AlkantarClanX12
Current Path : /opt/alt/ruby30/include/ruby/internal/ |
Current File : //opt/alt/ruby30/include/ruby/internal/xmalloc.h |
#ifndef RBIMPL_XMALLOC_H /*-*-C++-*-vi:se ft=cpp:*/ #define RBIMPL_XMALLOC_H /** * @file * @author Ruby developers <ruby-core@ruby-lang.org> * @copyright This file is a part of the programming language Ruby. * Permission is hereby granted, to either redistribute and/or * modify this file, provided that the conditions mentioned in the * file COPYING are met. Consult the file for details. * @warning Symbols prefixed with either `RBIMPL` or `rbimpl` are * implementation details. Don't take them as canon. They could * rapidly appear then vanish. The name (path) of this header file * is also an implementation detail. Do not expect it to persist * at the place it is now. Developers are free to move it anywhere * anytime at will. * @note To ruby-core: remember that this header can be possibly * recursively included from extension libraries written in C++. * Do not expect for instance `__VA_ARGS__` is always available. * We assume C99 for ruby itself but we don't assume languages of * extension libraries. They could be written in C++98. * @brief Declares ::ruby_xmalloc(). */ #include "ruby/internal/config.h" #ifdef STDC_HEADERS # include <stddef.h> #endif #ifdef HAVE_STDLIB_H # include <stdlib.h> #endif #include "ruby/internal/attr/alloc_size.h" #include "ruby/internal/attr/nodiscard.h" #include "ruby/internal/attr/noexcept.h" #include "ruby/internal/attr/restrict.h" #include "ruby/internal/attr/returns_nonnull.h" #include "ruby/internal/dllexport.h" #ifndef USE_GC_MALLOC_OBJ_INFO_DETAILS # define USE_GC_MALLOC_OBJ_INFO_DETAILS 0 #endif #define xmalloc ruby_xmalloc #define xmalloc2 ruby_xmalloc2 #define xcalloc ruby_xcalloc #define xrealloc ruby_xrealloc #define xrealloc2 ruby_xrealloc2 #define xfree ruby_xfree RBIMPL_SYMBOL_EXPORT_BEGIN() RBIMPL_ATTR_NODISCARD() RBIMPL_ATTR_RESTRICT() RBIMPL_ATTR_RETURNS_NONNULL() RBIMPL_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE((1)) /** * Allocates a storage instance. It is largely the same as system malloc(), * except: * * - It raises Ruby exceptions instead of returning NULL, and * - In case of `ENOMEM` it tries to GC to make some room. * * @param[in] size Requested amount of memory. * @exception rb_eNoMemError No space left for `size` bytes allocation. * @return A valid pointer to an allocated storage instance; which has at * least `size` bytes width, with appropriate alignment detected by * the underlying malloc() routine. * @note It doesn't return NULL. * @note Unlike some malloc() implementations, it allocates something and * returns a meaningful value even when `size` is equal to zero. * @warning The return value shall be invalidated exactly once by either * ruby_xfree(), ruby_xrealloc(), or ruby_xrealloc2(). It is a * failure to pass it to system free(), because the system and Ruby * might or might not share the same malloc() implementation. */ void *ruby_xmalloc(size_t size) RBIMPL_ATTR_NOEXCEPT(malloc(size)) ; RBIMPL_ATTR_NODISCARD() RBIMPL_ATTR_RESTRICT() RBIMPL_ATTR_RETURNS_NONNULL() RBIMPL_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE((1,2)) /** * Identical to ruby_xmalloc(), except it allocates `nelems` * `elemsiz` bytes. * This is needed because the multiplication could integer overflow. On such * situations Ruby does not try to allocate at all but raises Ruby level * exceptions instead. If there is no integer overflow the behaviour is * exactly the same as `ruby_xmalloc(nelems*elemsiz)`. * * @param[in] nelems Number of elements. * @param[in] elemsiz Size of an element. * @exception rb_eNoMemError No space left for allocation. * @exception rb_eArgError `nelems` * `elemsiz` would overflow. * @return A valid pointer to an allocated storage instance; which has at * least `nelems` * `elemsiz` bytes width, with appropriate * alignment detected by the underlying malloc() routine. * @note It doesn't return NULL. * @note Unlike some malloc() implementations, it allocates something and * returns a meaningful value even when `nelems` or `elemsiz` or * both are zero. * @warning The return value shall be invalidated exactly once by either * ruby_xfree(), ruby_xrealloc(), or ruby_xrealloc2(). It is a * failure to pass it to system free(), because the system and Ruby * might or might not share the same malloc() implementation. */ void *ruby_xmalloc2(size_t nelems, size_t elemsiz) RBIMPL_ATTR_NOEXCEPT(malloc(nelems * elemsiz)) ; RBIMPL_ATTR_NODISCARD() RBIMPL_ATTR_RESTRICT() RBIMPL_ATTR_RETURNS_NONNULL() RBIMPL_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE((1,2)) /** * Identical to ruby_xmalloc2(), except it zero-fills the region before it * returns. This could also be seen as a routine identical to ruby_xmalloc(), * except it calls calloc() instead of malloc() internally. * * @param[in] nelems Number of elements. * @param[in] elemsiz Size of an element. * @exception rb_eNoMemError No space left for allocation. * @exception rb_eArgError `nelems` * `elemsiz` would overflow. * @return A valid pointer to an allocated storage instance; which has at * least `nelems` * `elemsiz` bytes width, with appropriate * alignment detected by the underlying calloc() routine. * @note It doesn't return NULL. * @note Unlike some calloc() implementations, it allocates something and * returns a meaningful value even when `nelems` or `elemsiz` or * both are zero. * @warning The return value shall be invalidated exactly once by either * ruby_xfree(), ruby_xrealloc(), or ruby_xrealloc2(). It is a * failure to pass it to system free(), because the system and Ruby * might or might not share the same malloc() implementation. */ void *ruby_xcalloc(size_t nelems, size_t elemsiz) RBIMPL_ATTR_NOEXCEPT(calloc(nelems, elemsiz)) ; RBIMPL_ATTR_NODISCARD() RBIMPL_ATTR_RETURNS_NONNULL() RBIMPL_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE((2)) /** * Resize the storage instance. * * @param[in] ptr A valid pointer to a storage instance that was * previously returned from either ruby_xmalloc(), * ruby_xmalloc2(), ruby_xcalloc(), * ruby_xrealloc(), or ruby_xrealloc2(). * @param[in] newsiz Requested new amount of memory. * @exception rb_eNoMemError No space left for `newsiz` bytes allocation. * @retval ptr In case the function returns the passed pointer * as-is, the storage instance that the pointer * holds is either grown or shrunken to have at * least `newsiz` bytes. * @retval otherwise A valid pointer to a newly allocated storage * instance which has at least `newsiz` bytes * width, and holds previous contents of `ptr`. In * this case `ptr` is invalidated as if it was * passed to ruby_xfree(). * @note It doesn't return NULL. * @warning Unlike some realloc() implementations, passing zero to `elemsiz` * is not the same as calling ruby_xfree(), because this function * never returns NULL. Something meaningful still returns then. * @warning It is a failure not to check the return value. Do not assume * anything on it. It could be either identical to, or distinct * form the passed argument. * @warning Do not assume anything on the alignment of the return value. * There is no guarantee that it inherits the passed argument's * one. * @warning The return value shall be invalidated exactly once by either * ruby_xfree(), ruby_xrealloc(), or ruby_xrealloc2(). It is a * failure to pass it to system free(), because the system and Ruby * might or might not share the same malloc() implementation. */ void *ruby_xrealloc(void *ptr, size_t newsiz) RBIMPL_ATTR_NOEXCEPT(realloc(ptr, newsiz)) ; RBIMPL_ATTR_NODISCARD() RBIMPL_ATTR_RETURNS_NONNULL() RBIMPL_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE((2,3)) /** * Identical to ruby_xrealloc(), except it resizes the given storage instance * to `newelems` * `newsiz` bytes. This is needed because the multiplication * could integer overflow. On such situations Ruby does not try to touch the * contents of argument pointer at all but raises Ruby level exceptions * instead. If there is no integer overflow the behaviour is exactly the same * as `ruby_xrealloc(ptr,nelems*elemsiz)`. * * This is roughly the same as reallocarray() function that OpenBSD * etc. provides, but also interacts with our GC. * * @param[in] ptr A valid pointer to a storage instance that was * previously returned from either ruby_xmalloc(), * ruby_xmalloc2(), ruby_xcalloc(), * ruby_xrealloc(), or ruby_xrealloc2(). * @param[in] newelems Requested new number of elements. * @param[in] newsiz Requested new size of each element. * @exception rb_eNoMemError No space left for allocation. * @exception rb_eArgError `newelems` * `newsiz` would overflow. * @retval ptr In case the function returns the passed pointer * as-is, the storage instance that the pointer * holds is either grown or shrunken to have at * least `newelems` * `newsiz` bytes. * @retval otherwise A valid pointer to a newly allocated storage * instance which has at least `newelems` * * `newsiz` bytes width, and holds previous * contents of `ptr`. In this case `ptr` is * invalidated as if it was passed to ruby_xfree(). * @note It doesn't return NULL. * @warning Unlike some realloc() implementations, passing zero to either * `newelems` or `elemsiz` are not the same as calling * ruby_xfree(), because this function never returns NULL. * Something meaningful still returns then. * @warning It is a failure not to check the return value. Do not assume * anything on it. It could be either identical to, or distinct * form the passed argument. * @warning Do not assume anything on the alignment of the return value. * There is no guarantee that it inherits the passed argument's * one. * @warning The return value shall be invalidated exactly once by either * ruby_xfree(), ruby_xrealloc(), or ruby_xrealloc2(). It is a * failure to pass it to system free(), because the system and Ruby * might or might not share the same malloc() implementation. */ void *ruby_xrealloc2(void *ptr, size_t newelems, size_t newsiz) RBIMPL_ATTR_NOEXCEPT(realloc(ptr, newelems * newsiz)) ; /** * Deallocates a storage instance. * * @param[out] ptr Either NULL, or a valid pointer previously returned from * one of ruby_xmalloc(), ruby_xmalloc2(), ruby_xcalloc(), * ruby_xrealloc(), or ruby_xrealloc2(). * @warning Every single storage instance that was previously allocated by * either ruby_xmalloc(), ruby_xmalloc2(), ruby_xcalloc(), * ruby_xrealloc(), or ruby_xrealloc2() shall be invalidated * exactly once by either passing it to ruby_xfree(), or passing * it to either ruby_xrealloc(), ruby_xrealloc2() then check the * return value for invalidation. * @warning Do not pass anything other than pointers described above. For * instance pointers returned from malloc() or mmap() shall not be * passed to this function, because the underlying memory * management mechanism could differ. * @warning Do not pass any invalid pointers to this function e.g. by * calling it twice with a same argument. */ void ruby_xfree(void *ptr) RBIMPL_ATTR_NOEXCEPT(free(ptr)) ; #if USE_GC_MALLOC_OBJ_INFO_DETAILS || defined(__DOXYGEN) # define ruby_xmalloc(s1) ruby_xmalloc_with_location(s1, __FILE__, __LINE__) # define ruby_xmalloc2(s1, s2) ruby_xmalloc2_with_location(s1, s2, __FILE__, __LINE__) # define ruby_xcalloc(s1, s2) ruby_xcalloc_with_location(s1, s2, __FILE__, __LINE__) # define ruby_xrealloc(ptr, s1) ruby_xrealloc_with_location(ptr, s1, __FILE__, __LINE__) # define ruby_xrealloc2(ptr, s1, s2) ruby_xrealloc2_with_location(ptr, s1, s2, __FILE__, __LINE__) RBIMPL_ATTR_NODISCARD() RBIMPL_ATTR_RESTRICT() RBIMPL_ATTR_RETURNS_NONNULL() RBIMPL_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE((1)) void *ruby_xmalloc_body(size_t size) RBIMPL_ATTR_NOEXCEPT(malloc(size)) ; RBIMPL_ATTR_NODISCARD() RBIMPL_ATTR_RESTRICT() RBIMPL_ATTR_RETURNS_NONNULL() RBIMPL_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE((1,2)) void *ruby_xmalloc2_body(size_t nelems, size_t elemsiz) RBIMPL_ATTR_NOEXCEPT(malloc(nelems * elemsiz)) ; RBIMPL_ATTR_NODISCARD() RBIMPL_ATTR_RESTRICT() RBIMPL_ATTR_RETURNS_NONNULL() RBIMPL_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE((1,2)) void *ruby_xcalloc_body(size_t nelems, size_t elemsiz) RBIMPL_ATTR_NOEXCEPT(calloc(nelems, elemsiz)) ; RBIMPL_ATTR_NODISCARD() RBIMPL_ATTR_RETURNS_NONNULL() RBIMPL_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE((2)) void *ruby_xrealloc_body(void *ptr, size_t newsiz) RBIMPL_ATTR_NOEXCEPT(realloc(ptr, newsiz)) ; RBIMPL_ATTR_NODISCARD() RBIMPL_ATTR_RETURNS_NONNULL() RBIMPL_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE((2,3)) void *ruby_xrealloc2_body(void *ptr, size_t newelems, size_t newsiz) RBIMPL_ATTR_NOEXCEPT(realloc(ptr, newelems * newsiz)) ; RUBY_EXTERN const char *ruby_malloc_info_file; RUBY_EXTERN int ruby_malloc_info_line; static inline void * ruby_xmalloc_with_location(size_t s, const char *file, int line) { void *ptr; ruby_malloc_info_file = file; ruby_malloc_info_line = line; ptr = ruby_xmalloc_body(s); ruby_malloc_info_file = NULL; return ptr; } static inline void * ruby_xmalloc2_with_location(size_t s1, size_t s2, const char *file, int line) { void *ptr; ruby_malloc_info_file = file; ruby_malloc_info_line = line; ptr = ruby_xmalloc2_body(s1, s2); ruby_malloc_info_file = NULL; return ptr; } static inline void * ruby_xcalloc_with_location(size_t s1, size_t s2, const char *file, int line) { void *ptr; ruby_malloc_info_file = file; ruby_malloc_info_line = line; ptr = ruby_xcalloc_body(s1, s2); ruby_malloc_info_file = NULL; return ptr; } static inline void * ruby_xrealloc_with_location(void *ptr, size_t s, const char *file, int line) { void *rptr; ruby_malloc_info_file = file; ruby_malloc_info_line = line; rptr = ruby_xrealloc_body(ptr, s); ruby_malloc_info_file = NULL; return rptr; } static inline void * ruby_xrealloc2_with_location(void *ptr, size_t s1, size_t s2, const char *file, int line) { void *rptr; ruby_malloc_info_file = file; ruby_malloc_info_line = line; rptr = ruby_xrealloc2_body(ptr, s1, s2); ruby_malloc_info_file = NULL; return rptr; } #endif RBIMPL_SYMBOL_EXPORT_END() #endif /* RBIMPL_XMALLOC_H */