NAME
calloc
, free
,
malloc
, realloc
,
reallocf
, valloc
,
aligned_alloc
—
memory allocation
SYNOPSIS
#include
<stdlib.h>
void *
calloc
(size_t count,
size_t size);
void
free
(void *ptr);
void *
malloc
(size_t size);
void *
realloc
(void *ptr,
size_t size);
void *
reallocf
(void *ptr,
size_t size);
void *
valloc
(size_t size);
void *
aligned_alloc
(size_t alignment,
size_t size);
DESCRIPTION
The
malloc
(),
calloc
(), valloc
(),
realloc
(), and reallocf
()
functions allocate memory. The allocated memory is aligned such that it can
be used for any data type, including AltiVec- and SSE-related types. The
aligned_alloc
() function allocates memory with the
requested alignment. The free
() function frees
allocations that were created via the preceding allocation functions.
The
malloc
()
function allocates size bytes of memory and returns a
pointer to the allocated memory.
The
calloc
()
function contiguously allocates enough space for count
objects that are size bytes of memory each and returns
a pointer to the allocated memory. The allocated memory is filled with bytes
of value zero.
The
valloc
()
function allocates size bytes of memory and returns a
pointer to the allocated memory. The allocated memory is aligned on a page
boundary.
The
aligned_alloc
()
function allocates size bytes of memory with an
alignment specified by alignment and returns a pointer
to the allocated memory.
The
realloc
()
function tries to change the size of the allocation pointed to by
ptr to size, and returns
ptr. If there is not enough room to enlarge the memory
allocation pointed to by ptr,
realloc
() creates a new allocation, copies as much
of the old data pointed to by ptr as will fit to the
new allocation, frees the old allocation, and returns a pointer to the
allocated memory. If ptr is
NULL
, realloc
() is identical
to a call to malloc
() for size
bytes. If size is zero and ptr
is not NULL
, a new, minimum sized object is
allocated and the original object is freed. When extending a region
allocated with calloc(3), realloc(3) does not guarantee that the additional
memory is also zero-filled.
The
reallocf
()
function is identical to the realloc
() function,
except that it will free the passed pointer when the requested memory cannot
be allocated. This is a FreeBSD specific API
designed to ease the problems with traditional coding styles for realloc
causing memory leaks in libraries.
The
free
()
function deallocates the memory allocation pointed to by
ptr. If
ptr is a NULL pointer, no operation is performed.
RETURN VALUES
If successful, calloc
(),
malloc
(), realloc
(),
reallocf
(), valloc
(), and
aligned_alloc
() functions return a pointer to
allocated memory. If there is an error, they return a
NULL
pointer and set errno to
ENOMEM
.
In addition, aligned_alloc
() returns a
NULL
pointer and sets errno to
EINVAL
if size is not an
integral multiple of alignment, or if
alignment is not a power of 2 at least as large as
sizeof
(void *).
For realloc
(), the input pointer is still
valid if reallocation failed. For reallocf
(), the
input pointer will have been freed if reallocation failed.
The free
() function does not return a
value.
DEBUGGING ALLOCATION ERRORS
A number of facilities are provided to aid in debugging allocation errors in applications. These facilities are primarily controlled via environment variables. The recognized environment variables and their meanings are documented below.
ENVIRONMENT
The following environment variables change the behavior of the allocation-related functions.
MallocDebugReport
- If set, specifies where messages are written. Set to "stderr" to write messages to the standard error stream, "none" to discard all messages and "crash" to write messages to standard error only for a condition that is about to cause a crash. When not set, message are written to the standard error stream if it appears to be a terminal (that is, if isatty(STDERR_FILENO) returns a non-zero value) and are otherwise discarded.
MallocGuardEdges
- If set, add a guard page before and after each large block.
MallocDoNotProtectPrelude
- If set, do not add a guard page before large blocks, even if the
MallocGuardEdges
environment variable is set. MallocDoNotProtectPostlude
- If set, do not add a guard page after large blocks, even if the
MallocGuardEdges
environment variable is set. MallocStackLogging
- The default behavior if this is set is to record all allocation and
deallocation events to an on-disk log, along with stacks, so that tools
like leaks(1) and
malloc_history(1) can be used.
Set to "vm" to record only allocation of virtual memory regions allocated by system calls and mach traps, such as by mmap(1)
Set to "malloc" to record only allocations via malloc(3) and related interfaces, not virtual memory regions.
Set to "lite" to record current allocations only, not history. These are recorded by in-memory data structures, instead of an on-disk log.
MallocStackLoggingNoCompact
- If set, record all stacks in a manner that is compatible with the
malloc_history
program. MallocStackLoggingDirectory
- If set, records stack logs to the directory specified instead of saving them to the default location (/tmp).
MallocScribble
- If set, fill memory that has been allocated with 0xaa bytes. This increases the likelihood that a program making assumptions about the contents of freshly allocated memory will fail. Also if set, fill memory that has been deallocated with 0x55 bytes. This increases the likelihood that a program will fail due to accessing memory that is no longer allocated. Note that due to the way in which freed memory is managed internally, the 0x55 pattern may not appear in some parts of a deallocated memory block.
MallocCheckHeapStart <s>
- If set, specifies the number of allocations
<s> to wait before begining periodic heap
checks every <n> as specified by
MallocCheckHeapEach
. IfMallocCheckHeapStart
is set butMallocCheckHeapEach
is not specified, the default check repetition is 1000. MallocCheckHeapEach <n>
- If set, run a consistency check on the heap every
<n> operations.
MallocCheckHeapEach
is only meaningful ifMallocCheckHeapStart
is also set. MallocCheckHeapSleep <t>
- Sets the number of seconds to sleep (waiting for a debugger to attach)
when
MallocCheckHeapStart
is set and a heap corruption is detected. The default is 100 seconds. Setting this to zero means not to sleep at all. Setting this to a negative number means to sleep (for the positive number of seconds) only the very first time a heap corruption is detected. MallocCheckHeapAbort <b>
- When
MallocCheckHeapStart
is set and this is set to a non-zero value, causes abort(3) to be called if a heap corruption is detected, instead of any sleeping. MallocErrorAbort
- If set, causes abort(3) to be called if an error was encountered in malloc(3) or free(3) , such as a calling free(3) on a pointer previously freed.
MallocCorruptionAbort
- Similar to
MallocErrorAbort
but will not abort in out of memory conditions, making it more useful to catch only those errors which will cause memory corruption. MallocCorruptionAbort is always set on 64-bit processes. MallocHelp
- If set, print a list of environment variables that are paid heed to by the allocation-related functions, along with short descriptions. The list should correspond to this documentation.
DIAGNOSTIC MESSAGES
SEE ALSO
leaks(1), malloc_history(1), abort(3), malloc_size(3), malloc_zone_malloc(3), posix_memalign(3), libgmalloc(3)