, the
static variable malloc_corruption_error_count is compiled in
and can be examined to see if errors have occurred. This option
generates slower code than the default abort policy.
DEBUG default: NOT defined
The DEBUG setting is mainly intended for people trying to modify
this code or diagnose problems when porting to new platforms.
However, it may also be able to better isolate user errors than just
using runtime checks. The assertions in the check routines spell
out in more detail the assumptions and invariants underlying the
algorithms. The checking is fairly extensive, and will slow down
execution noticeably. Calling malloc_stats or mallinfo with DEBUG
set will attempt to check every non-mmapped allocated and free chunk
in the course of computing the summaries.
ABORT_ON_ASSERT_FAILURE default: defined as 1 (true)
Debugging assertion failures can be nearly impossible if your
version of the assert macro causes malloc to be called, which will
lead to a cascade of further failures, blowing the runtime stack.
ABORT_ON_ASSERT_FAILURE cause assertions failures to call abort(),
which will usually make debugging easier.
MALLOC_FAILURE_ACTION default: sets errno to ENOMEM, or no-op on win32
The action to take before "return 0" when malloc fails to be able to
return memory because there is none available.
HAVE_MORECORE default: 1 (true) unless win32 or ONLY_MSPACES
True if this system supports sbrk or an emulation of it.
MORECORE default: sbrk
The name of the sbrk-style system routine to call to obtain more
memory. See below for guidance on writing custom MORECORE
functions. The type of the argument to sbrk/MORECORE varies across
systems. It cannot be size_t, because it supports negative
arguments, so it is normally the signed type of the same width as
size_t (sometimes declared as "intptr_t"). It doesn't much matter
though. Internally, we only call if with arguments less than half
the max value of a size_t, which should work across all reasonable
possibilities, although sometimes generating compiler warnings. See
near the end of this file for guidelines for creating a custom
version of MORECORE.
MORECORE_CONTIGUOUS default: 1 (true)
If true, take advantage of fact that consecutive calls to MORECORE
with positive arguments always return contiguous increasing
addresses. This is true of unix sbrk. It does not hurt too much to
set it true anyway, since malloc copes with non-contiguities.
Setting it false when definitely non-contiguous saves time
and possibly wasted space it would take to discover this though.
MORECORE_CANNOT_TRIM default: NOT defined
True if MORECORE cannot release space back to the system when given
negative arguments. This is generally necessary only if you are
using a hand-crafted MORECORE function that cannot handle negative
arguments.
HAVE_MMAP default: 1 (true)
True if this system supports mmap or an emulation of it. If so, and
HAVE_MORECORE is not true, MMAP is used for all system
allocation. If set and HAVE_MORECORE is true as well, MMAP is
primarily used to directly allocate very large blocks. It is also
used as a backup strategy in cases where MORECORE fails to provide
space from system. Note: A single call to MUNMAP is assumed to be
able to unmap memory that may have be allocated using multiple calls
to MMAP, so long as they are adjacent.
HAVE_MREMAP default: 1 on linux, else 0
If true realloc() uses mremap() to re-allocate large blocks and
extend or shrink allocation spaces.
MMAP_CLEARS default: 1 on unix
True if mmap clears memory so calloc doesn't need to. This is true
for standard unix mmap using /dev/zero.
USE_BUILTIN_FFS default: 0 (i.e., not used)
Causes malloc to use the builtin ffs() function to compute indices.
Some compilers may recognize and intrinsify ffs to be faster than the
supplied C version. Also, the case of x86 using gcc is special-cased
to an asm instruction, so is already as fast as it can be, and so
this setting has no effect. (On most x86s, the asm version is only
slightly faster than the C version.)
malloc_getpagesize default: derive from system includes, or 4096.
The system page size. To the extent possible, this malloc manages
memory from the system in page-size units. This may be (and
usually is) a function rather than a constant. This is ignored
if WIN32, where page size is determined using getSystemInfo during
initialization.
USE_DEV_RANDOM default: 0 (i.e., not used)
Causes malloc to use /dev/random to initialize secure magic seed for
stamping footers. Otherwise, the current time is used.
NO_MALLINFO default: 0
If defined, don't compile "mallinfo". This can be a simple way
of dealing with mismatches between system declarations and
those in this file.
MALLINFO_FIELD_TYPE default: size_t
The type of the fields in the mallinfo struct. This was originally
defined as "int" in SVID etc, but is more usefully defined as
size_t. The value is used only if HAVE_USR_INCLUDE_MALLOC_H is not set
LACKS_UNISTD_H, LACKS_FCNTL_H, LACKS_SYS_PARAM_H, LACKS_SYS_MMAN_H
LACKS_STRINGS_H, LACKS_STRING_H, LACKS_SYS_TYPES_H, LACKS_ERRNO_H
LACKS_STDLIB_H default: NOT defined unless on WIN32
Define these if your system does not have these header files.
You might need to manually insert some of the declarations they provide.
DEFAULT_GRANULARITY default: page size if MORECORE_CONTIGUOUS,
system_info.dwAllocationGranularity in WIN32,
otherwise 64K.
Also settable using mallopt(M_GRANULARITY, x)
The unit for allocating and deallocating memory from the system. On
most systems with contiguous MORECORE, there is no reason to
make this more than a page. However, systems with MMAP tend to
either require or encourage larger granularities. You can increase
this value to prevent system allocation functions to be called so
often, especially if they are slow. The value must be at least one
page and must be a power of two. Setting to 0 causes initialization
to either page size or win32 region size. (Note: In previous
versions of malloc, the equivalent of this option was called
"TOP_PAD")
DEFAULT_TRIM_THRESHOLD default: 2MB
Also settable using mallopt(M_TRIM_THRESHOLD, x)
The maximum amount of unused top-most memory to keep before
releasing via malloc_trim in free(). Automatic trimming is mainly
useful in long-lived programs using contiguous MORECORE. Because
trimming via sbrk can be slow on some systems, and can sometimes be
wasteful (in cases where programs immediately afterward allocate
more large chunks) the value should be high enough so that your
overall system performance would improve by releasing this much
memory. As a rough guide, you might set to a value close to the
average size of a process (program) running on your system.
Releasing this much memory would allow such a process to run in
memory. Generally, it is worth tuning trim thresholds when a
program undergoes phases where several large chunks are allocated
and released in ways that can reuse each other's storage, perhaps
mixed with phases where there are no such chunks at all. The trim
value must be greater than page size to have any useful effect. To
disable trimming completely, you can set to -1U. Note that the trick
some people use of mallocing a huge space and then freeing it at
program startup, in an attempt to reserve system memory, doesn't
have the intended effect under automatic trimming, since that memory
will immediately be returned to the system.
DEFAULT_MMAP_THRESHOLD default: 256K
Also settable using mallopt(M_MMAP_THRESHOLD, x)
The request size threshold for using MMAP to directly service a
request. Requests of at least this size that cannot be allocated
using already-existing space will be serviced via mmap. (If enough
normal freed space already exists it is used instead.) Using mmap
segregates relatively large chunks of memory so that they can be
individually obtained and released from the host system. A request
serviced through mmap is never reused by any other request (at least
not directly; the system may just so happen to remap successive
requests to the same locations). Segregating space in this way has
the benefits that: Mmapped space can always be individually released
back to the system, which helps keep the system level memory demands
of a long-lived program low. Also, mapped memory doesn't become
`locked' between other chunks, as can happen with normally allocated
chunks, which means that even trimming via malloc_trim would not
release them. However, it has the disadvantage that the space
cannot be reclaimed, consolidated, and then used to service later
requests, as happens with normal chunks. The advantages of mmap
nearly always outweigh disadvantages for "large" chunks, but the
value of "large" may vary across systems. The default is an
empirically derived value that works well in most systems. You can
disable mmap by setting to -1U.
*/
#ifndef WIN32
#ifdef _WIN32
#define WIN32 1
#endif
#endif
#ifdef WIN32
#define WIN32_LEAN_AND_MEAN
#include <windows.h>
#define HAVE_MMAP 1
#define HAVE_MORECORE 0
#define LACKS_UNISTD_H
#define LACKS_SYS_PARAM_H
#define LACKS_SYS_MMAN_H
#define LACKS_STRING_H
#define LACKS_STRINGS_H
#define LACKS_SYS_TYPES_H
#define LACKS_ERRNO_H
#define MALLOC_FAILURE_ACTION
#define MMAP_CLEARS 0 /* WINCE and some others apparently don't clear */
#endif
#if defined(DARWIN) || defined(_DARWIN)
/* Mac OSX docs advise not to use sbrk; it seems better to use mmap */
#ifndef HAVE_MORECORE
#define HAVE_MORECORE 0
#define HAVE_MMAP 1
#endif
#endif
#ifndef LACKS_SYS_TYPES_H
#include <sys/types.h> /* For size_t */
#endif
#ifndef ONLY_MSPACES
#define ONLY_MSPACES 0
#endif
#ifndef MSPACES
#if ONLY_MSPACES
#define MSPACES 1
#else
#define MSPACES 0
#endif
#endif
#ifndef MALLOC_ALIGNMENT
#define MALLOC_ALIGNMENT (8U)
#endif
#ifndef FOOTERS
#define FOOTERS 0
#endif
#ifndef ABORT
#define ABORT abort()
#endif
#ifndef ABORT_ON_ASSERT_FAILURE
#define ABORT_ON_ASSERT_FAILURE 1
#endif
#ifndef PROCEED_ON_ERROR
#define PROCEED_ON_ERROR 0
#endif
#ifndef USE_LOCKS
#define USE_LOCKS 0
#endif
#ifndef INSECURE
#define INSECURE 0
#endif
#ifndef HAVE_MMAP
#define HAVE_MMAP 1
#endif
#ifndef MMAP_CLEARS
#define MMAP_CLEARS 1
#endif
#ifndef HAVE_MREMAP
#ifdef linux
#define HAVE_MREMAP 1
#else
#define HAVE_MREMAP 0
#endif
#endif
#ifndef MALLOC_FAILURE_ACTION
#define MALLOC_FAILURE_ACTION errno = ENOMEM;
#endif
#ifndef HAVE_MORECORE
#if ONLY_MSPACES
#define HAVE_MORECORE 0
#else
#define HAVE_MORECORE 1
#endif
#endif
#if !HAVE_MORECORE
#define MORECORE_CONTIGUOUS 0
#else
#ifndef MORECORE
#define MORECORE sbrk
#endif
#ifndef MORECORE_CONTIGUOUS
#define MORECORE_CONTIGUOUS 1
#endif
#endif
#ifndef DEFAULT_GRANULARITY
#if MORECORE_CONTIGUOUS
#define DEFAULT_GRANULARITY (0) /* 0 means to compute in init_mparams */
#else
#define DEFAULT_GRANULARITY (64U * 1024U)
#endif
#endif
#ifndef DEFAULT_TRIM_THRESHOLD
#ifndef MORECORE_CANNOT_TRIM
#define DEFAULT_TRIM_THRESHOLD (2U * 1024U * 1024U)
#else
#define DEFAULT_TRIM_THRESHOLD (-1U)
#endif
#endif
#ifndef DEFAULT_MMAP_THRESHOLD
#if HAVE_MMAP
#define DEFAULT_MMAP_THRESHOLD (256U * 1024U)
#else
#define DEFAULT_MMAP_THRESHOLD (-1U)
#endif
#endif
#ifndef USE_BUILTIN_FFS
#define USE_BUILTIN_FFS 0
#endif
#ifndef USE_DEV_RANDOM
#define USE_DEV_RANDOM 0
#endif
#ifndef NO_MALLINFO
#define NO_MALLINFO 0
#endif
#ifndef MALLINFO_FIELD_TYPE
#define MALLINFO_FIELD_TYPE size_t
#endif
/*
mallopt tuning options. SVID/XPG defines four standard parameter
numbers for mallopt, normally defined in malloc.h. None of these
are used in this malloc, so setting them has no effect. But this
malloc does support the following options.
*/
#define M_TRIM_THRESHOLD (-1)
#define M_GRANULARITY (-2)
#define M_MMAP_THRESHOLD (-3)
/* ------------------------ Mallinfo declarations ------------------------ */
#if !NO_MALLINFO
/*
This version of malloc supports the standard SVID/XPG mallinfo
routine that returns a struct containing usage properties and
statistics. It should work on any system that has a
/usr/include/malloc.h defining struct mallinfo. The main
declaration needed is the mallinfo struct that is returned (by-copy)
by mallinfo(). The malloinfo struct contains a bunch of fields that
are not even meaningful in this version of malloc. These fields are
are instead filled by mallinfo() with other numbers that might be of
interest.
HAVE_USR_INCLUDE_MALLOC_H should be set if you have a
/usr/include/malloc.h file that includes a declaration of struct
mallinfo. If so, it is included; else a compliant version is
declared below. These must be precisely the same for mallinfo() to
work. The original SVID version of this struct, defined on most
systems with mallinfo, declares all fields as ints. But some others
define as unsigned long. If your system defines the fields using a
type of different width than listed here, you MUST #include your
system version and #define HAVE_USR_INCLUDE_MALLOC_H.
*/
/* #define HAVE_USR_INCLUDE_MALLOC_H */
#ifdef HAVE_USR_INCLUDE_MALLOC_H
#include "/usr/include/malloc.h"
#else
struct mallinfo {
MALLINFO_FIELD_TYPE arena; /* non-mmapped space allocated from system */
MALLINFO_FIELD_TYPE ordblks; /* number of free chunks */
MALLINFO_FIELD_TYPE smblks; /* always 0 */
MALLINFO_FIELD_TYPE hblks; /* always 0 */
MALLINFO_FIELD_TYPE hblkhd; /* space in mmapped regions */
MALLINFO_FIELD_TYPE usmblks; /* maximum total allocated space */
MALLINFO_FIELD_TYPE fsmblks; /* always 0 */
MALLINFO_FIELD_TYPE uordblks; /* total allocated space */
MALLINFO_FIELD_TYPE fordblks; /* total free space */
MALLINFO_FIELD_TYPE keepcost; /* releasable (via malloc_trim) space */
};
#endif
#endif
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
#if !ONLY_MSPACES
/* ------------------- Declarations of public routines ------------------- */
#ifndef USE_DL_PREFIX
#define dlcalloc calloc
#define dlfree free
#define dlmalloc malloc
#define dlmemalign memalign
#define dlrealloc realloc
#define dlvalloc valloc
#define dlpvalloc pvalloc
#define dlmallinfo mallinfo
#define dlmallopt mallopt
#define dlmalloc_trim malloc_trim
#define dlmalloc_stats malloc_stats
#define dlmalloc_usable_size malloc_usable_size
#define dlmalloc_footprint malloc_footprint
#define dlindependent_calloc independent_calloc
#define dlindependent_comalloc independent_comalloc
#endif
/*
malloc(size_t n)
Returns a pointer to a newly allocated chunk of at least n bytes, or
null if no space is available, in which case errno is set to ENOMEM
on ANSI C systems.
If n is zero, malloc returns a minimum-sized chunk. (The minimum
size is 16 bytes on most 32bit systems, and 32 bytes on 64bit
systems.) Note that size_t is an unsigned type, so calls with
arguments that would be negative if signed are interpreted as
requests for huge amounts of space, which will often fail. The
maximum supported value of n differs across systems, but is in all
cases less than the maximum representable value of a size_t.
*/
void* dlmalloc(size_t);
/*
free(void* p)
Releases the chunk of memory pointed to by p, that had been previously
allocated using malloc or a related routine such as realloc.
It has no effect if p is null. If p was not malloced or already
freed, free(p) will by default cuase the current program to abort.
*/
void dlfree(void*);
/*
calloc(size_t n_elements, size_t element_size);
Returns a pointer to n_elements * element_size bytes, with all locations
set to zero.
*/
void* dlcalloc(size_t, size_t);
/*
realloc(void* p, size_t n)
Returns a pointer to a chunk of size n that contains the same data
as does chunk p up to the minimum of (n, p's size) bytes, or null
if no space is available.
The returned pointer may or may not be the same as p. The algorithm
prefers extending p in most cases when possible, otherwise it
employs the equivalent of a malloc-copy-free sequence.
If p is null, realloc is equivalent to malloc.
If space is not available, realloc returns null, errno is set (if on
ANSI) and p is NOT freed.
if n is for fewer bytes than already held by p, the newly unused
space is lopped off and freed if possible. realloc with a size
argument of zero (re)allocates a minimum-sized chunk.
The old unix realloc convention of allowing the last-free'd chunk
to be used as an argument to realloc is not supported.
*/
void* dlrealloc(void*, size_t);
/*
memalign(size_t alignment, size_t n);
Returns a pointer to a newly allocated chunk of n bytes, aligned
in accord with the alignment argument.
The alignment argument should be a power of two. If the argument is
not a power of two, the nearest greater power is used.
8-byte alignment is guaranteed by normal malloc calls, so don't
bother calling memalign with an argument of 8 or less.
Overreliance on memalign is a sure way to fragment space.
*/
void* dlmemalign(size_t, size_t);
/*
valloc(size_t n);
Equivalent to memalign(pagesize, n), where pagesize is the page
size of the system. If the pagesize is unknown, 4096 is used.
*/
void* dlvalloc(size_t);
/*
mallopt(int parameter_number, int parameter_value)
Sets tunable parameters The format is to provide a
(parameter-number, parameter-value) pair. mallopt then sets the
corresponding parameter to the argument value if it can (i.e., so
long as the value is meaningful), and returns 1 if successful else
0. SVID/XPG/ANSI defines four standard param numbers for mallopt,
normally defined in malloc.h. None of these are use in this malloc,
so setting them has no effect. But this malloc also supports other
options in mallopt. See below for details. Briefly, supported
parameters are as follows (listed defaults are for "typical"
configurations).
Symbol param # default allowed param values
M_TRIM_THRESHOLD -1 2*1024*1024 any (-1U disables trimming)
M_GRANULARITY -2 page size any power of 2 >= page size
M_MMAP_THRESHOLD -3 256*1024 any (or 0 if no MMAP support)
*/
int dlmallopt(int, int);
/*
malloc_footprint();
Returns the number of bytes obtained from the system. The total
number of bytes allocated by malloc, realloc etc., is less than this
value. Unlike mallinfo, this function returns only a precomputed
result, so can be called frequently to monitor memory consumption.
Even if locks are otherwise defined, this function does not use them,
so results might not be up to date.
*/
size_t dlmalloc_footprint();
#if !NO_MALLINFO
/*
mallinfo()
Returns (by copy) a struct containing various summary statistics:
arena: current total non-mmapped bytes allocated from system
ordblks: the number of free chunks
smblks: always zero.
hblks: current number of mmapped regions
hblkhd: total bytes held in mmapped regions
usmblks: the maximum total allocated space. This will be greater
than current total if trimming has occurred.
fsmblks: always zero
uordblks: current total allocated space (normal or mmapped)
fordblks: total free space
keepcost: the maximum number of bytes that could ideally be released
back to system via malloc_trim. ("ideally" means that
it ignores page restrictions etc.)
Because these fields are ints, but internal bookkeeping may
be kept as longs, the reported values may wrap around zero and
thus be inaccurate.
*/
struct mallinfo dlmallinfo(void);
#endif
/*
independent_calloc(size_t n_elements, size_t element_size, void* chunks[]);
independent_calloc is similar to calloc, but instead of returning a
single cleared space, it returns an array of pointers to n_elements
independent elements that can hold contents of size elem_size, each
of which starts out cleared, and can be independently freed,
realloc'ed etc. The elements are guaranteed to be adjacently
allocated (this is not guaranteed to occur with multiple callocs or
mallocs), which may also improve cache locality in some
applications.
The "chunks" argument is optional (i.e., may be null, which is
probably the most typical usage). If it is null, the returned array
is itself dynamically allocated and should also be freed when it is
no longer needed. Otherwise, the chunks array must be of at least
n_elements in length. It is filled in with the pointers to the
chunks.
In either case, independent_calloc returns this pointer array, or
null if the allocation failed. If n_elements is zero and "chunks"
is null, it returns a chunk representing an array with zero elements
(which should be freed if not wanted).
Each element must be individually freed when it is no longer
needed. If you'd like to instead be able to free all at once, you
should instead use regular calloc and assign pointers into this
space to represent elements. (In this case though, you cannot
independently free elements.)
independent_calloc simplifies and speeds up implementations of many
kinds of pools. It may also be useful when constructing large data
structures that initially have a fixed number of fixed-sized nodes,
but the number is not known at compile time, and some of the nodes
may later need to be freed. For example:
struct Node { int item; struct Node* next; };
struct Node* build_list() {
struct Node** pool;
int n = read_number_of_nodes_needed();
if (n <= 0) return 0;
pool = (struct Node**)(independent_calloc(n, sizeof(struct Node), 0);
if (pool == 0) die();
// organize into a linked list...
struct Node* first = pool[0];
for (i = 0; i < n-1; ++i)
pool[i]->next = pool[i+1];
free(pool); // Can now free the array (or not, if it is needed later)
return first;
}
*/
void** dlindependent_calloc(size_t, size_t, void**);
/*
independent_comalloc(size_t n_elements, size_t sizes[], void* chunks[]);
independent_comalloc allocates, all at once, a set of n_elements
chunks with sizes indicated in the "sizes" array. It returns
an array of pointers to these elements, each of which can be
independently freed, realloc'ed etc. The elements are guaranteed to
be adjacently allocated (this is not guaranteed to occur with
multiple callocs or mallocs), which may also improve cache locality
in some applications.
The "chunks" argument is optional (i.e., may be null). If it is null
the returned array is itself dynamically allocated and should also
be freed when it is no longer needed. Otherwise, the chunks array
must be of at least n_elements in length. It is filled in with the
pointers to the chunks.
In either case, independent_comalloc returns this pointer array, or
null if the allocation failed. If n_elements is zero and chunks is
null, it returns a chunk representing an array with zero elements
(which should be freed if not wanted).
Each element must be individually freed when it is no longer
needed. If you'd like to instead be able to free all at once, you
should instead use a single regular malloc, and assign pointers at
particular offsets in the aggregate space. (In this case though, you
cannot independently free elements.)
independent_comallac differs from independent_calloc in that each
element may have a different size, and also that it does not
automatically clear elements.
independent_comalloc can be used to speed up allocation in cases
where several structs or objects must always be allocated at the
same time. For example:
struct Head { ... }
struct Foot { ... }
void send_message(char* msg) {
int msglen = strlen(msg);
size_t sizes[3] = { sizeof(struct Head), msglen, sizeof(struct Foot) };
void* chunks[3];
if (independent_comalloc(3, sizes, chunks) == 0)
die();
struct Head* head = (struct Head*)(chunks[0]);
char* body = (char*)(chunks[1]);
struct Foot* foot = (struct Foot*)(chunks[2]);
// ...
}
In general though, independent_comalloc is worth using only for
larger values of n_elements. For small values, you probably won't
detect enough difference from series of malloc calls to bother.
Overuse of independent_comalloc can increase overall memory usage,
since it cannot reuse existing noncontiguous small chunks that
might be available for some of the elements.
*/
void** dlindependent_comalloc(size_t, size_t*, void**);
/*
pvalloc(size_t n);
Equivalent to valloc(minimum-page-that-holds(n)), that is,
round up n to nearest pagesize.
*/
void* dlpvalloc(size_t);
/*
malloc_trim(size_t pad);
If possible, gives memory back to the system (via negative arguments
to sbrk) if there is unused memory at the `high' end of the malloc
pool or in unused MMAP segments. You can call this after freeing
large blocks of memory to potentially reduce the system-level memory
requirements of a program. However, it cannot guarantee to reduce
memory. Under some allocation patterns, some large free blocks of
memory will be locked between two used chunks, so they cannot be
given back to the system.
The `pad' argument to malloc_trim represents the amount of free
trailing space to leave untrimmed. If this argument is zero, only
the minimum amount of memory to maintain internal data structures
will be left. Non-zero arguments can be supplied to maintain enough
trailing space to service future expected allocations without having
to re-obtain memory from the system.
Malloc_trim returns 1 if it actually released any memory, else 0.
*/
int dlmalloc_trim(size_t);
/*
malloc_usable_size(void* p);
Returns the number of bytes you can actually use in
an allocated chunk, which may be more than you requested (although
often not) due to alignment and minimum size constraints.
You can use this many bytes without worrying about
overwriting other allocated objects. This is not a particularly great
programming practice. malloc_usable_size can be more useful in
debugging and assertions, for example:
p = malloc(n);
assert(malloc_usable_size(p) >= 256);
*/
size_t dlmalloc_usable_size(void*);
/*
malloc_stats();
Prints on stderr the amount of space obtained from the system (both
via sbrk and mmap), the maximum amount (which may be more than
current if malloc_trim and/or munmap got called), and the current
number of bytes allocated via malloc (or realloc, etc) but not yet
freed. Note that this is the number of bytes allocated, not the
number requested. It will be larger than the number requested
because of alignment and bookkeeping overhead. Because it includes
alignment wastage as being in use, this figure may be greater than
zero even when no user-level chunks are allocated.
The reported current and maximum system memory can be inaccurate if
a program makes other calls to system memory allocation functions
(normally sbrk) outside of malloc.
malloc_stats prints only the most commonly interesting statistics.
More information can be obtained by calling mallinfo.
*/
void dlmalloc_stats();
#endif
#if MSPACES
/*
mspace is an opaque type representing an independent
region of space that supports mspace_malloc, etc.
*/
typedef void* mspace;
/*
create_mspace creates and returns a new independent space with the
given initial capacity, or, if 0, the default granularity size. It
returns null if there is no system memory available to create the
space. If argument locked is non-zero, the space uses a separate
lock to control access. The capacity of the space will grow
dynamically as needed to service mspace_malloc requests. You can
control the sizes of incremental increases of this space by
compiling with a different DEFAULT_GRANULARITY or dynamically
setting with mallopt(M_GRANULARITY, value).
*/
mspace create_mspace(size_t capacity, int locked);
/*
destroy_mspace destroys the given space, and attempts to return all
of its memory back to the system, returning the total number of
bytes freed. After destruction, the results of access to all memory
used by the space become undefined.
*/
size_t destroy_mspace(mspace msp);
/*
create_mspace_with_base uses the memory supplied as the initial base
of a new mspace. Part (less than 128*sizeof(size_t) bytes) of this
space is used for bookkeeping, so the capacity must be at least this
large. (Otherwise 0 is returned.) When this initial space is
exhausted, additional memory will be obtained from the system.