NAME
malloc, mallocz, smalloc, realloc, free, msize, secalloc, secfree,
setmalloctag, setrealloctag, getmalloctag, getrealloctag – kernel
memory allocator |
SYNOPSIS
void* malloc(ulong size) void* mallocalign(ulong size, ulong align, long offset, ulong span) void* mallocz(ulong size, int clr) void* smalloc(ulong size) void* realloc(void *p, ulong size) void free(void *ptr) ulong msize(void *ptr) void* secalloc(ulong size) void secfree(void *ptr) void setmalloctag(void *ptr, ulong tag) ulong getmalloctag(void *ptr) void setrealloctag(void *ptr, ulong tag) ulong getrealloctag(void *ptr)
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DESCRIPTION
These are kernel versions of the functions in malloc(2). They
allocate memory from the mainmem memory pool, which is managed
by the allocator pool(2), which in turn replenishes the pool as
required by calling xalloc(9). All but smalloc (which calls sleep(9))
may safely be called by interrupt handlers. Malloc returns a pointer to a block of at least size bytes, initialised to zero. The block is suitably aligned for storage of any type of object. The call malloc(0) returns a valid pointer rather than null. Mallocz is similar, but only clears the memory if clr is non–zero. Smalloc returns a pointer to a block of size bytes, initialised to zero. If the memory is not immediately available, smalloc retries every 100 milliseconds until the memory is acquired. Mallocalign allocates a block of at least n bytes of memory respecting alignment contraints. If align is non–zero, the returned pointer is aligned to be equal to offset modulo align. If span is non–zero, the n byte block allocated will not span a span–byte boundary.
Realloc changes the size of the block pointed to by p to size
bytes, if possible without moving the data, and returns a pointer
to the block. The contents are unchanged up to the lesser of old
and new sizes, and any new space allocated is initialised to zero.
Realloc takes on special meanings when one or both
arguments are zero:
When a block is allocated, sometimes there is some extra unused space at the end. Msize grows the block to encompass this unused space and returns the new number of bytes that may be used. Secalloc and secfree are security–aware functions that use a pool flagged by POOL_ANTAGONISM (see pool(2)), which fills every allocated block with garbage before and after its use, to prevent leakage.
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 setmalloctag, getmalloctag,
setrealloctag, and getrealloctag. When allocating blocks directly
with malloc and 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 getcallerpc(2)
to setmalloctag) to provide more useful information about the
source
of allocation. |
SOURCE
/sys/src/9/port/alloc.c |
DIAGNOSTICS
All functions except smalloc return a null pointer if space is
unavailable. If the allocated blocks have no malloc or realloc
tags, getmalloctag and getrealloctag return ~0. |
SEE ALSO
pool(2), xalloc(9) |