/* xmalloc.c -- malloc with out of memory checking Copyright (C) 1990-2000, 2002-2006, 2008-2016 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see . */ #include #define XALLOC_INLINE _GL_EXTERN_INLINE #include "xalloc.h" #include #include /* 1 if calloc is known to be compatible with GNU calloc. This matters if we are not also using the calloc module, which defines HAVE_CALLOC_GNU and supports the GNU API even on non-GNU platforms. */ #if defined HAVE_CALLOC_GNU || (defined __GLIBC__ && !defined __UCLIBC__) enum { HAVE_GNU_CALLOC = 1 }; #else enum { HAVE_GNU_CALLOC = 0 }; #endif /* Allocate N bytes of memory dynamically, with error checking. */ void * xmalloc (size_t n) { void *p = malloc (n); if (!p && n != 0) xalloc_die (); return p; } /* Change the size of an allocated block of memory P to N bytes, with error checking. */ void * xrealloc (void *p, size_t n) { if (!n && p) { /* The GNU and C99 realloc behaviors disagree here. Act like GNU, even if the underlying realloc is C99. */ free (p); return NULL; } p = realloc (p, n); if (!p && n) xalloc_die (); return p; } /* If P is null, allocate a block of at least *PN bytes; otherwise, reallocate P so that it contains more than *PN bytes. *PN must be nonzero unless P is null. Set *PN to the new block's size, and return the pointer to the new block. *PN is never set to zero, and the returned pointer is never null. */ void * x2realloc (void *p, size_t *pn) { return x2nrealloc (p, pn, 1); } /* Allocate S bytes of zeroed memory dynamically, with error checking. There's no need for xnzalloc (N, S), since it would be equivalent to xcalloc (N, S). */ void * xzalloc (size_t s) { return memset (xmalloc (s), 0, s); } /* Allocate zeroed memory for N elements of S bytes, with error checking. S must be nonzero. */ void * xcalloc (size_t n, size_t s) { void *p; /* Test for overflow, since some calloc implementations don't have proper overflow checks. But omit overflow and size-zero tests if HAVE_GNU_CALLOC, since GNU calloc catches overflow and never returns NULL if successful. */ if ((! HAVE_GNU_CALLOC && xalloc_oversized (n, s)) || (! (p = calloc (n, s)) && (HAVE_GNU_CALLOC || n != 0))) xalloc_die (); return p; } /* Clone an object P of size S, with error checking. There's no need for xnmemdup (P, N, S), since xmemdup (P, N * S) works without any need for an arithmetic overflow check. */ void * xmemdup (void const *p, size_t s) { return memcpy (xmalloc (s), p, s); } /* Clone STRING. */ char * xstrdup (char const *string) { return xmemdup (string, strlen (string) + 1); }