From ba02c1bd6981675aaf5a0b6cddb7457e53d5eed1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Brett Weiland Date: Mon, 4 Jan 2021 16:32:01 -0600 Subject: new file: HeapLAB+Bible.pdf new file: HeapLAB/.glibc/glibc_2.23/ld-2.23.so new file: HeapLAB/.glibc/glibc_2.23/ld.so.2 new file: HeapLAB/.glibc/glibc_2.23/libc-2.23.so new file: HeapLAB/.glibc/glibc_2.23/libc.so.6 new file: HeapLAB/.glibc/glibc_2.23/libio/genops.c new file: HeapLAB/.glibc/glibc_2.23/malloc/malloc.c new file: HeapLAB/.glibc/glibc_2.23_unsafe-unlink/ld-2.23.so new file: HeapLAB/.glibc/glibc_2.23_unsafe-unlink/ld.so.2 new file: HeapLAB/.glibc/glibc_2.23_unsafe-unlink/libc-2.23.so new file: HeapLAB/.glibc/glibc_2.23_unsafe-unlink/libc.so.6 new file: HeapLAB/.glibc/glibc_2.23_unsafe-unlink/libio/genops.c new file: HeapLAB/.glibc/glibc_2.23_unsafe-unlink/malloc/malloc.c new file: HeapLAB/.glibc/glibc_2.24/ld-2.24.so new file: HeapLAB/.glibc/glibc_2.24/ld.so.2 new file: HeapLAB/.glibc/glibc_2.24/libc-2.24.so new file: 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index 0000000..e6d084e Binary files /dev/null and b/HeapLAB/.glibc/glibc_2.28_no-tcache/libc-2.28.so differ diff --git a/HeapLAB/.glibc/glibc_2.28_no-tcache/libc.so.6 b/HeapLAB/.glibc/glibc_2.28_no-tcache/libc.so.6 new file mode 120000 index 0000000..695ffa0 --- /dev/null +++ b/HeapLAB/.glibc/glibc_2.28_no-tcache/libc.so.6 @@ -0,0 +1 @@ +libc-2.28.so \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/HeapLAB/.glibc/glibc_2.28_no-tcache/malloc/malloc.c b/HeapLAB/.glibc/glibc_2.28_no-tcache/malloc/malloc.c new file mode 100644 index 0000000..e247c77 --- /dev/null +++ b/HeapLAB/.glibc/glibc_2.28_no-tcache/malloc/malloc.c @@ -0,0 +1,5593 @@ +/* Malloc implementation for multiple threads without lock contention. + Copyright (C) 1996-2018 Free Software Foundation, Inc. + This file is part of the GNU C Library. + Contributed by Wolfram Gloger + and Doug Lea , 2001. + + The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or + modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as + published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the + License, or (at your option) any later version. + + The GNU C Library 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 + Lesser General Public License for more details. + + You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public + License along with the GNU C Library; see the file COPYING.LIB. If + not, see . */ + +/* + This is a version (aka ptmalloc2) of malloc/free/realloc written by + Doug Lea and adapted to multiple threads/arenas by Wolfram Gloger. + + There have been substantial changes made after the integration into + glibc in all parts of the code. Do not look for much commonality + with the ptmalloc2 version. + +* Version ptmalloc2-20011215 + based on: + VERSION 2.7.0 Sun Mar 11 14:14:06 2001 Doug Lea (dl at gee) + +* Quickstart + + In order to compile this implementation, a Makefile is provided with + the ptmalloc2 distribution, which has pre-defined targets for some + popular systems (e.g. "make posix" for Posix threads). All that is + typically required with regard to compiler flags is the selection of + the thread package via defining one out of USE_PTHREADS, USE_THR or + USE_SPROC. Check the thread-m.h file for what effects this has. + Many/most systems will additionally require USE_TSD_DATA_HACK to be + defined, so this is the default for "make posix". + +* Why use this malloc? + + 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. + + The main properties of the algorithms are: + * For large (>= 512 bytes) requests, it is a pure best-fit allocator, + with ties normally decided via FIFO (i.e. least recently used). + * For small (<= 64 bytes by default) requests, it is a caching + allocator, that maintains pools of quickly recycled chunks. + * In between, and for combinations of large and small requests, it does + the best it can trying to meet both goals at once. + * For very large requests (>= 128KB by default), it relies on system + memory mapping facilities, if supported. + + For a longer but slightly out of date high-level description, see + http://gee.cs.oswego.edu/dl/html/malloc.html + + 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 in order to + customize settings or to avoid overheads associated with library + versions. + +* Contents, described in more detail in "description of public routines" below. + + Standard (ANSI/SVID/...) functions: + malloc(size_t n); + calloc(size_t n_elements, size_t element_size); + free(void* p); + realloc(void* p, size_t n); + memalign(size_t alignment, size_t n); + valloc(size_t n); + mallinfo() + mallopt(int parameter_number, int parameter_value) + + Additional functions: + independent_calloc(size_t n_elements, size_t size, void* chunks[]); + independent_comalloc(size_t n_elements, size_t sizes[], void* chunks[]); + pvalloc(size_t n); + malloc_trim(size_t pad); + malloc_usable_size(void* p); + malloc_stats(); + +* Vital statistics: + + Supported pointer representation: 4 or 8 bytes + Supported size_t representation: 4 or 8 bytes + Note that size_t is allowed to be 4 bytes even if pointers are 8. + You can adjust this by defining INTERNAL_SIZE_T + + Alignment: 2 * sizeof(size_t) (default) + (i.e., 8 byte alignment with 4byte size_t). This suffices for + nearly all current machines and C compilers. However, you can + define MALLOC_ALIGNMENT to be wider than this if necessary. + + Minimum overhead per allocated chunk: 4 or 8 bytes + Each malloced chunk has a hidden word of overhead holding size + and status information. + + Minimum allocated size: 4-byte ptrs: 16 bytes (including 4 overhead) + 8-byte ptrs: 24/32 bytes (including, 4/8 overhead) + + When a chunk is freed, 12 (for 4byte ptrs) or 20 (for 8 byte + ptrs but 4 byte size) or 24 (for 8/8) additional bytes are + needed; 4 (8) for a trailing size field and 8 (16) bytes for + free list pointers. Thus, the minimum allocatable size is + 16/24/32 bytes. + + 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 2 * + sizeof(size_t) bytes plus the remainder from a system page (the + minimal mmap unit); typically 4096 or 8192 bytes. + + Maximum allocated size: 4-byte size_t: 2^32 minus about two pages + 8-byte size_t: 2^64 minus about two pages + + It is assumed that (possibly signed) size_t values suffice to + represent chunk sizes. `Possibly signed' is due to the fact + that `size_t' may be defined on a system as either a signed or + an unsigned type. The ISO C standard says that it must be + unsigned, but a few systems are known not to adhere to this. + Additionally, even when size_t is unsigned, sbrk (which is by + default used to obtain memory from system) accepts signed + arguments, and may not be able to handle size_t-wide arguments + with negative sign bit. Generally, values that would + appear as negative after accounting for overhead and alignment + are supported only via mmap(), which does not have this + limitation. + + Requests for sizes outside the allowed range will perform an optional + failure action and then return null. (Requests may also + also fail because a system is out of memory.) + + Thread-safety: thread-safe + + Compliance: I believe it is compliant with the 1997 Single Unix Specification + Also SVID/XPG, ANSI C, and probably others as well. + +* Synopsis of compile-time options: + + People have reported using previous versions of this malloc on all + versions of Unix, sometimes by tweaking some of the defines + below. It has been tested most extensively on Solaris and Linux. + People also report using it in stand-alone embedded systems. + + The implementation is in straight, hand-tuned ANSI C. It is not + at all modular. (Sorry!) It uses a lot of macros. To be at all + usable, this code should be compiled using an optimizing compiler + (for example gcc -O3) that can simplify expressions and control + paths. (FAQ: some macros import variables as arguments rather than + declare locals because people reported that some debuggers + otherwise get confused.) + + OPTION DEFAULT VALUE + + Compilation Environment options: + + HAVE_MREMAP 0 + + Changing default word sizes: + + INTERNAL_SIZE_T size_t + + Configuration and functionality options: + + USE_PUBLIC_MALLOC_WRAPPERS NOT defined + USE_MALLOC_LOCK NOT defined + MALLOC_DEBUG NOT defined + REALLOC_ZERO_BYTES_FREES 1 + TRIM_FASTBINS 0 + + Options for customizing MORECORE: + + MORECORE sbrk + MORECORE_FAILURE -1 + MORECORE_CONTIGUOUS 1 + MORECORE_CANNOT_TRIM NOT defined + MORECORE_CLEARS 1 + MMAP_AS_MORECORE_SIZE (1024 * 1024) + + Tuning options that are also dynamically changeable via mallopt: + + DEFAULT_MXFAST 64 (for 32bit), 128 (for 64bit) + DEFAULT_TRIM_THRESHOLD 128 * 1024 + DEFAULT_TOP_PAD 0 + DEFAULT_MMAP_THRESHOLD 128 * 1024 + DEFAULT_MMAP_MAX 65536 + + There are several other #defined constants and macros that you + probably don't want to touch unless you are extending or adapting malloc. */ + +/* + void* is the pointer type that malloc should say it returns +*/ + +#ifndef void +#define void void +#endif /*void*/ + +#include /* for size_t */ +#include /* for getenv(), abort() */ +#include /* for __libc_enable_secure */ + +#include +#include <_itoa.h> +#include +#include + +#include + +#include +#include /* needed for malloc_stats */ +#include +#include + +#include + +/* For uintptr_t. */ +#include + +/* For va_arg, va_start, va_end. */ +#include + +/* For MIN, MAX, powerof2. */ +#include + +/* For ALIGN_UP et. al. */ +#include + +/* For DIAG_PUSH/POP_NEEDS_COMMENT et al. */ +#include + +#include + +/* For SINGLE_THREAD_P. */ +#include + +/* + Debugging: + + Because freed chunks may be overwritten with bookkeeping fields, this + malloc will often die when freed memory is overwritten by user + programs. This can be very effective (albeit in an annoying way) + in helping track down dangling pointers. + + If you compile with -DMALLOC_DEBUG, a number of assertion checks are + enabled that will catch more memory errors. You probably won't be + able to make much sense of the actual assertion errors, but they + should help you locate incorrectly overwritten memory. The checking + is fairly extensive, and will slow down execution + noticeably. Calling malloc_stats or mallinfo with MALLOC_DEBUG set + will attempt to check every non-mmapped allocated and free chunk in + the course of computing the summmaries. (By nature, mmapped regions + cannot be checked very much automatically.) + + Setting MALLOC_DEBUG may also be helpful if you are trying to modify + this code. The assertions in the check routines spell out in more + detail the assumptions and invariants underlying the algorithms. + + Setting MALLOC_DEBUG does NOT provide an automated mechanism for + checking that all accesses to malloced memory stay within their + bounds. However, there are several add-ons and adaptations of this + or other mallocs available that do this. +*/ + +#ifndef MALLOC_DEBUG +#define MALLOC_DEBUG 0 +#endif + +#ifndef NDEBUG +# define __assert_fail(assertion, file, line, function) \ + __malloc_assert(assertion, file, line, function) + +extern const char *__progname; + +static void +__malloc_assert (const char *assertion, const char *file, unsigned int line, + const char *function) +{ + (void) __fxprintf (NULL, "%s%s%s:%u: %s%sAssertion `%s' failed.\n", + __progname, __progname[0] ? ": " : "", + file, line, + function ? function : "", function ? ": " : "", + assertion); + fflush (stderr); + abort (); +} +#endif + +#if USE_TCACHE +/* We want 64 entries. This is an arbitrary limit, which tunables can reduce. */ +# define TCACHE_MAX_BINS 64 +# define MAX_TCACHE_SIZE tidx2usize (TCACHE_MAX_BINS-1) + +/* Only used to pre-fill the tunables. */ +# define tidx2usize(idx) (((size_t) idx) * MALLOC_ALIGNMENT + MINSIZE - SIZE_SZ) + +/* When "x" is from chunksize(). */ +# define csize2tidx(x) (((x) - MINSIZE + MALLOC_ALIGNMENT - 1) / MALLOC_ALIGNMENT) +/* When "x" is a user-provided size. */ +# define usize2tidx(x) csize2tidx (request2size (x)) + +/* With rounding and alignment, the bins are... + idx 0 bytes 0..24 (64-bit) or 0..12 (32-bit) + idx 1 bytes 25..40 or 13..20 + idx 2 bytes 41..56 or 21..28 + etc. */ + +/* This is another arbitrary limit, which tunables can change. Each + tcache bin will hold at most this number of chunks. */ +# define TCACHE_FILL_COUNT 7 +#endif + + +/* + REALLOC_ZERO_BYTES_FREES should be set if a call to + realloc with zero bytes should be the same as a call to free. + This is required by the C standard. Otherwise, since this malloc + returns a unique pointer for malloc(0), so does realloc(p, 0). +*/ + +#ifndef REALLOC_ZERO_BYTES_FREES +#define REALLOC_ZERO_BYTES_FREES 1 +#endif + +/* + TRIM_FASTBINS controls whether free() of a very small chunk can + immediately lead to trimming. Setting to true (1) can reduce memory + footprint, but will almost always slow down programs that use a lot + of small chunks. + + Define this only if you are willing to give up some speed to more + aggressively reduce system-level memory footprint when releasing + memory in programs that use many small chunks. You can get + essentially the same effect by setting MXFAST to 0, but this can + lead to even greater slowdowns in programs using many small chunks. + TRIM_FASTBINS is an in-between compile-time option, that disables + only those chunks bordering topmost memory from being placed in + fastbins. +*/ + +#ifndef TRIM_FASTBINS +#define TRIM_FASTBINS 0 +#endif + + +/* Definition for getting more memory from the OS. */ +#define MORECORE (*__morecore) +#define MORECORE_FAILURE 0 +void * __default_morecore (ptrdiff_t); +void *(*__morecore)(ptrdiff_t) = __default_morecore; + + +#include + +/* + MORECORE-related declarations. By default, rely on sbrk +*/ + + +/* + MORECORE is the name of the routine to call to obtain more memory + from the system. See below for general guidance on writing + alternative MORECORE functions, as well as a version for WIN32 and a + sample version for pre-OSX macos. +*/ + +#ifndef MORECORE +#define MORECORE sbrk +#endif + +/* + MORECORE_FAILURE is the value returned upon failure of MORECORE + as well as mmap. Since it cannot be an otherwise valid memory address, + and must reflect values of standard sys calls, you probably ought not + try to redefine it. +*/ + +#ifndef MORECORE_FAILURE +#define MORECORE_FAILURE (-1) +#endif + +/* + If MORECORE_CONTIGUOUS is true, take advantage of fact that + consecutive calls to MORECORE with positive arguments always return + contiguous increasing addresses. This is true of unix sbrk. Even + if not defined, when regions happen to be contiguous, malloc will + permit allocations spanning regions obtained from different + calls. But defining this when applicable enables some stronger + consistency checks and space efficiencies. +*/ + +#ifndef MORECORE_CONTIGUOUS +#define MORECORE_CONTIGUOUS 1 +#endif + +/* + Define MORECORE_CANNOT_TRIM if your version of 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. +*/ + +/* #define MORECORE_CANNOT_TRIM */ + +/* MORECORE_CLEARS (default 1) + The degree to which the routine mapped to MORECORE zeroes out + memory: never (0), only for newly allocated space (1) or always + (2). The distinction between (1) and (2) is necessary because on + some systems, if the application first decrements and then + increments the break value, the contents of the reallocated space + are unspecified. + */ + +#ifndef MORECORE_CLEARS +# define MORECORE_CLEARS 1 +#endif + + +/* + MMAP_AS_MORECORE_SIZE is the minimum mmap size argument to use if + sbrk fails, and mmap is used as a backup. The value must be a + multiple of page size. This backup strategy generally applies only + when systems have "holes" in address space, so sbrk cannot perform + contiguous expansion, but there is still space available on system. + On systems for which this is known to be useful (i.e. most linux + kernels), this occurs only when programs allocate huge amounts of + memory. Between this, and the fact that mmap regions tend to be + limited, the size should be large, to avoid too many mmap calls and + thus avoid running out of kernel resources. */ + +#ifndef MMAP_AS_MORECORE_SIZE +#define MMAP_AS_MORECORE_SIZE (1024 * 1024) +#endif + +/* + Define HAVE_MREMAP to make realloc() use mremap() to re-allocate + large blocks. +*/ + +#ifndef HAVE_MREMAP +#define HAVE_MREMAP 0 +#endif + +/* We may need to support __malloc_initialize_hook for backwards + compatibility. */ + +#if SHLIB_COMPAT (libc, GLIBC_2_0, GLIBC_2_24) +# define HAVE_MALLOC_INIT_HOOK 1 +#else +# define HAVE_MALLOC_INIT_HOOK 0 +#endif + + +/* + 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 SVID/XPG compliant system that has + a /usr/include/malloc.h defining struct mallinfo. (If you'd like to + install such a thing yourself, cut out the preliminary declarations + as described above and below and save them in a malloc.h file. But + there's no compelling reason to bother to do this.) + + The main declaration needed is the mallinfo struct that is returned + (by-copy) by mallinfo(). The SVID/XPG 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. +*/ + + +/* ---------- description of public routines ------------ */ + +/* + malloc(size_t n) + Returns a pointer to a newly allocated chunk of at least n bytes, or null + if no space is available. Additionally, on failure, errno is + set to ENOMEM on ANSI C systems. + + If n is zero, malloc returns a minumum-sized chunk. (The minimum + size is 16 bytes on most 32bit systems, and 24 or 32 bytes on 64bit + systems.) On most systems, size_t is an unsigned type, so calls + with negative arguments 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* __libc_malloc(size_t); +libc_hidden_proto (__libc_malloc) + +/* + 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. It can have arbitrary (i.e., bad!) + effects if p has already been freed. + + Unless disabled (using mallopt), freeing very large spaces will + when possible, automatically trigger operations that give + back unused memory to the system, thus reducing program footprint. +*/ +void __libc_free(void*); +libc_hidden_proto (__libc_free) + +/* + 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* __libc_calloc(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 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. Unless the #define + REALLOC_ZERO_BYTES_FREES is set, realloc with a size argument of + zero (re)allocates a minimum-sized chunk. + + Large chunks that were internally obtained via mmap will always be + grown using malloc-copy-free sequences unless the system supports + MREMAP (currently only linux). + + The old unix realloc convention of allowing the last-free'd chunk + to be used as an argument to realloc is not supported. +*/ +void* __libc_realloc(void*, size_t); +libc_hidden_proto (__libc_realloc) + +/* + 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* __libc_memalign(size_t, size_t); +libc_hidden_proto (__libc_memalign) + +/* + 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* __libc_valloc(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. Only one of these (M_MXFAST) is used + in this malloc. The others (M_NLBLKS, M_GRAIN, M_KEEP) don't apply, + so setting them has no effect. But this malloc also supports four + 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_MXFAST 1 64 0-80 (0 disables fastbins) + M_TRIM_THRESHOLD -1 128*1024 any (-1U disables trimming) + M_TOP_PAD -2 0 any + M_MMAP_THRESHOLD -3 128*1024 any (or 0 if no MMAP support) + M_MMAP_MAX -4 65536 any (0 disables use of mmap) +*/ +int __libc_mallopt(int, int); +libc_hidden_proto (__libc_mallopt) + + +/* + 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: the number of fastbin blocks (i.e., small chunks that + have been freed but not use resused or consolidated) + hblks: current number of mmapped regions + hblkhd: total bytes held in mmapped regions + usmblks: always 0 + fsmblks: total bytes held in fastbin blocks + 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 __libc_mallinfo(void); + + +/* + pvalloc(size_t n); + Equivalent to valloc(minimum-page-that-holds(n)), that is, + round up n to nearest pagesize. + */ +void* __libc_pvalloc(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. 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 (one page or less). 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. + On systems that do not support "negative sbrks", it will always + return 0. +*/ +int __malloc_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 __malloc_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 __malloc_stats(void); + +/* + posix_memalign(void **memptr, size_t alignment, size_t size); + + POSIX wrapper like memalign(), checking for validity of size. +*/ +int __posix_memalign(void **, size_t, size_t); + +/* mallopt tuning options */ + +/* + M_MXFAST is the maximum request size used for "fastbins", special bins + that hold returned chunks without consolidating their spaces. This + enables future requests for chunks of the same size to be handled + very quickly, but can increase fragmentation, and thus increase the + overall memory footprint of a program. + + This malloc manages fastbins very conservatively yet still + efficiently, so fragmentation is rarely a problem for values less + than or equal to the default. The maximum supported value of MXFAST + is 80. You wouldn't want it any higher than this anyway. Fastbins + are designed especially for use with many small structs, objects or + strings -- the default handles structs/objects/arrays with sizes up + to 8 4byte fields, or small strings representing words, tokens, + etc. Using fastbins for larger objects normally worsens + fragmentation without improving speed. + + M_MXFAST is set in REQUEST size units. It is internally used in + chunksize units, which adds padding and alignment. You can reduce + M_MXFAST to 0 to disable all use of fastbins. This causes the malloc + algorithm to be a closer approximation of fifo-best-fit in all cases, + not just for larger requests, but will generally cause it to be + slower. +*/ + + +/* M_MXFAST is a standard SVID/XPG tuning option, usually listed in malloc.h */ +#ifndef M_MXFAST +#define M_MXFAST 1 +#endif + +#ifndef DEFAULT_MXFAST +#define DEFAULT_MXFAST (64 * SIZE_SZ / 4) +#endif + + +/* + M_TRIM_THRESHOLD is 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. + 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. + + The trim threshold and the mmap control parameters (see below) + can be traded off with one another. Trimming and mmapping are + two different ways of releasing unused memory back to the + system. Between these two, it is often possible to keep + system-level demands of a long-lived program down to a bare + minimum. For example, in one test suite of sessions measuring + the XF86 X server on Linux, using a trim threshold of 128K and a + mmap threshold of 192K led to near-minimal long term resource + consumption. + + If you are using this malloc in a long-lived program, it should + pay to experiment with these values. 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's + worth it to tune for trimming rather tham memory mapping 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. And in well-behaved long-lived programs, + controlling release of large blocks via trimming versus mapping + is usually faster. + + However, in most programs, these parameters serve mainly as + protection against the system-level effects of carrying around + massive amounts of unneeded memory. Since frequent calls to + sbrk, mmap, and munmap otherwise degrade performance, the default + parameters are set to relatively high values that serve only as + safeguards. + + The trim value It must be greater than page size to have any useful + effect. To disable trimming completely, you can set to + (unsigned long)(-1) + + Trim settings interact with fastbin (MXFAST) settings: Unless + TRIM_FASTBINS is defined, automatic trimming never takes place upon + freeing a chunk with size less than or equal to MXFAST. Trimming is + instead delayed until subsequent freeing of larger chunks. However, + you can still force an attempted trim by calling malloc_trim. + + Also, trimming is not generally possible in cases where + the main arena is obtained via mmap. + + 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. +*/ + +#define M_TRIM_THRESHOLD -1 + +#ifndef DEFAULT_TRIM_THRESHOLD +#define DEFAULT_TRIM_THRESHOLD (128 * 1024) +#endif + +/* + M_TOP_PAD is the amount of extra `padding' space to allocate or + retain whenever sbrk is called. It is used in two ways internally: + + * When sbrk is called to extend the top of the arena to satisfy + a new malloc request, this much padding is added to the sbrk + request. + + * When malloc_trim is called automatically from free(), + it is used as the `pad' argument. + + In both cases, the actual amount of padding is rounded + so that the end of the arena is always a system page boundary. + + The main reason for using padding is to avoid calling sbrk so + often. Having even a small pad greatly reduces the likelihood + that nearly every malloc request during program start-up (or + after trimming) will invoke sbrk, which needlessly wastes + time. + + Automatic rounding-up to page-size units is normally sufficient + to avoid measurable overhead, so the default is 0. However, in + systems where sbrk is relatively slow, it can pay to increase + this value, at the expense of carrying around more memory than + the program needs. +*/ + +#define M_TOP_PAD -2 + +#ifndef DEFAULT_TOP_PAD +#define DEFAULT_TOP_PAD (0) +#endif + +/* + MMAP_THRESHOLD_MAX and _MIN are the bounds on the dynamically + adjusted MMAP_THRESHOLD. +*/ + +#ifndef DEFAULT_MMAP_THRESHOLD_MIN +#define DEFAULT_MMAP_THRESHOLD_MIN (128 * 1024) +#endif + +#ifndef DEFAULT_MMAP_THRESHOLD_MAX + /* For 32-bit platforms we cannot increase the maximum mmap + threshold much because it is also the minimum value for the + maximum heap size and its alignment. Going above 512k (i.e., 1M + for new heaps) wastes too much address space. */ +# if __WORDSIZE == 32 +# define DEFAULT_MMAP_THRESHOLD_MAX (512 * 1024) +# else +# define DEFAULT_MMAP_THRESHOLD_MAX (4 * 1024 * 1024 * sizeof(long)) +# endif +#endif + +/* + M_MMAP_THRESHOLD is the request size threshold for using mmap() + to 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: + + 1. 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. + 2. Mapped memory can never become `locked' between + other chunks, as can happen with normally allocated chunks, which + means that even trimming via malloc_trim would not release them. + 3. On some systems with "holes" in address spaces, mmap can obtain + memory that sbrk cannot. + + However, it has the disadvantages that: + + 1. The space cannot be reclaimed, consolidated, and then + used to service later requests, as happens with normal chunks. + 2. It can lead to more wastage because of mmap page alignment + requirements + 3. It causes malloc performance to be more dependent on host + system memory management support routines which may vary in + implementation quality and may impose arbitrary + limitations. Generally, servicing a request via normal + malloc steps is faster than going through a system's mmap. + + The advantages of mmap nearly always outweigh disadvantages for + "large" chunks, but the value of "large" varies across systems. The + default is an empirically derived value that works well in most + systems. + + + Update in 2006: + The above was written in 2001. Since then the world has changed a lot. + Memory got bigger. Applications got bigger. The virtual address space + layout in 32 bit linux changed. + + In the new situation, brk() and mmap space is shared and there are no + artificial limits on brk size imposed by the kernel. What is more, + applications have started using transient allocations larger than the + 128Kb as was imagined in 2001. + + The price for mmap is also high now; each time glibc mmaps from the + kernel, the kernel is forced to zero out the memory it gives to the + application. Zeroing memory is expensive and eats a lot of cache and + memory bandwidth. This has nothing to do with the efficiency of the + virtual memory system, by doing mmap the kernel just has no choice but + to zero. + + In 2001, the kernel had a maximum size for brk() which was about 800 + megabytes on 32 bit x86, at that point brk() would hit the first + mmaped shared libaries and couldn't expand anymore. With current 2.6 + kernels, the VA space layout is different and brk() and mmap + both can span the entire heap at will. + + Rather than using a static threshold for the brk/mmap tradeoff, + we are now using a simple dynamic one. The goal is still to avoid + fragmentation. The old goals we kept are + 1) try to get the long lived large allocations to use mmap() + 2) really large allocations should always use mmap() + and we're adding now: + 3) transient allocations should use brk() to avoid forcing the kernel + having to zero memory over and over again + + The implementation works with a sliding threshold, which is by default + limited to go between 128Kb and 32Mb (64Mb for 64 bitmachines) and starts + out at 128Kb as per the 2001 default. + + This allows us to satisfy requirement 1) under the assumption that long + lived allocations are made early in the process' lifespan, before it has + started doing dynamic allocations of the same size (which will + increase the threshold). + + The upperbound on the threshold satisfies requirement 2) + + The threshold goes up in value when the application frees memory that was + allocated with the mmap allocator. The idea is that once the application + starts freeing memory of a certain size, it's highly probable that this is + a size the application uses for transient allocations. This estimator + is there to satisfy the new third requirement. + +*/ + +#define M_MMAP_THRESHOLD -3 + +#ifndef DEFAULT_MMAP_THRESHOLD +#define DEFAULT_MMAP_THRESHOLD DEFAULT_MMAP_THRESHOLD_MIN +#endif + +/* + M_MMAP_MAX is the maximum number of requests to simultaneously + service using mmap. This parameter exists because + some systems have a limited number of internal tables for + use by mmap, and using more than a few of them may degrade + performance. + + The default is set to a value that serves only as a safeguard. + Setting to 0 disables use of mmap for servicing large requests. +*/ + +#define M_MMAP_MAX -4 + +#ifndef DEFAULT_MMAP_MAX +#define DEFAULT_MMAP_MAX (65536) +#endif + +#include + +#ifndef RETURN_ADDRESS +#define RETURN_ADDRESS(X_) (NULL) +#endif + +/* Forward declarations. */ +struct malloc_chunk; +typedef struct malloc_chunk* mchunkptr; + +/* Internal routines. */ + +static void* _int_malloc(mstate, size_t); +static void _int_free(mstate, mchunkptr, int); +static void* _int_realloc(mstate, mchunkptr, INTERNAL_SIZE_T, + INTERNAL_SIZE_T); +static void* _int_memalign(mstate, size_t, size_t); +static void* _mid_memalign(size_t, size_t, void *); + +static void malloc_printerr(const char *str) __attribute__ ((noreturn)); + +static void* mem2mem_check(void *p, size_t sz); +static void top_check(void); +static void munmap_chunk(mchunkptr p); +#if HAVE_MREMAP +static mchunkptr mremap_chunk(mchunkptr p, size_t new_size); +#endif + +static void* malloc_check(size_t sz, const void *caller); +static void free_check(void* mem, const void *caller); +static void* realloc_check(void* oldmem, size_t bytes, + const void *caller); +static void* memalign_check(size_t alignment, size_t bytes, + const void *caller); + +/* ------------------ MMAP support ------------------ */ + + +#include +#include + +#if !defined(MAP_ANONYMOUS) && defined(MAP_ANON) +# define MAP_ANONYMOUS MAP_ANON +#endif + +#ifndef MAP_NORESERVE +# define MAP_NORESERVE 0 +#endif + +#define MMAP(addr, size, prot, flags) \ + __mmap((addr), (size), (prot), (flags)|MAP_ANONYMOUS|MAP_PRIVATE, -1, 0) + + +/* + ----------------------- Chunk representations ----------------------- +*/ + + +/* + This struct declaration is misleading (but accurate and necessary). + It declares a "view" into memory allowing access to necessary + fields at known offsets from a given base. See explanation below. +*/ + +struct malloc_chunk { + + INTERNAL_SIZE_T mchunk_prev_size; /* Size of previous chunk (if free). */ + INTERNAL_SIZE_T mchunk_size; /* Size in bytes, including overhead. */ + + struct malloc_chunk* fd; /* double links -- used only if free. */ + struct malloc_chunk* bk; + + /* Only used for large blocks: pointer to next larger size. */ + struct malloc_chunk* fd_nextsize; /* double links -- used only if free. */ + struct malloc_chunk* bk_nextsize; +}; + + +/* + malloc_chunk details: + + (The following includes lightly edited explanations by Colin Plumb.) + + Chunks of memory are maintained using a `boundary tag' method as + described in e.g., Knuth or Standish. (See the paper by Paul + Wilson ftp://ftp.cs.utexas.edu/pub/garbage/allocsrv.ps for a + survey of such techniques.) Sizes of free chunks are stored both + in the front of each chunk and at the end. This makes + consolidating fragmented chunks into bigger chunks very fast. The + size fields also hold bits representing whether chunks are free or + in use. + + An allocated chunk looks like this: + + + chunk-> +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ + | Size of previous chunk, if unallocated (P clear) | + +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ + | Size of chunk, in bytes |A|M|P| + mem-> +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ + | User data starts here... . + . . + . (malloc_usable_size() bytes) . + . | +nextchunk-> +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ + | (size of chunk, but used for application data) | + +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ + | Size of next chunk, in bytes |A|0|1| + +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ + + Where "chunk" is the front of the chunk for the purpose of most of + the malloc code, but "mem" is the pointer that is returned to the + user. "Nextchunk" is the beginning of the next contiguous chunk. + + Chunks always begin on even word boundaries, so the mem portion + (which is returned to the user) is also on an even word boundary, and + thus at least double-word aligned. + + Free chunks are stored in circular doubly-linked lists, and look like this: + + chunk-> +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ + | Size of previous chunk, if unallocated (P clear) | + +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ + `head:' | Size of chunk, in bytes |A|0|P| + mem-> +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ + | Forward pointer to next chunk in list | + +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ + | Back pointer to previous chunk in list | + +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ + | Unused space (may be 0 bytes long) . + . . + . | +nextchunk-> +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ + `foot:' | Size of chunk, in bytes | + +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ + | Size of next chunk, in bytes |A|0|0| + +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ + + The P (PREV_INUSE) bit, stored in the unused low-order bit of the + chunk size (which is always a multiple of two words), is an in-use + bit for the *previous* chunk. If that bit is *clear*, then the + word before the current chunk size contains the previous chunk + size, and can be used to find the front of the previous chunk. + The very first chunk allocated always has this bit set, + preventing access to non-existent (or non-owned) memory. If + prev_inuse is set for any given chunk, then you CANNOT determine + the size of the previous chunk, and might even get a memory + addressing fault when trying to do so. + + The A (NON_MAIN_ARENA) bit is cleared for chunks on the initial, + main arena, described by the main_arena variable. When additional + threads are spawned, each thread receives its own arena (up to a + configurable limit, after which arenas are reused for multiple + threads), and the chunks in these arenas have the A bit set. To + find the arena for a chunk on such a non-main arena, heap_for_ptr + performs a bit mask operation and indirection through the ar_ptr + member of the per-heap header heap_info (see arena.c). + + Note that the `foot' of the current chunk is actually represented + as the prev_size of the NEXT chunk. This makes it easier to + deal with alignments etc but can be very confusing when trying + to extend or adapt this code. + + The three exceptions to all this are: + + 1. The special chunk `top' doesn't bother using the + trailing size field since there is no next contiguous chunk + that would have to index off it. After initialization, `top' + is forced to always exist. If it would become less than + MINSIZE bytes long, it is replenished. + + 2. Chunks allocated via mmap, which have the second-lowest-order + bit M (IS_MMAPPED) set in their size fields. Because they are + allocated one-by-one, each must contain its own trailing size + field. If the M bit is set, the other bits are ignored + (because mmapped chunks are neither in an arena, nor adjacent + to a freed chunk). The M bit is also used for chunks which + originally came from a dumped heap via malloc_set_state in + hooks.c. + + 3. Chunks in fastbins are treated as allocated chunks from the + point of view of the chunk allocator. They are consolidated + with their neighbors only in bulk, in malloc_consolidate. +*/ + +/* + ---------- Size and alignment checks and conversions ---------- +*/ + +/* conversion from malloc headers to user pointers, and back */ + +#define chunk2mem(p) ((void*)((char*)(p) + 2*SIZE_SZ)) +#define mem2chunk(mem) ((mchunkptr)((char*)(mem) - 2*SIZE_SZ)) + +/* The smallest possible chunk */ +#define MIN_CHUNK_SIZE (offsetof(struct malloc_chunk, fd_nextsize)) + +/* The smallest size we can malloc is an aligned minimal chunk */ + +#define MINSIZE \ + (unsigned long)(((MIN_CHUNK_SIZE+MALLOC_ALIGN_MASK) & ~MALLOC_ALIGN_MASK)) + +/* Check if m has acceptable alignment */ + +#define aligned_OK(m) (((unsigned long)(m) & MALLOC_ALIGN_MASK) == 0) + +#define misaligned_chunk(p) \ + ((uintptr_t)(MALLOC_ALIGNMENT == 2 * SIZE_SZ ? (p) : chunk2mem (p)) \ + & MALLOC_ALIGN_MASK) + + +/* + Check if a request is so large that it would wrap around zero when + padded and aligned. To simplify some other code, the bound is made + low enough so that adding MINSIZE will also not wrap around zero. + */ + +#define REQUEST_OUT_OF_RANGE(req) \ + ((unsigned long) (req) >= \ + (unsigned long) (INTERNAL_SIZE_T) (-2 * MINSIZE)) + +/* pad request bytes into a usable size -- internal version */ + +#define request2size(req) \ + (((req) + SIZE_SZ + MALLOC_ALIGN_MASK < MINSIZE) ? \ + MINSIZE : \ + ((req) + SIZE_SZ + MALLOC_ALIGN_MASK) & ~MALLOC_ALIGN_MASK) + +/* Same, except also perform an argument and result check. First, we check + that the padding done by request2size didn't result in an integer + overflow. Then we check (using REQUEST_OUT_OF_RANGE) that the resulting + size isn't so large that a later alignment would lead to another integer + overflow. */ +#define checked_request2size(req, sz) \ +({ \ + (sz) = request2size (req); \ + if (((sz) < (req)) \ + || REQUEST_OUT_OF_RANGE (sz)) \ + { \ + __set_errno (ENOMEM); \ + return 0; \ + } \ +}) + +/* + --------------- Physical chunk operations --------------- + */ + + +/* size field is or'ed with PREV_INUSE when previous adjacent chunk in use */ +#define PREV_INUSE 0x1 + +/* extract inuse bit of previous chunk */ +#define prev_inuse(p) ((p)->mchunk_size & PREV_INUSE) + + +/* size field is or'ed with IS_MMAPPED if the chunk was obtained with mmap() */ +#define IS_MMAPPED 0x2 + +/* check for mmap()'ed chunk */ +#define chunk_is_mmapped(p) ((p)->mchunk_size & IS_MMAPPED) + + +/* size field is or'ed with NON_MAIN_ARENA if the chunk was obtained + from a non-main arena. This is only set immediately before handing + the chunk to the user, if necessary. */ +#define NON_MAIN_ARENA 0x4 + +/* Check for chunk from main arena. */ +#define chunk_main_arena(p) (((p)->mchunk_size & NON_MAIN_ARENA) == 0) + +/* Mark a chunk as not being on the main arena. */ +#define set_non_main_arena(p) ((p)->mchunk_size |= NON_MAIN_ARENA) + + +/* + Bits to mask off when extracting size + + Note: IS_MMAPPED is intentionally not masked off from size field in + macros for which mmapped chunks should never be seen. This should + cause helpful core dumps to occur if it is tried by accident by + people extending or adapting this malloc. + */ +#define SIZE_BITS (PREV_INUSE | IS_MMAPPED | NON_MAIN_ARENA) + +/* Get size, ignoring use bits */ +#define chunksize(p) (chunksize_nomask (p) & ~(SIZE_BITS)) + +/* Like chunksize, but do not mask SIZE_BITS. */ +#define chunksize_nomask(p) ((p)->mchunk_size) + +/* Ptr to next physical malloc_chunk. */ +#define next_chunk(p) ((mchunkptr) (((char *) (p)) + chunksize (p))) + +/* Size of the chunk below P. Only valid if !prev_inuse (P). */ +#define prev_size(p) ((p)->mchunk_prev_size) + +/* Set the size of the chunk below P. Only valid if !prev_inuse (P). */ +#define set_prev_size(p, sz) ((p)->mchunk_prev_size = (sz)) + +/* Ptr to previous physical malloc_chunk. Only valid if !prev_inuse (P). */ +#define prev_chunk(p) ((mchunkptr) (((char *) (p)) - prev_size (p))) + +/* Treat space at ptr + offset as a chunk */ +#define chunk_at_offset(p, s) ((mchunkptr) (((char *) (p)) + (s))) + +/* extract p's inuse bit */ +#define inuse(p) \ + ((((mchunkptr) (((char *) (p)) + chunksize (p)))->mchunk_size) & PREV_INUSE) + +/* set/clear chunk as being inuse without otherwise disturbing */ +#define set_inuse(p) \ + ((mchunkptr) (((char *) (p)) + chunksize (p)))->mchunk_size |= PREV_INUSE + +#define clear_inuse(p) \ + ((mchunkptr) (((char *) (p)) + chunksize (p)))->mchunk_size &= ~(PREV_INUSE) + + +/* check/set/clear inuse bits in known places */ +#define inuse_bit_at_offset(p, s) \ + (((mchunkptr) (((char *) (p)) + (s)))->mchunk_size & PREV_INUSE) + +#define set_inuse_bit_at_offset(p, s) \ + (((mchunkptr) (((char *) (p)) + (s)))->mchunk_size |= PREV_INUSE) + +#define clear_inuse_bit_at_offset(p, s) \ + (((mchunkptr) (((char *) (p)) + (s)))->mchunk_size &= ~(PREV_INUSE)) + + +/* Set size at head, without disturbing its use bit */ +#define set_head_size(p, s) ((p)->mchunk_size = (((p)->mchunk_size & SIZE_BITS) | (s))) + +/* Set size/use field */ +#define set_head(p, s) ((p)->mchunk_size = (s)) + +/* Set size at footer (only when chunk is not in use) */ +#define set_foot(p, s) (((mchunkptr) ((char *) (p) + (s)))->mchunk_prev_size = (s)) + + +#pragma GCC poison mchunk_size +#pragma GCC poison mchunk_prev_size + +/* + -------------------- Internal data structures -------------------- + + All internal state is held in an instance of malloc_state defined + below. There are no other static variables, except in two optional + cases: + * If USE_MALLOC_LOCK is defined, the mALLOC_MUTEx declared above. + * If mmap doesn't support MAP_ANONYMOUS, a dummy file descriptor + for mmap. + + Beware of lots of tricks that minimize the total bookkeeping space + requirements. The result is a little over 1K bytes (for 4byte + pointers and size_t.) + */ + +/* + Bins + + An array of bin headers for free chunks. Each bin is doubly + linked. The bins are approximately proportionally (log) spaced. + There are a lot of these bins (128). This may look excessive, but + works very well in practice. Most bins hold sizes that are + unusual as malloc request sizes, but are more usual for fragments + and consolidated sets of chunks, which is what these bins hold, so + they can be found quickly. All procedures maintain the invariant + that no consolidated chunk physically borders another one, so each + chunk in a list is known to be preceeded and followed by either + inuse chunks or the ends of memory. + + Chunks in bins are kept in size order, with ties going to the + approximately least recently used chunk. Ordering isn't needed + for the small bins, which all contain the same-sized chunks, but + facilitates best-fit allocation for larger chunks. These lists + are just sequential. Keeping them in order almost never requires + enough traversal to warrant using fancier ordered data + structures. + + Chunks of the same size are linked with the most + recently freed at the front, and allocations are taken from the + back. This results in LRU (FIFO) allocation order, which tends + to give each chunk an equal opportunity to be consolidated with + adjacent freed chunks, resulting in larger free chunks and less + fragmentation. + + To simplify use in double-linked lists, each bin header acts + as a malloc_chunk. This avoids special-casing for headers. + But to conserve space and improve locality, we allocate + only the fd/bk pointers of bins, and then use repositioning tricks + to treat these as the fields of a malloc_chunk*. + */ + +typedef struct malloc_chunk *mbinptr; + +/* addressing -- note that bin_at(0) does not exist */ +#define bin_at(m, i) \ + (mbinptr) (((char *) &((m)->bins[((i) - 1) * 2])) \ + - offsetof (struct malloc_chunk, fd)) + +/* analog of ++bin */ +#define next_bin(b) ((mbinptr) ((char *) (b) + (sizeof (mchunkptr) << 1))) + +/* Reminders about list directionality within bins */ +#define first(b) ((b)->fd) +#define last(b) ((b)->bk) + +/* Take a chunk off a bin list */ +#define unlink(AV, P, BK, FD) { \ + if (__builtin_expect (chunksize(P) != prev_size (next_chunk(P)), 0)) \ + malloc_printerr ("corrupted size vs. prev_size"); \ + FD = P->fd; \ + BK = P->bk; \ + if (__builtin_expect (FD->bk != P || BK->fd != P, 0)) \ + malloc_printerr ("corrupted double-linked list"); \ + else { \ + FD->bk = BK; \ + BK->fd = FD; \ + if (!in_smallbin_range (chunksize_nomask (P)) \ + && __builtin_expect (P->fd_nextsize != NULL, 0)) { \ + if (__builtin_expect (P->fd_nextsize->bk_nextsize != P, 0) \ + || __builtin_expect (P->bk_nextsize->fd_nextsize != P, 0)) \ + malloc_printerr ("corrupted double-linked list (not small)"); \ + if (FD->fd_nextsize == NULL) { \ + if (P->fd_nextsize == P) \ + FD->fd_nextsize = FD->bk_nextsize = FD; \ + else { \ + FD->fd_nextsize = P->fd_nextsize; \ + FD->bk_nextsize = P->bk_nextsize; \ + P->fd_nextsize->bk_nextsize = FD; \ + P->bk_nextsize->fd_nextsize = FD; \ + } \ + } else { \ + P->fd_nextsize->bk_nextsize = P->bk_nextsize; \ + P->bk_nextsize->fd_nextsize = P->fd_nextsize; \ + } \ + } \ + } \ +} + +/* + Indexing + + Bins for sizes < 512 bytes contain chunks of all the same size, spaced + 8 bytes apart. Larger bins are approximately logarithmically spaced: + + 64 bins of size 8 + 32 bins of size 64 + 16 bins of size 512 + 8 bins of size 4096 + 4 bins of size 32768 + 2 bins of size 262144 + 1 bin of size what's left + + There is actually a little bit of slop in the numbers in bin_index + for the sake of speed. This makes no difference elsewhere. + + The bins top out around 1MB because we expect to service large + requests via mmap. + + Bin 0 does not exist. Bin 1 is the unordered list; if that would be + a valid chunk size the small bins are bumped up one. + */ + +#define NBINS 128 +#define NSMALLBINS 64 +#define SMALLBIN_WIDTH MALLOC_ALIGNMENT +#define SMALLBIN_CORRECTION (MALLOC_ALIGNMENT > 2 * SIZE_SZ) +#define MIN_LARGE_SIZE ((NSMALLBINS - SMALLBIN_CORRECTION) * SMALLBIN_WIDTH) + +#define in_smallbin_range(sz) \ + ((unsigned long) (sz) < (unsigned long) MIN_LARGE_SIZE) + +#define smallbin_index(sz) \ + ((SMALLBIN_WIDTH == 16 ? (((unsigned) (sz)) >> 4) : (((unsigned) (sz)) >> 3))\ + + SMALLBIN_CORRECTION) + +#define largebin_index_32(sz) \ + (((((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 6) <= 38) ? 56 + (((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 6) :\ + ((((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 9) <= 20) ? 91 + (((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 9) :\ + ((((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 12) <= 10) ? 110 + (((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 12) :\ + ((((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 15) <= 4) ? 119 + (((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 15) :\ + ((((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 18) <= 2) ? 124 + (((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 18) :\ + 126) + +#define largebin_index_32_big(sz) \ + (((((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 6) <= 45) ? 49 + (((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 6) :\ + ((((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 9) <= 20) ? 91 + (((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 9) :\ + ((((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 12) <= 10) ? 110 + (((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 12) :\ + ((((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 15) <= 4) ? 119 + (((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 15) :\ + ((((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 18) <= 2) ? 124 + (((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 18) :\ + 126) + +// XXX It remains to be seen whether it is good to keep the widths of +// XXX the buckets the same or whether it should be scaled by a factor +// XXX of two as well. +#define largebin_index_64(sz) \ + (((((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 6) <= 48) ? 48 + (((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 6) :\ + ((((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 9) <= 20) ? 91 + (((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 9) :\ + ((((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 12) <= 10) ? 110 + (((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 12) :\ + ((((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 15) <= 4) ? 119 + (((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 15) :\ + ((((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 18) <= 2) ? 124 + (((unsigned long) (sz)) >> 18) :\ + 126) + +#define largebin_index(sz) \ + (SIZE_SZ == 8 ? largebin_index_64 (sz) \ + : MALLOC_ALIGNMENT == 16 ? largebin_index_32_big (sz) \ + : largebin_index_32 (sz)) + +#define bin_index(sz) \ + ((in_smallbin_range (sz)) ? smallbin_index (sz) : largebin_index (sz)) + + +/* + Unsorted chunks + + All remainders from chunk splits, as well as all returned chunks, + are first placed in the "unsorted" bin. They are then placed + in regular bins after malloc gives them ONE chance to be used before + binning. So, basically, the unsorted_chunks list acts as a queue, + with chunks being placed on it in free (and malloc_consolidate), + and taken off (to be either used or placed in bins) in malloc. + + The NON_MAIN_ARENA flag is never set for unsorted chunks, so it + does not have to be taken into account in size comparisons. + */ + +/* The otherwise unindexable 1-bin is used to hold unsorted chunks. */ +#define unsorted_chunks(M) (bin_at (M, 1)) + +/* + Top + + The top-most available chunk (i.e., the one bordering the end of + available memory) is treated specially. It is never included in + any bin, is used only if no other chunk is available, and is + released back to the system if it is very large (see + M_TRIM_THRESHOLD). Because top initially + points to its own bin with initial zero size, thus forcing + extension on the first malloc request, we avoid having any special + code in malloc to check whether it even exists yet. But we still + need to do so when getting memory from system, so we make + initial_top treat the bin as a legal but unusable chunk during the + interval between initialization and the first call to + sysmalloc. (This is somewhat delicate, since it relies on + the 2 preceding words to be zero during this interval as well.) + */ + +/* Conveniently, the unsorted bin can be used as dummy top on first call */ +#define initial_top(M) (unsorted_chunks (M)) + +/* + Binmap + + To help compensate for the large number of bins, a one-level index + structure is used for bin-by-bin searching. `binmap' is a + bitvector recording whether bins are definitely empty so they can + be skipped over during during traversals. The bits are NOT always + cleared as soon as bins are empty, but instead only + when they are noticed to be empty during traversal in malloc. + */ + +/* Conservatively use 32 bits per map word, even if on 64bit system */ +#define BINMAPSHIFT 5 +#define BITSPERMAP (1U << BINMAPSHIFT) +#define BINMAPSIZE (NBINS / BITSPERMAP) + +#define idx2block(i) ((i) >> BINMAPSHIFT) +#define idx2bit(i) ((1U << ((i) & ((1U << BINMAPSHIFT) - 1)))) + +#define mark_bin(m, i) ((m)->binmap[idx2block (i)] |= idx2bit (i)) +#define unmark_bin(m, i) ((m)->binmap[idx2block (i)] &= ~(idx2bit (i))) +#define get_binmap(m, i) ((m)->binmap[idx2block (i)] & idx2bit (i)) + +/* + Fastbins + + An array of lists holding recently freed small chunks. Fastbins + are not doubly linked. It is faster to single-link them, and + since chunks are never removed from the middles of these lists, + double linking is not necessary. Also, unlike regular bins, they + are not even processed in FIFO order (they use faster LIFO) since + ordering doesn't much matter in the transient contexts in which + fastbins are normally used. + + Chunks in fastbins keep their inuse bit set, so they cannot + be consolidated with other free chunks. malloc_consolidate + releases all chunks in fastbins and consolidates them with + other free chunks. + */ + +typedef struct malloc_chunk *mfastbinptr; +#define fastbin(ar_ptr, idx) ((ar_ptr)->fastbinsY[idx]) + +/* offset 2 to use otherwise unindexable first 2 bins */ +#define fastbin_index(sz) \ + ((((unsigned int) (sz)) >> (SIZE_SZ == 8 ? 4 : 3)) - 2) + + +/* The maximum fastbin request size we support */ +#define MAX_FAST_SIZE (80 * SIZE_SZ / 4) + +#define NFASTBINS (fastbin_index (request2size (MAX_FAST_SIZE)) + 1) + +/* + FASTBIN_CONSOLIDATION_THRESHOLD is the size of a chunk in free() + that triggers automatic consolidation of possibly-surrounding + fastbin chunks. This is a heuristic, so the exact value should not + matter too much. It is defined at half the default trim threshold as a + compromise heuristic to only attempt consolidation if it is likely + to lead to trimming. However, it is not dynamically tunable, since + consolidation reduces fragmentation surrounding large chunks even + if trimming is not used. + */ + +#define FASTBIN_CONSOLIDATION_THRESHOLD (65536UL) + +/* + NONCONTIGUOUS_BIT indicates that MORECORE does not return contiguous + regions. Otherwise, contiguity is exploited in merging together, + when possible, results from consecutive MORECORE calls. + + The initial value comes from MORECORE_CONTIGUOUS, but is + changed dynamically if mmap is ever used as an sbrk substitute. + */ + +#define NONCONTIGUOUS_BIT (2U) + +#define contiguous(M) (((M)->flags & NONCONTIGUOUS_BIT) == 0) +#define noncontiguous(M) (((M)->flags & NONCONTIGUOUS_BIT) != 0) +#define set_noncontiguous(M) ((M)->flags |= NONCONTIGUOUS_BIT) +#define set_contiguous(M) ((M)->flags &= ~NONCONTIGUOUS_BIT) + +/* Maximum size of memory handled in fastbins. */ +static INTERNAL_SIZE_T global_max_fast; + +/* + Set value of max_fast. + Use impossibly small value if 0. + Precondition: there are no existing fastbin chunks in the main arena. + Since do_check_malloc_state () checks this, we call malloc_consolidate () + before changing max_fast. Note other arenas will leak their fast bin + entries if max_fast is reduced. + */ + +#define set_max_fast(s) \ + global_max_fast = (((s) == 0) \ + ? SMALLBIN_WIDTH : ((s + SIZE_SZ) & ~MALLOC_ALIGN_MASK)) + +static inline INTERNAL_SIZE_T +get_max_fast (void) +{ + /* Tell the GCC optimizers that global_max_fast is never larger + than MAX_FAST_SIZE. This avoids out-of-bounds array accesses in + _int_malloc after constant propagation of the size parameter. + (The code never executes because malloc preserves the + global_max_fast invariant, but the optimizers may not recognize + this.) */ + if (global_max_fast > MAX_FAST_SIZE) + __builtin_unreachable (); + return global_max_fast; +} + +/* + ----------- Internal state representation and initialization ----------- + */ + +/* + have_fastchunks indicates that there are probably some fastbin chunks. + It is set true on entering a chunk into any fastbin, and cleared early in + malloc_consolidate. The value is approximate since it may be set when there + are no fastbin chunks, or it may be clear even if there are fastbin chunks + available. Given it's sole purpose is to reduce number of redundant calls to + malloc_consolidate, it does not affect correctness. As a result we can safely + use relaxed atomic accesses. + */ + + +struct malloc_state +{ + /* Serialize access. */ + __libc_lock_define (, mutex); + + /* Flags (formerly in max_fast). */ + int flags; + + /* Set if the fastbin chunks contain recently inserted free blocks. */ + /* Note this is a bool but not all targets support atomics on booleans. */ + int have_fastchunks; + + /* Fastbins */ + mfastbinptr fastbinsY[NFASTBINS]; + + /* Base of the topmost chunk -- not otherwise kept in a bin */ + mchunkptr top; + + /* The remainder from the most recent split of a small request */ + mchunkptr last_remainder; + + /* Normal bins packed as described above */ + mchunkptr bins[NBINS * 2 - 2]; + + /* Bitmap of bins */ + unsigned int binmap[BINMAPSIZE]; + + /* Linked list */ + struct malloc_state *next; + + /* Linked list for free arenas. Access to this field is serialized + by free_list_lock in arena.c. */ + struct malloc_state *next_free; + + /* Number of threads attached to this arena. 0 if the arena is on + the free list. Access to this field is serialized by + free_list_lock in arena.c. */ + INTERNAL_SIZE_T attached_threads; + + /* Memory allocated from the system in this arena. */ + INTERNAL_SIZE_T system_mem; + INTERNAL_SIZE_T max_system_mem; +}; + +struct malloc_par +{ + /* Tunable parameters */ + unsigned long trim_threshold; + INTERNAL_SIZE_T top_pad; + INTERNAL_SIZE_T mmap_threshold; + INTERNAL_SIZE_T arena_test; + INTERNAL_SIZE_T arena_max; + + /* Memory map support */ + int n_mmaps; + int n_mmaps_max; + int max_n_mmaps; + /* the mmap_threshold is dynamic, until the user sets + it manually, at which point we need to disable any + dynamic behavior. */ + int no_dyn_threshold; + + /* Statistics */ + INTERNAL_SIZE_T mmapped_mem; + INTERNAL_SIZE_T max_mmapped_mem; + + /* First address handed out by MORECORE/sbrk. */ + char *sbrk_base; + +#if USE_TCACHE + /* Maximum number of buckets to use. */ + size_t tcache_bins; + size_t tcache_max_bytes; + /* Maximum number of chunks in each bucket. */ + size_t tcache_count; + /* Maximum number of chunks to remove from the unsorted list, which + aren't used to prefill the cache. */ + size_t tcache_unsorted_limit; +#endif +}; + +/* There are several instances of this struct ("arenas") in this + malloc. If you are adapting this malloc in a way that does NOT use + a static or mmapped malloc_state, you MUST explicitly zero-fill it + before using. This malloc relies on the property that malloc_state + is initialized to all zeroes (as is true of C statics). */ + +static struct malloc_state main_arena = +{ + .mutex = _LIBC_LOCK_INITIALIZER, + .next = &main_arena, + .attached_threads = 1 +}; + +/* These variables are used for undumping support. Chunked are marked + as using mmap, but we leave them alone if they fall into this + range. NB: The chunk size for these chunks only includes the + initial size field (of SIZE_SZ bytes), there is no trailing size + field (unlike with regular mmapped chunks). */ +static mchunkptr dumped_main_arena_start; /* Inclusive. */ +static mchunkptr dumped_main_arena_end; /* Exclusive. */ + +/* True if the pointer falls into the dumped arena. Use this after + chunk_is_mmapped indicates a chunk is mmapped. */ +#define DUMPED_MAIN_ARENA_CHUNK(p) \ + ((p) >= dumped_main_arena_start && (p) < dumped_main_arena_end) + +/* There is only one instance of the malloc parameters. */ + +static struct malloc_par mp_ = +{ + .top_pad = DEFAULT_TOP_PAD, + .n_mmaps_max = DEFAULT_MMAP_MAX, + .mmap_threshold = DEFAULT_MMAP_THRESHOLD, + .trim_threshold = DEFAULT_TRIM_THRESHOLD, +#define NARENAS_FROM_NCORES(n) ((n) * (sizeof (long) == 4 ? 2 : 8)) + .arena_test = NARENAS_FROM_NCORES (1) +#if USE_TCACHE + , + .tcache_count = TCACHE_FILL_COUNT, + .tcache_bins = TCACHE_MAX_BINS, + .tcache_max_bytes = tidx2usize (TCACHE_MAX_BINS-1), + .tcache_unsorted_limit = 0 /* No limit. */ +#endif +}; + +/* + Initialize a malloc_state struct. + + This is called from ptmalloc_init () or from _int_new_arena () + when creating a new arena. + */ + +static void +malloc_init_state (mstate av) +{ + int i; + mbinptr bin; + + /* Establish circular links for normal bins */ + for (i = 1; i < NBINS; ++i) + { + bin = bin_at (av, i); + bin->fd = bin->bk = bin; + } + +#if MORECORE_CONTIGUOUS + if (av != &main_arena) +#endif + set_noncontiguous (av); + if (av == &main_arena) + set_max_fast (DEFAULT_MXFAST); + atomic_store_relaxed (&av->have_fastchunks, false); + + av->top = initial_top (av); +} + +/* + Other internal utilities operating on mstates + */ + +static void *sysmalloc (INTERNAL_SIZE_T, mstate); +static int systrim (size_t, mstate); +static void malloc_consolidate (mstate); + + +/* -------------- Early definitions for debugging hooks ---------------- */ + +/* Define and initialize the hook variables. These weak definitions must + appear before any use of the variables in a function (arena.c uses one). */ +#ifndef weak_variable +/* In GNU libc we want the hook variables to be weak definitions to + avoid a problem with Emacs. */ +# define weak_variable weak_function +#endif + +/* Forward declarations. */ +static void *malloc_hook_ini (size_t sz, + const void *caller) __THROW; +static void *realloc_hook_ini (void *ptr, size_t sz, + const void *caller) __THROW; +static void *memalign_hook_ini (size_t alignment, size_t sz, + const void *caller) __THROW; + +#if HAVE_MALLOC_INIT_HOOK +void weak_variable (*__malloc_initialize_hook) (void) = NULL; +compat_symbol (libc, __malloc_initialize_hook, + __malloc_initialize_hook, GLIBC_2_0); +#endif + +void weak_variable (*__free_hook) (void *__ptr, + const void *) = NULL; +void *weak_variable (*__malloc_hook) + (size_t __size, const void *) = malloc_hook_ini; +void *weak_variable (*__realloc_hook) + (void *__ptr, size_t __size, const void *) + = realloc_hook_ini; +void *weak_variable (*__memalign_hook) + (size_t __alignment, size_t __size, const void *) + = memalign_hook_ini; +void weak_variable (*__after_morecore_hook) (void) = NULL; + +/* This function is called from the arena shutdown hook, to free the + thread cache (if it exists). */ +static void tcache_thread_shutdown (void); + +/* ------------------ Testing support ----------------------------------*/ + +static int perturb_byte; + +static void +alloc_perturb (char *p, size_t n) +{ + if (__glibc_unlikely (perturb_byte)) + memset (p, perturb_byte ^ 0xff, n); +} + +static void +free_perturb (char *p, size_t n) +{ + if (__glibc_unlikely (perturb_byte)) + memset (p, perturb_byte, n); +} + + + +#include + +/* ------------------- Support for multiple arenas -------------------- */ +#include "arena.c" + +/* + Debugging support + + These routines make a number of assertions about the states + of data structures that should be true at all times. If any + are not true, it's very likely that a user program has somehow + trashed memory. (It's also possible that there is a coding error + in malloc. In which case, please report it!) + */ + +#if !MALLOC_DEBUG + +# define check_chunk(A, P) +# define check_free_chunk(A, P) +# define check_inuse_chunk(A, P) +# define check_remalloced_chunk(A, P, N) +# define check_malloced_chunk(A, P, N) +# define check_malloc_state(A) + +#else + +# define check_chunk(A, P) do_check_chunk (A, P) +# define check_free_chunk(A, P) do_check_free_chunk (A, P) +# define check_inuse_chunk(A, P) do_check_inuse_chunk (A, P) +# define check_remalloced_chunk(A, P, N) do_check_remalloced_chunk (A, P, N) +# define check_malloced_chunk(A, P, N) do_check_malloced_chunk (A, P, N) +# define check_malloc_state(A) do_check_malloc_state (A) + +/* + Properties of all chunks + */ + +static void +do_check_chunk (mstate av, mchunkptr p) +{ + unsigned long sz = chunksize (p); + /* min and max possible addresses assuming contiguous allocation */ + char *max_address = (char *) (av->top) + chunksize (av->top); + char *min_address = max_address - av->system_mem; + + if (!chunk_is_mmapped (p)) + { + /* Has legal address ... */ + if (p != av->top) + { + if (contiguous (av)) + { + assert (((char *) p) >= min_address); + assert (((char *) p + sz) <= ((char *) (av->top))); + } + } + else + { + /* top size is always at least MINSIZE */ + assert ((unsigned long) (sz) >= MINSIZE); + /* top predecessor always marked inuse */ + assert (prev_inuse (p)); + } + } + else if (!DUMPED_MAIN_ARENA_CHUNK (p)) + { + /* address is outside main heap */ + if (contiguous (av) && av->top != initial_top (av)) + { + assert (((char *) p) < min_address || ((char *) p) >= max_address); + } + /* chunk is page-aligned */ + assert (((prev_size (p) + sz) & (GLRO (dl_pagesize) - 1)) == 0); + /* mem is aligned */ + assert (aligned_OK (chunk2mem (p))); + } +} + +/* + Properties of free chunks + */ + +static void +do_check_free_chunk (mstate av, mchunkptr p) +{ + INTERNAL_SIZE_T sz = chunksize_nomask (p) & ~(PREV_INUSE | NON_MAIN_ARENA); + mchunkptr next = chunk_at_offset (p, sz); + + do_check_chunk (av, p); + + /* Chunk must claim to be free ... */ + assert (!inuse (p)); + assert (!chunk_is_mmapped (p)); + + /* Unless a special marker, must have OK fields */ + if ((unsigned long) (sz) >= MINSIZE) + { + assert ((sz & MALLOC_ALIGN_MASK) == 0); + assert (aligned_OK (chunk2mem (p))); + /* ... matching footer field */ + assert (prev_size (next_chunk (p)) == sz); + /* ... and is fully consolidated */ + assert (prev_inuse (p)); + assert (next == av->top || inuse (next)); + + /* ... and has minimally sane links */ + assert (p->fd->bk == p); + assert (p->bk->fd == p); + } + else /* markers are always of size SIZE_SZ */ + assert (sz == SIZE_SZ); +} + +/* + Properties of inuse chunks + */ + +static void +do_check_inuse_chunk (mstate av, mchunkptr p) +{ + mchunkptr next; + + do_check_chunk (av, p); + + if (chunk_is_mmapped (p)) + return; /* mmapped chunks have no next/prev */ + + /* Check whether it claims to be in use ... */ + assert (inuse (p)); + + next = next_chunk (p); + + /* ... and is surrounded by OK chunks. + Since more things can be checked with free chunks than inuse ones, + if an inuse chunk borders them and debug is on, it's worth doing them. + */ + if (!prev_inuse (p)) + { + /* Note that we cannot even look at prev unless it is not inuse */ + mchunkptr prv = prev_chunk (p); + assert (next_chunk (prv) == p); + do_check_free_chunk (av, prv); + } + + if (next == av->top) + { + assert (prev_inuse (next)); + assert (chunksize (next) >= MINSIZE); + } + else if (!inuse (next)) + do_check_free_chunk (av, next); +} + +/* + Properties of chunks recycled from fastbins + */ + +static void +do_check_remalloced_chunk (mstate av, mchunkptr p, INTERNAL_SIZE_T s) +{ + INTERNAL_SIZE_T sz = chunksize_nomask (p) & ~(PREV_INUSE | NON_MAIN_ARENA); + + if (!chunk_is_mmapped (p)) + { + assert (av == arena_for_chunk (p)); + if (chunk_main_arena (p)) + assert (av == &main_arena); + else + assert (av != &main_arena); + } + + do_check_inuse_chunk (av, p); + + /* Legal size ... */ + assert ((sz & MALLOC_ALIGN_MASK) == 0); + assert ((unsigned long) (sz) >= MINSIZE); + /* ... and alignment */ + assert (aligned_OK (chunk2mem (p))); + /* chunk is less than MINSIZE more than request */ + assert ((long) (sz) - (long) (s) >= 0); + assert ((long) (sz) - (long) (s + MINSIZE) < 0); +} + +/* + Properties of nonrecycled chunks at the point they are malloced + */ + +static void +do_check_malloced_chunk (mstate av, mchunkptr p, INTERNAL_SIZE_T s) +{ + /* same as recycled case ... */ + do_check_remalloced_chunk (av, p, s); + + /* + ... plus, must obey implementation invariant that prev_inuse is + always true of any allocated chunk; i.e., that each allocated + chunk borders either a previously allocated and still in-use + chunk, or the base of its memory arena. This is ensured + by making all allocations from the `lowest' part of any found + chunk. This does not necessarily hold however for chunks + recycled via fastbins. + */ + + assert (prev_inuse (p)); +} + + +/* + Properties of malloc_state. + + This may be useful for debugging malloc, as well as detecting user + programmer errors that somehow write into malloc_state. + + If you are extending or experimenting with this malloc, you can + probably figure out how to hack this routine to print out or + display chunk addresses, sizes, bins, and other instrumentation. + */ + +static void +do_check_malloc_state (mstate av) +{ + int i; + mchunkptr p; + mchunkptr q; + mbinptr b; + unsigned int idx; + INTERNAL_SIZE_T size; + unsigned long total = 0; + int max_fast_bin; + + /* internal size_t must be no wider than pointer type */ + assert (sizeof (INTERNAL_SIZE_T) <= sizeof (char *)); + + /* alignment is a power of 2 */ + assert ((MALLOC_ALIGNMENT & (MALLOC_ALIGNMENT - 1)) == 0); + + /* Check the arena is initialized. */ + assert (av->top != 0); + + /* No memory has been allocated yet, so doing more tests is not possible. */ + if (av->top == initial_top (av)) + return; + + /* pagesize is a power of 2 */ + assert (powerof2(GLRO (dl_pagesize))); + + /* A contiguous main_arena is consistent with sbrk_base. */ + if (av == &main_arena && contiguous (av)) + assert ((char *) mp_.sbrk_base + av->system_mem == + (char *) av->top + chunksize (av->top)); + + /* properties of fastbins */ + + /* max_fast is in allowed range */ + assert ((get_max_fast () & ~1) <= request2size (MAX_FAST_SIZE)); + + max_fast_bin = fastbin_index (get_max_fast ()); + + for (i = 0; i < NFASTBINS; ++i) + { + p = fastbin (av, i); + + /* The following test can only be performed for the main arena. + While mallopt calls malloc_consolidate to get rid of all fast + bins (especially those larger than the new maximum) this does + only happen for the main arena. Trying to do this for any + other arena would mean those arenas have to be locked and + malloc_consolidate be called for them. This is excessive. And + even if this is acceptable to somebody it still cannot solve + the problem completely since if the arena is locked a + concurrent malloc call might create a new arena which then + could use the newly invalid fast bins. */ + + /* all bins past max_fast are empty */ + if (av == &main_arena && i > max_fast_bin) + assert (p == 0); + + while (p != 0) + { + /* each chunk claims to be inuse */ + do_check_inuse_chunk (av, p); + total += chunksize (p); + /* chunk belongs in this bin */ + assert (fastbin_index (chunksize (p)) == i); + p = p->fd; + } + } + + /* check normal bins */ + for (i = 1; i < NBINS; ++i) + { + b = bin_at (av, i); + + /* binmap is accurate (except for bin 1 == unsorted_chunks) */ + if (i >= 2) + { + unsigned int binbit = get_binmap (av, i); + int empty = last (b) == b; + if (!binbit) + assert (empty); + else if (!empty) + assert (binbit); + } + + for (p = last (b); p != b; p = p->bk) + { + /* each chunk claims to be free */ + do_check_free_chunk (av, p); + size = chunksize (p); + total += size; + if (i >= 2) + { + /* chunk belongs in bin */ + idx = bin_index (size); + assert (idx == i); + /* lists are sorted */ + assert (p->bk == b || + (unsigned long) chunksize (p->bk) >= (unsigned long) chunksize (p)); + + if (!in_smallbin_range (size)) + { + if (p->fd_nextsize != NULL) + { + if (p->fd_nextsize == p) + assert (p->bk_nextsize == p); + else + { + if (p->fd_nextsize == first (b)) + assert (chunksize (p) < chunksize (p->fd_nextsize)); + else + assert (chunksize (p) > chunksize (p->fd_nextsize)); + + if (p == first (b)) + assert (chunksize (p) > chunksize (p->bk_nextsize)); + else + assert (chunksize (p) < chunksize (p->bk_nextsize)); + } + } + else + assert (p->bk_nextsize == NULL); + } + } + else if (!in_smallbin_range (size)) + assert (p->fd_nextsize == NULL && p->bk_nextsize == NULL); + /* chunk is followed by a legal chain of inuse chunks */ + for (q = next_chunk (p); + (q != av->top && inuse (q) && + (unsigned long) (chunksize (q)) >= MINSIZE); + q = next_chunk (q)) + do_check_inuse_chunk (av, q); + } + } + + /* top chunk is OK */ + check_chunk (av, av->top); +} +#endif + + +/* ----------------- Support for debugging hooks -------------------- */ +#include "hooks.c" + + +/* ----------- Routines dealing with system allocation -------------- */ + +/* + sysmalloc handles malloc cases requiring more memory from the system. + On entry, it is assumed that av->top does not have enough + space to service request for nb bytes, thus requiring that av->top + be extended or replaced. + */ + +static void * +sysmalloc (INTERNAL_SIZE_T nb, mstate av) +{ + mchunkptr old_top; /* incoming value of av->top */ + INTERNAL_SIZE_T old_size; /* its size */ + char *old_end; /* its end address */ + + long size; /* arg to first MORECORE or mmap call */ + char *brk; /* return value from MORECORE */ + + long correction; /* arg to 2nd MORECORE call */ + char *snd_brk; /* 2nd return val */ + + INTERNAL_SIZE_T front_misalign; /* unusable bytes at front of new space */ + INTERNAL_SIZE_T end_misalign; /* partial page left at end of new space */ + char *aligned_brk; /* aligned offset into brk */ + + mchunkptr p; /* the allocated/returned chunk */ + mchunkptr remainder; /* remainder from allocation */ + unsigned long remainder_size; /* its size */ + + + size_t pagesize = GLRO (dl_pagesize); + bool tried_mmap = false; + + + /* + If have mmap, and the request size meets the mmap threshold, and + the system supports mmap, and there are few enough currently + allocated mmapped regions, try to directly map this request + rather than expanding top. + */ + + if (av == NULL + || ((unsigned long) (nb) >= (unsigned long) (mp_.mmap_threshold) + && (mp_.n_mmaps < mp_.n_mmaps_max))) + { + char *mm; /* return value from mmap call*/ + + try_mmap: + /* + Round up size to nearest page. For mmapped chunks, the overhead + is one SIZE_SZ unit larger than for normal chunks, because there + is no following chunk whose prev_size field could be used. + + See the front_misalign handling below, for glibc there is no + need for further alignments unless we have have high alignment. + */ + if (MALLOC_ALIGNMENT == 2 * SIZE_SZ) + size = ALIGN_UP (nb + SIZE_SZ, pagesize); + else + size = ALIGN_UP (nb + SIZE_SZ + MALLOC_ALIGN_MASK, pagesize); + tried_mmap = true; + + /* Don't try if size wraps around 0 */ + if ((unsigned long) (size) > (unsigned long) (nb)) + { + mm = (char *) (MMAP (0, size, PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE, 0)); + + if (mm != MAP_FAILED) + { + /* + The offset to the start of the mmapped region is stored + in the prev_size field of the chunk. This allows us to adjust + returned start address to meet alignment requirements here + and in memalign(), and still be able to compute proper + address argument for later munmap in free() and realloc(). + */ + + if (MALLOC_ALIGNMENT == 2 * SIZE_SZ) + { + /* For glibc, chunk2mem increases the address by 2*SIZE_SZ and + MALLOC_ALIGN_MASK is 2*SIZE_SZ-1. Each mmap'ed area is page + aligned and therefore definitely MALLOC_ALIGN_MASK-aligned. */ + assert (((INTERNAL_SIZE_T) chunk2mem (mm) & MALLOC_ALIGN_MASK) == 0); + front_misalign = 0; + } + else + front_misalign = (INTERNAL_SIZE_T) chunk2mem (mm) & MALLOC_ALIGN_MASK; + if (front_misalign > 0) + { + correction = MALLOC_ALIGNMENT - front_misalign; + p = (mchunkptr) (mm + correction); + set_prev_size (p, correction); + set_head (p, (size - correction) | IS_MMAPPED); + } + else + { + p = (mchunkptr) mm; + set_prev_size (p, 0); + set_head (p, size | IS_MMAPPED); + } + + /* update statistics */ + + int new = atomic_exchange_and_add (&mp_.n_mmaps, 1) + 1; + atomic_max (&mp_.max_n_mmaps, new); + + unsigned long sum; + sum = atomic_exchange_and_add (&mp_.mmapped_mem, size) + size; + atomic_max (&mp_.max_mmapped_mem, sum); + + check_chunk (av, p); + + return chunk2mem (p); + } + } + } + + /* There are no usable arenas and mmap also failed. */ + if (av == NULL) + return 0; + + /* Record incoming configuration of top */ + + old_top = av->top; + old_size = chunksize (old_top); + old_end = (char *) (chunk_at_offset (old_top, old_size)); + + brk = snd_brk = (char *) (MORECORE_FAILURE); + + /* + If not the first time through, we require old_size to be + at least MINSIZE and to have prev_inuse set. + */ + + assert ((old_top == initial_top (av) && old_size == 0) || + ((unsigned long) (old_size) >= MINSIZE && + prev_inuse (old_top) && + ((unsigned long) old_end & (pagesize - 1)) == 0)); + + /* Precondition: not enough current space to satisfy nb request */ + assert ((unsigned long) (old_size) < (unsigned long) (nb + MINSIZE)); + + + if (av != &main_arena) + { + heap_info *old_heap, *heap; + size_t old_heap_size; + + /* First try to extend the current heap. */ + old_heap = heap_for_ptr (old_top); + old_heap_size = old_heap->size; + if ((long) (MINSIZE + nb - old_size) > 0 + && grow_heap (old_heap, MINSIZE + nb - old_size) == 0) + { + av->system_mem += old_heap->size - old_heap_size; + set_head (old_top, (((char *) old_heap + old_heap->size) - (char *) old_top) + | PREV_INUSE); + } + else if ((heap = new_heap (nb + (MINSIZE + sizeof (*heap)), mp_.top_pad))) + { + /* Use a newly allocated heap. */ + heap->ar_ptr = av; + heap->prev = old_heap; + av->system_mem += heap->size; + /* Set up the new top. */ + top (av) = chunk_at_offset (heap, sizeof (*heap)); + set_head (top (av), (heap->size - sizeof (*heap)) | PREV_INUSE); + + /* Setup fencepost and free the old top chunk with a multiple of + MALLOC_ALIGNMENT in size. */ + /* The fencepost takes at least MINSIZE bytes, because it might + become the top chunk again later. Note that a footer is set + up, too, although the chunk is marked in use. */ + old_size = (old_size - MINSIZE) & ~MALLOC_ALIGN_MASK; + set_head (chunk_at_offset (old_top, old_size + 2 * SIZE_SZ), 0 | PREV_INUSE); + if (old_size >= MINSIZE) + { + set_head (chunk_at_offset (old_top, old_size), (2 * SIZE_SZ) | PREV_INUSE); + set_foot (chunk_at_offset (old_top, old_size), (2 * SIZE_SZ)); + set_head (old_top, old_size | PREV_INUSE | NON_MAIN_ARENA); + _int_free (av, old_top, 1); + } + else + { + set_head (old_top, (old_size + 2 * SIZE_SZ) | PREV_INUSE); + set_foot (old_top, (old_size + 2 * SIZE_SZ)); + } + } + else if (!tried_mmap) + /* We can at least try to use to mmap memory. */ + goto try_mmap; + } + else /* av == main_arena */ + + + { /* Request enough space for nb + pad + overhead */ + size = nb + mp_.top_pad + MINSIZE; + + /* + If contiguous, we can subtract out existing space that we hope to + combine with new space. We add it back later only if + we don't actually get contiguous space. + */ + + if (contiguous (av)) + size -= old_size; + + /* + Round to a multiple of page size. + If MORECORE is not contiguous, this ensures that we only call it + with whole-page arguments. And if MORECORE is contiguous and + this is not first time through, this preserves page-alignment of + previous calls. Otherwise, we correct to page-align below. + */ + + size = ALIGN_UP (size, pagesize); + + /* + Don't try to call MORECORE if argument is so big as to appear + negative. Note that since mmap takes size_t arg, it may succeed + below even if we cannot call MORECORE. + */ + + if (size > 0) + { + brk = (char *) (MORECORE (size)); + LIBC_PROBE (memory_sbrk_more, 2, brk, size); + } + + if (brk != (char *) (MORECORE_FAILURE)) + { + /* Call the `morecore' hook if necessary. */ + void (*hook) (void) = atomic_forced_read (__after_morecore_hook); + if (__builtin_expect (hook != NULL, 0)) + (*hook)(); + } + else + { + /* + If have mmap, try using it as a backup when MORECORE fails or + cannot be used. This is worth doing on systems that have "holes" in + address space, so sbrk cannot extend to give contiguous space, but + space is available elsewhere. Note that we ignore mmap max count + and threshold limits, since the space will not be used as a + segregated mmap region. + */ + + /* Cannot merge with old top, so add its size back in */ + if (contiguous (av)) + size = ALIGN_UP (size + old_size, pagesize); + + /* If we are relying on mmap as backup, then use larger units */ + if ((unsigned long) (size) < (unsigned long) (MMAP_AS_MORECORE_SIZE)) + size = MMAP_AS_MORECORE_SIZE; + + /* Don't try if size wraps around 0 */ + if ((unsigned long) (size) > (unsigned long) (nb)) + { + char *mbrk = (char *) (MMAP (0, size, PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE, 0)); + + if (mbrk != MAP_FAILED) + { + /* We do not need, and cannot use, another sbrk call to find end */ + brk = mbrk; + snd_brk = brk + size; + + /* + Record that we no longer have a contiguous sbrk region. + After the first time mmap is used as backup, we do not + ever rely on contiguous space since this could incorrectly + bridge regions. + */ + set_noncontiguous (av); + } + } + } + + if (brk != (char *) (MORECORE_FAILURE)) + { + if (mp_.sbrk_base == 0) + mp_.sbrk_base = brk; + av->system_mem += size; + + /* + If MORECORE extends previous space, we can likewise extend top size. + */ + + if (brk == old_end && snd_brk == (char *) (MORECORE_FAILURE)) + set_head (old_top, (size + old_size) | PREV_INUSE); + + else if (contiguous (av) && old_size && brk < old_end) + /* Oops! Someone else killed our space.. Can't touch anything. */ + malloc_printerr ("break adjusted to free malloc space"); + + /* + Otherwise, make adjustments: + + * If the first time through or noncontiguous, we need to call sbrk + just to find out where the end of memory lies. + + * We need to ensure that all returned chunks from malloc will meet + MALLOC_ALIGNMENT + + * If there was an intervening foreign sbrk, we need to adjust sbrk + request size to account for fact that we will not be able to + combine new space with existing space in old_top. + + * Almost all systems internally allocate whole pages at a time, in + which case we might as well use the whole last page of request. + So we allocate enough more memory to hit a page boundary now, + which in turn causes future contiguous calls to page-align. + */ + + else + { + front_misalign = 0; + end_misalign = 0; + correction = 0; + aligned_brk = brk; + + /* handle contiguous cases */ + if (contiguous (av)) + { + /* Count foreign sbrk as system_mem. */ + if (old_size) + av->system_mem += brk - old_end; + + /* Guarantee alignment of first new chunk made from this space */ + + front_misalign = (INTERNAL_SIZE_T) chunk2mem (brk) & MALLOC_ALIGN_MASK; + if (front_misalign > 0) + { + /* + Skip over some bytes to arrive at an aligned position. + We don't need to specially mark these wasted front bytes. + They will never be accessed anyway because + prev_inuse of av->top (and any chunk created from its start) + is always true after initialization. + */ + + correction = MALLOC_ALIGNMENT - front_misalign; + aligned_brk += correction; + } + + /* + If this isn't adjacent to existing space, then we will not + be able to merge with old_top space, so must add to 2nd request. + */ + + correction += old_size; + + /* Extend the end address to hit a page boundary */ + end_misalign = (INTERNAL_SIZE_T) (brk + size + correction); + correction += (ALIGN_UP (end_misalign, pagesize)) - end_misalign; + + assert (correction >= 0); + snd_brk = (char *) (MORECORE (correction)); + + /* + If can't allocate correction, try to at least find out current + brk. It might be enough to proceed without failing. + + Note that if second sbrk did NOT fail, we assume that space + is contiguous with first sbrk. This is a safe assumption unless + program is multithreaded but doesn't use locks and a foreign sbrk + occurred between our first and second calls. + */ + + if (snd_brk == (char *) (MORECORE_FAILURE)) + { + correction = 0; + snd_brk = (char *) (MORECORE (0)); + } + else + { + /* Call the `morecore' hook if necessary. */ + void (*hook) (void) = atomic_forced_read (__after_morecore_hook); + if (__builtin_expect (hook != NULL, 0)) + (*hook)(); + } + } + + /* handle non-contiguous cases */ + else + { + if (MALLOC_ALIGNMENT == 2 * SIZE_SZ) + /* MORECORE/mmap must correctly align */ + assert (((unsigned long) chunk2mem (brk) & MALLOC_ALIGN_MASK) == 0); + else + { + front_misalign = (INTERNAL_SIZE_T) chunk2mem (brk) & MALLOC_ALIGN_MASK; + if (front_misalign > 0) + { + /* + Skip over some bytes to arrive at an aligned position. + We don't need to specially mark these wasted front bytes. + They will never be accessed anyway because + prev_inuse of av->top (and any chunk created from its start) + is always true after initialization. + */ + + aligned_brk += MALLOC_ALIGNMENT - front_misalign; + } + } + + /* Find out current end of memory */ + if (snd_brk == (char *) (MORECORE_FAILURE)) + { + snd_brk = (char *) (MORECORE (0)); + } + } + + /* Adjust top based on results of second sbrk */ + if (snd_brk != (char *) (MORECORE_FAILURE)) + { + av->top = (mchunkptr) aligned_brk; + set_head (av->top, (snd_brk - aligned_brk + correction) | PREV_INUSE); + av->system_mem += correction; + + /* + If not the first time through, we either have a + gap due to foreign sbrk or a non-contiguous region. Insert a + double fencepost at old_top to prevent consolidation with space + we don't own. These fenceposts are artificial chunks that are + marked as inuse and are in any case too small to use. We need + two to make sizes and alignments work out. + */ + + if (old_size != 0) + { + /* + Shrink old_top to insert fenceposts, keeping size a + multiple of MALLOC_ALIGNMENT. We know there is at least + enough space in old_top to do this. + */ + old_size = (old_size - 4 * SIZE_SZ) & ~MALLOC_ALIGN_MASK; + set_head (old_top, old_size | PREV_INUSE); + + /* + Note that the following assignments completely overwrite + old_top when old_size was previously MINSIZE. This is + intentional. We need the fencepost, even if old_top otherwise gets + lost. + */ + set_head (chunk_at_offset (old_top, old_size), + (2 * SIZE_SZ) | PREV_INUSE); + set_head (chunk_at_offset (old_top, old_size + 2 * SIZE_SZ), + (2 * SIZE_SZ) | PREV_INUSE); + + /* If possible, release the rest. */ + if (old_size >= MINSIZE) + { + _int_free (av, old_top, 1); + } + } + } + } + } + } /* if (av != &main_arena) */ + + if ((unsigned long) av->system_mem > (unsigned long) (av->max_system_mem)) + av->max_system_mem = av->system_mem; + check_malloc_state (av); + + /* finally, do the allocation */ + p = av->top; + size = chunksize (p); + + /* check that one of the above allocation paths succeeded */ + if ((unsigned long) (size) >= (unsigned long) (nb + MINSIZE)) + { + remainder_size = size - nb; + remainder = chunk_at_offset (p, nb); + av->top = remainder; + set_head (p, nb | PREV_INUSE | (av != &main_arena ? NON_MAIN_ARENA : 0)); + set_head (remainder, remainder_size | PREV_INUSE); + check_malloced_chunk (av, p, nb); + return chunk2mem (p); + } + + /* catch all failure paths */ + __set_errno (ENOMEM); + return 0; +} + + +/* + systrim is an inverse of sorts to sysmalloc. It gives memory back + to the system (via negative arguments to sbrk) if there is unused + memory at the `high' end of the malloc pool. It is called + automatically by free() when top space exceeds the trim + threshold. It is also called by the public malloc_trim routine. It + returns 1 if it actually released any memory, else 0. + */ + +static int +systrim (size_t pad, mstate av) +{ + long top_size; /* Amount of top-most memory */ + long extra; /* Amount to release */ + long released; /* Amount actually released */ + char *current_brk; /* address returned by pre-check sbrk call */ + char *new_brk; /* address returned by post-check sbrk call */ + size_t pagesize; + long top_area; + + pagesize = GLRO (dl_pagesize); + top_size = chunksize (av->top); + + top_area = top_size - MINSIZE - 1; + if (top_area <= pad) + return 0; + + /* Release in pagesize units and round down to the nearest page. */ + extra = ALIGN_DOWN(top_area - pad, pagesize); + + if (extra == 0) + return 0; + + /* + Only proceed if end of memory is where we last set it. + This avoids problems if there were foreign sbrk calls. + */ + current_brk = (char *) (MORECORE (0)); + if (current_brk == (char *) (av->top) + top_size) + { + /* + Attempt to release memory. We ignore MORECORE return value, + and instead call again to find out where new end of memory is. + This avoids problems if first call releases less than we asked, + of if failure somehow altered brk value. (We could still + encounter problems if it altered brk in some very bad way, + but the only thing we can do is adjust anyway, which will cause + some downstream failure.) + */ + + MORECORE (-extra); + /* Call the `morecore' hook if necessary. */ + void (*hook) (void) = atomic_forced_read (__after_morecore_hook); + if (__builtin_expect (hook != NULL, 0)) + (*hook)(); + new_brk = (char *) (MORECORE (0)); + + LIBC_PROBE (memory_sbrk_less, 2, new_brk, extra); + + if (new_brk != (char *) MORECORE_FAILURE) + { + released = (long) (current_brk - new_brk); + + if (released != 0) + { + /* Success. Adjust top. */ + av->system_mem -= released; + set_head (av->top, (top_size - released) | PREV_INUSE); + check_malloc_state (av); + return 1; + } + } + } + return 0; +} + +static void +munmap_chunk (mchunkptr p) +{ + INTERNAL_SIZE_T size = chunksize (p); + + assert (chunk_is_mmapped (p)); + + /* Do nothing if the chunk is a faked mmapped chunk in the dumped + main arena. We never free this memory. */ + if (DUMPED_MAIN_ARENA_CHUNK (p)) + return; + + uintptr_t block = (uintptr_t) p - prev_size (p); + size_t total_size = prev_size (p) + size; + /* Unfortunately we have to do the compilers job by hand here. Normally + we would test BLOCK and TOTAL-SIZE separately for compliance with the + page size. But gcc does not recognize the optimization possibility + (in the moment at least) so we combine the two values into one before + the bit test. */ + if (__builtin_expect (((block | total_size) & (GLRO (dl_pagesize) - 1)) != 0, 0)) + malloc_printerr ("munmap_chunk(): invalid pointer"); + + atomic_decrement (&mp_.n_mmaps); + atomic_add (&mp_.mmapped_mem, -total_size); + + /* If munmap failed the process virtual memory address space is in a + bad shape. Just leave the block hanging around, the process will + terminate shortly anyway since not much can be done. */ + __munmap ((char *) block, total_size); +} + +#if HAVE_MREMAP + +static mchunkptr +mremap_chunk (mchunkptr p, size_t new_size) +{ + size_t pagesize = GLRO (dl_pagesize); + INTERNAL_SIZE_T offset = prev_size (p); + INTERNAL_SIZE_T size = chunksize (p); + char *cp; + + assert (chunk_is_mmapped (p)); + assert (((size + offset) & (GLRO (dl_pagesize) - 1)) == 0); + + /* Note the extra SIZE_SZ overhead as in mmap_chunk(). */ + new_size = ALIGN_UP (new_size + offset + SIZE_SZ, pagesize); + + /* No need to remap if the number of pages does not change. */ + if (size + offset == new_size) + return p; + + cp = (char *) __mremap ((char *) p - offset, size + offset, new_size, + MREMAP_MAYMOVE); + + if (cp == MAP_FAILED) + return 0; + + p = (mchunkptr) (cp + offset); + + assert (aligned_OK (chunk2mem (p))); + + assert (prev_size (p) == offset); + set_head (p, (new_size - offset) | IS_MMAPPED); + + INTERNAL_SIZE_T new; + new = atomic_exchange_and_add (&mp_.mmapped_mem, new_size - size - offset) + + new_size - size - offset; + atomic_max (&mp_.max_mmapped_mem, new); + return p; +} +#endif /* HAVE_MREMAP */ + +/*------------------------ Public wrappers. --------------------------------*/ + +#if USE_TCACHE + +/* We overlay this structure on the user-data portion of a chunk when + the chunk is stored in the per-thread cache. */ +typedef struct tcache_entry +{ + struct tcache_entry *next; +} tcache_entry; + +/* There is one of these for each thread, which contains the + per-thread cache (hence "tcache_perthread_struct"). Keeping + overall size low is mildly important. Note that COUNTS and ENTRIES + are redundant (we could have just counted the linked list each + time), this is for performance reasons. */ +typedef struct tcache_perthread_struct +{ + char counts[TCACHE_MAX_BINS]; + tcache_entry *entries[TCACHE_MAX_BINS]; +} tcache_perthread_struct; + +static __thread bool tcache_shutting_down = false; +static __thread tcache_perthread_struct *tcache = NULL; + +/* Caller must ensure that we know tc_idx is valid and there's room + for more chunks. */ +static __always_inline void +tcache_put (mchunkptr chunk, size_t tc_idx) +{ + tcache_entry *e = (tcache_entry *) chunk2mem (chunk); + assert (tc_idx < TCACHE_MAX_BINS); + e->next = tcache->entries[tc_idx]; + tcache->entries[tc_idx] = e; + ++(tcache->counts[tc_idx]); +} + +/* Caller must ensure that we know tc_idx is valid and there's + available chunks to remove. */ +static __always_inline void * +tcache_get (size_t tc_idx) +{ + tcache_entry *e = tcache->entries[tc_idx]; + assert (tc_idx < TCACHE_MAX_BINS); + assert (tcache->entries[tc_idx] > 0); + tcache->entries[tc_idx] = e->next; + --(tcache->counts[tc_idx]); + return (void *) e; +} + +static void +tcache_thread_shutdown (void) +{ + int i; + tcache_perthread_struct *tcache_tmp = tcache; + + if (!tcache) + return; + + /* Disable the tcache and prevent it from being reinitialized. */ + tcache = NULL; + tcache_shutting_down = true; + + /* Free all of the entries and the tcache itself back to the arena + heap for coalescing. */ + for (i = 0; i < TCACHE_MAX_BINS; ++i) + { + while (tcache_tmp->entries[i]) + { + tcache_entry *e = tcache_tmp->entries[i]; + tcache_tmp->entries[i] = e->next; + __libc_free (e); + } + } + + __libc_free (tcache_tmp); +} + +static void +tcache_init(void) +{ + mstate ar_ptr; + void *victim = 0; + const size_t bytes = sizeof (tcache_perthread_struct); + + if (tcache_shutting_down) + return; + + arena_get (ar_ptr, bytes); + victim = _int_malloc (ar_ptr, bytes); + if (!victim && ar_ptr != NULL) + { + ar_ptr = arena_get_retry (ar_ptr, bytes); + victim = _int_malloc (ar_ptr, bytes); + } + + + if (ar_ptr != NULL) + __libc_lock_unlock (ar_ptr->mutex); + + /* In a low memory situation, we may not be able to allocate memory + - in which case, we just keep trying later. However, we + typically do this very early, so either there is sufficient + memory, or there isn't enough memory to do non-trivial + allocations anyway. */ + if (victim) + { + tcache = (tcache_perthread_struct *) victim; + memset (tcache, 0, sizeof (tcache_perthread_struct)); + } + +} + +# define MAYBE_INIT_TCACHE() \ + if (__glibc_unlikely (tcache == NULL)) \ + tcache_init(); + +#else /* !USE_TCACHE */ +# define MAYBE_INIT_TCACHE() + +static void +tcache_thread_shutdown (void) +{ + /* Nothing to do if there is no thread cache. */ +} + +#endif /* !USE_TCACHE */ + +void * +__libc_malloc (size_t bytes) +{ + mstate ar_ptr; + void *victim; + + void *(*hook) (size_t, const void *) + = atomic_forced_read (__malloc_hook); + if (__builtin_expect (hook != NULL, 0)) + return (*hook)(bytes, RETURN_ADDRESS (0)); +#if USE_TCACHE + /* int_free also calls request2size, be careful to not pad twice. */ + size_t tbytes; + checked_request2size (bytes, tbytes); + size_t tc_idx = csize2tidx (tbytes); + + MAYBE_INIT_TCACHE (); + + DIAG_PUSH_NEEDS_COMMENT; + if (tc_idx < mp_.tcache_bins + /*&& tc_idx < TCACHE_MAX_BINS*/ /* to appease gcc */ + && tcache + && tcache->entries[tc_idx] != NULL) + { + return tcache_get (tc_idx); + } + DIAG_POP_NEEDS_COMMENT; +#endif + + if (SINGLE_THREAD_P) + { + victim = _int_malloc (&main_arena, bytes); + assert (!victim || chunk_is_mmapped (mem2chunk (victim)) || + &main_arena == arena_for_chunk (mem2chunk (victim))); + return victim; + } + + arena_get (ar_ptr, bytes); + + victim = _int_malloc (ar_ptr, bytes); + /* Retry with another arena only if we were able to find a usable arena + before. */ + if (!victim && ar_ptr != NULL) + { + LIBC_PROBE (memory_malloc_retry, 1, bytes); + ar_ptr = arena_get_retry (ar_ptr, bytes); + victim = _int_malloc (ar_ptr, bytes); + } + + if (ar_ptr != NULL) + __libc_lock_unlock (ar_ptr->mutex); + + assert (!victim || chunk_is_mmapped (mem2chunk (victim)) || + ar_ptr == arena_for_chunk (mem2chunk (victim))); + return victim; +} +libc_hidden_def (__libc_malloc) + +void +__libc_free (void *mem) +{ + mstate ar_ptr; + mchunkptr p; /* chunk corresponding to mem */ + + void (*hook) (void *, const void *) + = atomic_forced_read (__free_hook); + if (__builtin_expect (hook != NULL, 0)) + { + (*hook)(mem, RETURN_ADDRESS (0)); + return; + } + + if (mem == 0) /* free(0) has no effect */ + return; + + p = mem2chunk (mem); + + if (chunk_is_mmapped (p)) /* release mmapped memory. */ + { + /* See if the dynamic brk/mmap threshold needs adjusting. + Dumped fake mmapped chunks do not affect the threshold. */ + if (!mp_.no_dyn_threshold + && chunksize_nomask (p) > mp_.mmap_threshold + && chunksize_nomask (p) <= DEFAULT_MMAP_THRESHOLD_MAX + && !DUMPED_MAIN_ARENA_CHUNK (p)) + { + mp_.mmap_threshold = chunksize (p); + mp_.trim_threshold = 2 * mp_.mmap_threshold; + LIBC_PROBE (memory_mallopt_free_dyn_thresholds, 2, + mp_.mmap_threshold, mp_.trim_threshold); + } + munmap_chunk (p); + return; + } + + MAYBE_INIT_TCACHE (); + + ar_ptr = arena_for_chunk (p); + _int_free (ar_ptr, p, 0); +} +libc_hidden_def (__libc_free) + +void * +__libc_realloc (void *oldmem, size_t bytes) +{ + mstate ar_ptr; + INTERNAL_SIZE_T nb; /* padded request size */ + + void *newp; /* chunk to return */ + + void *(*hook) (void *, size_t, const void *) = + atomic_forced_read (__realloc_hook); + if (__builtin_expect (hook != NULL, 0)) + return (*hook)(oldmem, bytes, RETURN_ADDRESS (0)); + +#if REALLOC_ZERO_BYTES_FREES + if (bytes == 0 && oldmem != NULL) + { + __libc_free (oldmem); return 0; + } +#endif + + /* realloc of null is supposed to be same as malloc */ + if (oldmem == 0) + return __libc_malloc (bytes); + + /* chunk corresponding to oldmem */ + const mchunkptr oldp = mem2chunk (oldmem); + /* its size */ + const INTERNAL_SIZE_T oldsize = chunksize (oldp); + + if (chunk_is_mmapped (oldp)) + ar_ptr = NULL; + else + { + MAYBE_INIT_TCACHE (); + ar_ptr = arena_for_chunk (oldp); + } + + /* Little security check which won't hurt performance: the allocator + never wrapps around at the end of the address space. Therefore + we can exclude some size values which might appear here by + accident or by "design" from some intruder. We need to bypass + this check for dumped fake mmap chunks from the old main arena + because the new malloc may provide additional alignment. */ + if ((__builtin_expect ((uintptr_t) oldp > (uintptr_t) -oldsize, 0) + || __builtin_expect (misaligned_chunk (oldp), 0)) + && !DUMPED_MAIN_ARENA_CHUNK (oldp)) + malloc_printerr ("realloc(): invalid pointer"); + + checked_request2size (bytes, nb); + + if (chunk_is_mmapped (oldp)) + { + /* If this is a faked mmapped chunk from the dumped main arena, + always make a copy (and do not free the old chunk). */ + if (DUMPED_MAIN_ARENA_CHUNK (oldp)) + { + /* Must alloc, copy, free. */ + void *newmem = __libc_malloc (bytes); + if (newmem == 0) + return NULL; + /* Copy as many bytes as are available from the old chunk + and fit into the new size. NB: The overhead for faked + mmapped chunks is only SIZE_SZ, not 2 * SIZE_SZ as for + regular mmapped chunks. */ + if (bytes > oldsize - SIZE_SZ) + bytes = oldsize - SIZE_SZ; + memcpy (newmem, oldmem, bytes); + return newmem; + } + + void *newmem; + +#if HAVE_MREMAP + newp = mremap_chunk (oldp, nb); + if (newp) + return chunk2mem (newp); +#endif + /* Note the extra SIZE_SZ overhead. */ + if (oldsize - SIZE_SZ >= nb) + return oldmem; /* do nothing */ + + /* Must alloc, copy, free. */ + newmem = __libc_malloc (bytes); + if (newmem == 0) + return 0; /* propagate failure */ + + memcpy (newmem, oldmem, oldsize - 2 * SIZE_SZ); + munmap_chunk (oldp); + return newmem; + } + + if (SINGLE_THREAD_P) + { + newp = _int_realloc (ar_ptr, oldp, oldsize, nb); + assert (!newp || chunk_is_mmapped (mem2chunk (newp)) || + ar_ptr == arena_for_chunk (mem2chunk (newp))); + + return newp; + } + + __libc_lock_lock (ar_ptr->mutex); + + newp = _int_realloc (ar_ptr, oldp, oldsize, nb); + + __libc_lock_unlock (ar_ptr->mutex); + assert (!newp || chunk_is_mmapped (mem2chunk (newp)) || + ar_ptr == arena_for_chunk (mem2chunk (newp))); + + if (newp == NULL) + { + /* Try harder to allocate memory in other arenas. */ + LIBC_PROBE (memory_realloc_retry, 2, bytes, oldmem); + newp = __libc_malloc (bytes); + if (newp != NULL) + { + memcpy (newp, oldmem, oldsize - SIZE_SZ); + _int_free (ar_ptr, oldp, 0); + } + } + + return newp; +} +libc_hidden_def (__libc_realloc) + +void * +__libc_memalign (size_t alignment, size_t bytes) +{ + void *address = RETURN_ADDRESS (0); + return _mid_memalign (alignment, bytes, address); +} + +static void * +_mid_memalign (size_t alignment, size_t bytes, void *address) +{ + mstate ar_ptr; + void *p; + + void *(*hook) (size_t, size_t, const void *) = + atomic_forced_read (__memalign_hook); + if (__builtin_expect (hook != NULL, 0)) + return (*hook)(alignment, bytes, address); + + /* If we need less alignment than we give anyway, just relay to malloc. */ + if (alignment <= MALLOC_ALIGNMENT) + return __libc_malloc (bytes); + + /* Otherwise, ensure that it is at least a minimum chunk size */ + if (alignment < MINSIZE) + alignment = MINSIZE; + + /* If the alignment is greater than SIZE_MAX / 2 + 1 it cannot be a + power of 2 and will cause overflow in the check below. */ + if (alignment > SIZE_MAX / 2 + 1) + { + __set_errno (EINVAL); + return 0; + } + + /* Check for overflow. */ + if (bytes > SIZE_MAX - alignment - MINSIZE) + { + __set_errno (ENOMEM); + return 0; + } + + + /* Make sure alignment is power of 2. */ + if (!powerof2 (alignment)) + { + size_t a = MALLOC_ALIGNMENT * 2; + while (a < alignment) + a <<= 1; + alignment = a; + } + + if (SINGLE_THREAD_P) + { + p = _int_memalign (&main_arena, alignment, bytes); + assert (!p || chunk_is_mmapped (mem2chunk (p)) || + &main_arena == arena_for_chunk (mem2chunk (p))); + + return p; + } + + arena_get (ar_ptr, bytes + alignment + MINSIZE); + + p = _int_memalign (ar_ptr, alignment, bytes); + if (!p && ar_ptr != NULL) + { + LIBC_PROBE (memory_memalign_retry, 2, bytes, alignment); + ar_ptr = arena_get_retry (ar_ptr, bytes); + p = _int_memalign (ar_ptr, alignment, bytes); + } + + if (ar_ptr != NULL) + __libc_lock_unlock (ar_ptr->mutex); + + assert (!p || chunk_is_mmapped (mem2chunk (p)) || + ar_ptr == arena_for_chunk (mem2chunk (p))); + return p; +} +/* For ISO C11. */ +weak_alias (__libc_memalign, aligned_alloc) +libc_hidden_def (__libc_memalign) + +void * +__libc_valloc (size_t bytes) +{ + if (__malloc_initialized < 0) + ptmalloc_init (); + + void *address = RETURN_ADDRESS (0); + size_t pagesize = GLRO (dl_pagesize); + return _mid_memalign (pagesize, bytes, address); +} + +void * +__libc_pvalloc (size_t bytes) +{ + if (__malloc_initialized < 0) + ptmalloc_init (); + + void *address = RETURN_ADDRESS (0); + size_t pagesize = GLRO (dl_pagesize); + size_t rounded_bytes = ALIGN_UP (bytes, pagesize); + + /* Check for overflow. */ + if (bytes > SIZE_MAX - 2 * pagesize - MINSIZE) + { + __set_errno (ENOMEM); + return 0; + } + + return _mid_memalign (pagesize, rounded_bytes, address); +} + +void * +__libc_calloc (size_t n, size_t elem_size) +{ + mstate av; + mchunkptr oldtop, p; + INTERNAL_SIZE_T bytes, sz, csz, oldtopsize; + void *mem; + unsigned long clearsize; + unsigned long nclears; + INTERNAL_SIZE_T *d; + + /* size_t is unsigned so the behavior on overflow is defined. */ + bytes = n * elem_size; +#define HALF_INTERNAL_SIZE_T \ + (((INTERNAL_SIZE_T) 1) << (8 * sizeof (INTERNAL_SIZE_T) / 2)) + if (__builtin_expect ((n | elem_size) >= HALF_INTERNAL_SIZE_T, 0)) + { + if (elem_size != 0 && bytes / elem_size != n) + { + __set_errno (ENOMEM); + return 0; + } + } + + void *(*hook) (size_t, const void *) = + atomic_forced_read (__malloc_hook); + if (__builtin_expect (hook != NULL, 0)) + { + sz = bytes; + mem = (*hook)(sz, RETURN_ADDRESS (0)); + if (mem == 0) + return 0; + + return memset (mem, 0, sz); + } + + sz = bytes; + + MAYBE_INIT_TCACHE (); + + if (SINGLE_THREAD_P) + av = &main_arena; + else + arena_get (av, sz); + + if (av) + { + /* Check if we hand out the top chunk, in which case there may be no + need to clear. */ +#if MORECORE_CLEARS + oldtop = top (av); + oldtopsize = chunksize (top (av)); +# if MORECORE_CLEARS < 2 + /* Only newly allocated memory is guaranteed to be cleared. */ + if (av == &main_arena && + oldtopsize < mp_.sbrk_base + av->max_system_mem - (char *) oldtop) + oldtopsize = (mp_.sbrk_base + av->max_system_mem - (char *) oldtop); +# endif + if (av != &main_arena) + { + heap_info *heap = heap_for_ptr (oldtop); + if (oldtopsize < (char *) heap + heap->mprotect_size - (char *) oldtop) + oldtopsize = (char *) heap + heap->mprotect_size - (char *) oldtop; + } +#endif + } + else + { + /* No usable arenas. */ + oldtop = 0; + oldtopsize = 0; + } + mem = _int_malloc (av, sz); + + assert (!mem || chunk_is_mmapped (mem2chunk (mem)) || + av == arena_for_chunk (mem2chunk (mem))); + + if (!SINGLE_THREAD_P) + { + if (mem == 0 && av != NULL) + { + LIBC_PROBE (memory_calloc_retry, 1, sz); + av = arena_get_retry (av, sz); + mem = _int_malloc (av, sz); + } + + if (av != NULL) + __libc_lock_unlock (av->mutex); + } + + /* Allocation failed even after a retry. */ + if (mem == 0) + return 0; + + p = mem2chunk (mem); + + /* Two optional cases in which clearing not necessary */ + if (chunk_is_mmapped (p)) + { + if (__builtin_expect (perturb_byte, 0)) + return memset (mem, 0, sz); + + return mem; + } + + csz = chunksize (p); + +#if MORECORE_CLEARS + if (perturb_byte == 0 && (p == oldtop && csz > oldtopsize)) + { + /* clear only the bytes from non-freshly-sbrked memory */ + csz = oldtopsize; + } +#endif + + /* Unroll clear of <= 36 bytes (72 if 8byte sizes). We know that + contents have an odd number of INTERNAL_SIZE_T-sized words; + minimally 3. */ + d = (INTERNAL_SIZE_T *) mem; + clearsize = csz - SIZE_SZ; + nclears = clearsize / sizeof (INTERNAL_SIZE_T); + assert (nclears >= 3); + + if (nclears > 9) + return memset (d, 0, clearsize); + + else + { + *(d + 0) = 0; + *(d + 1) = 0; + *(d + 2) = 0; + if (nclears > 4) + { + *(d + 3) = 0; + *(d + 4) = 0; + if (nclears > 6) + { + *(d + 5) = 0; + *(d + 6) = 0; + if (nclears > 8) + { + *(d + 7) = 0; + *(d + 8) = 0; + } + } + } + } + + return mem; +} + +/* + ------------------------------ malloc ------------------------------ + */ + +static void * +_int_malloc (mstate av, size_t bytes) +{ + INTERNAL_SIZE_T nb; /* normalized request size */ + unsigned int idx; /* associated bin index */ + mbinptr bin; /* associated bin */ + + mchunkptr victim; /* inspected/selected chunk */ + INTERNAL_SIZE_T size; /* its size */ + int victim_index; /* its bin index */ + + mchunkptr remainder; /* remainder from a split */ + unsigned long remainder_size; /* its size */ + + unsigned int block; /* bit map traverser */ + unsigned int bit; /* bit map traverser */ + unsigned int map; /* current word of binmap */ + + mchunkptr fwd; /* misc temp for linking */ + mchunkptr bck; /* misc temp for linking */ + +#if USE_TCACHE + size_t tcache_unsorted_count; /* count of unsorted chunks processed */ +#endif + + /* + Convert request size to internal form by adding SIZE_SZ bytes + overhead plus possibly more to obtain necessary alignment and/or + to obtain a size of at least MINSIZE, the smallest allocatable + size. Also, checked_request2size traps (returning 0) request sizes + that are so large that they wrap around zero when padded and + aligned. + */ + + checked_request2size (bytes, nb); + + /* There are no usable arenas. Fall back to sysmalloc to get a chunk from + mmap. */ + if (__glibc_unlikely (av == NULL)) + { + void *p = sysmalloc (nb, av); + if (p != NULL) + alloc_perturb (p, bytes); + return p; + } + + /* + If the size qualifies as a fastbin, first check corresponding bin. + This code is safe to execute even if av is not yet initialized, so we + can try it without checking, which saves some time on this fast path. + */ + +#define REMOVE_FB(fb, victim, pp) \ + do \ + { \ + victim = pp; \ + if (victim == NULL) \ + break; \ + } \ + while ((pp = catomic_compare_and_exchange_val_acq (fb, victim->fd, victim)) \ + != victim); \ + + if ((unsigned long) (nb) <= (unsigned long) (get_max_fast ())) + { + idx = fastbin_index (nb); + mfastbinptr *fb = &fastbin (av, idx); + mchunkptr pp; + victim = *fb; + + if (victim != NULL) + { + if (SINGLE_THREAD_P) + *fb = victim->fd; + else + REMOVE_FB (fb, pp, victim); + if (__glibc_likely (victim != NULL)) + { + size_t victim_idx = fastbin_index (chunksize (victim)); + if (__builtin_expect (victim_idx != idx, 0)) + malloc_printerr ("malloc(): memory corruption (fast)"); + check_remalloced_chunk (av, victim, nb); +#if USE_TCACHE + /* While we're here, if we see other chunks of the same size, + stash them in the tcache. */ + size_t tc_idx = csize2tidx (nb); + if (tcache && tc_idx < mp_.tcache_bins) + { + mchunkptr tc_victim; + + /* While bin not empty and tcache not full, copy chunks. */ + while (tcache->counts[tc_idx] < mp_.tcache_count + && (tc_victim = *fb) != NULL) + { + if (SINGLE_THREAD_P) + *fb = tc_victim->fd; + else + { + REMOVE_FB (fb, pp, tc_victim); + if (__glibc_unlikely (tc_victim == NULL)) + break; + } + tcache_put (tc_victim, tc_idx); + } + } +#endif + void *p = chunk2mem (victim); + alloc_perturb (p, bytes); + return p; + } + } + } + + /* + If a small request, check regular bin. Since these "smallbins" + hold one size each, no searching within bins is necessary. + (For a large request, we need to wait until unsorted chunks are + processed to find best fit. But for small ones, fits are exact + anyway, so we can check now, which is faster.) + */ + + if (in_smallbin_range (nb)) + { + idx = smallbin_index (nb); + bin = bin_at (av, idx); + + if ((victim = last (bin)) != bin) + { + bck = victim->bk; + if (__glibc_unlikely (bck->fd != victim)) + malloc_printerr ("malloc(): smallbin double linked list corrupted"); + set_inuse_bit_at_offset (victim, nb); + bin->bk = bck; + bck->fd = bin; + + if (av != &main_arena) + set_non_main_arena (victim); + check_malloced_chunk (av, victim, nb); +#if USE_TCACHE + /* While we're here, if we see other chunks of the same size, + stash them in the tcache. */ + size_t tc_idx = csize2tidx (nb); + if (tcache && tc_idx < mp_.tcache_bins) + { + mchunkptr tc_victim; + + /* While bin not empty and tcache not full, copy chunks over. */ + while (tcache->counts[tc_idx] < mp_.tcache_count + && (tc_victim = last (bin)) != bin) + { + if (tc_victim != 0) + { + bck = tc_victim->bk; + set_inuse_bit_at_offset (tc_victim, nb); + if (av != &main_arena) + set_non_main_arena (tc_victim); + bin->bk = bck; + bck->fd = bin; + + tcache_put (tc_victim, tc_idx); + } + } + } +#endif + void *p = chunk2mem (victim); + alloc_perturb (p, bytes); + return p; + } + } + + /* + If this is a large request, consolidate fastbins before continuing. + While it might look excessive to kill all fastbins before + even seeing if there is space available, this avoids + fragmentation problems normally associated with fastbins. + Also, in practice, programs tend to have runs of either small or + large requests, but less often mixtures, so consolidation is not + invoked all that often in most programs. And the programs that + it is called frequently in otherwise tend to fragment. + */ + + else + { + idx = largebin_index (nb); + if (atomic_load_relaxed (&av->have_fastchunks)) + malloc_consolidate (av); + } + + /* + Process recently freed or remaindered chunks, taking one only if + it is exact fit, or, if this a small request, the chunk is remainder from + the most recent non-exact fit. Place other traversed chunks in + bins. Note that this step is the only place in any routine where + chunks are placed in bins. + + The outer loop here is needed because we might not realize until + near the end of malloc that we should have consolidated, so must + do so and retry. This happens at most once, and only when we would + otherwise need to expand memory to service a "small" request. + */ + +#if USE_TCACHE + INTERNAL_SIZE_T tcache_nb = 0; + size_t tc_idx = csize2tidx (nb); + if (tcache && tc_idx < mp_.tcache_bins) + tcache_nb = nb; + int return_cached = 0; + + tcache_unsorted_count = 0; +#endif + + for (;; ) + { + int iters = 0; + while ((victim = unsorted_chunks (av)->bk) != unsorted_chunks (av)) + { + bck = victim->bk; + if (__builtin_expect (chunksize_nomask (victim) <= 2 * SIZE_SZ, 0) + || __builtin_expect (chunksize_nomask (victim) + > av->system_mem, 0)) + malloc_printerr ("malloc(): memory corruption"); + size = chunksize (victim); + + /* + If a small request, try to use last remainder if it is the + only chunk in unsorted bin. This helps promote locality for + runs of consecutive small requests. This is the only + exception to best-fit, and applies only when there is + no exact fit for a small chunk. + */ + + if (in_smallbin_range (nb) && + bck == unsorted_chunks (av) && + victim == av->last_remainder && + (unsigned long) (size) > (unsigned long) (nb + MINSIZE)) + { + /* split and reattach remainder */ + remainder_size = size - nb; + remainder = chunk_at_offset (victim, nb); + unsorted_chunks (av)->bk = unsorted_chunks (av)->fd = remainder; + av->last_remainder = remainder; + remainder->bk = remainder->fd = unsorted_chunks (av); + if (!in_smallbin_range (remainder_size)) + { + remainder->fd_nextsize = NULL; + remainder->bk_nextsize = NULL; + } + + set_head (victim, nb | PREV_INUSE | + (av != &main_arena ? NON_MAIN_ARENA : 0)); + set_head (remainder, remainder_size | PREV_INUSE); + set_foot (remainder, remainder_size); + + check_malloced_chunk (av, victim, nb); + void *p = chunk2mem (victim); + alloc_perturb (p, bytes); + return p; + } + + /* remove from unsorted list */ + if (__glibc_unlikely (bck->fd != victim)) + malloc_printerr ("malloc(): corrupted unsorted chunks 3"); + unsorted_chunks (av)->bk = bck; + bck->fd = unsorted_chunks (av); + + /* Take now instead of binning if exact fit */ + + if (size == nb) + { + set_inuse_bit_at_offset (victim, size); + if (av != &main_arena) + set_non_main_arena (victim); +#if USE_TCACHE + /* Fill cache first, return to user only if cache fills. + We may return one of these chunks later. */ + if (tcache_nb + && tcache->counts[tc_idx] < mp_.tcache_count) + { + tcache_put (victim, tc_idx); + return_cached = 1; + continue; + } + else + { +#endif + check_malloced_chunk (av, victim, nb); + void *p = chunk2mem (victim); + alloc_perturb (p, bytes); + return p; +#if USE_TCACHE + } +#endif + } + + /* place chunk in bin */ + + if (in_smallbin_range (size)) + { + victim_index = smallbin_index (size); + bck = bin_at (av, victim_index); + fwd = bck->fd; + } + else + { + victim_index = largebin_index (size); + bck = bin_at (av, victim_index); + fwd = bck->fd; + + /* maintain large bins in sorted order */ + if (fwd != bck) + { + /* Or with inuse bit to speed comparisons */ + size |= PREV_INUSE; + /* if smaller than smallest, bypass loop below */ + assert (chunk_main_arena (bck->bk)); + if ((unsigned long) (size) + < (unsigned long) chunksize_nomask (bck->bk)) + { + fwd = bck; + bck = bck->bk; + + victim->fd_nextsize = fwd->fd; + victim->bk_nextsize = fwd->fd->bk_nextsize; + fwd->fd->bk_nextsize = victim->bk_nextsize->fd_nextsize = victim; + } + else + { + assert (chunk_main_arena (fwd)); + while ((unsigned long) size < chunksize_nomask (fwd)) + { + fwd = fwd->fd_nextsize; + assert (chunk_main_arena (fwd)); + } + + if ((unsigned long) size + == (unsigned long) chunksize_nomask (fwd)) + /* Always insert in the second position. */ + fwd = fwd->fd; + else + { + victim->fd_nextsize = fwd; + victim->bk_nextsize = fwd->bk_nextsize; + fwd->bk_nextsize = victim; + victim->bk_nextsize->fd_nextsize = victim; + } + bck = fwd->bk; + } + } + else + victim->fd_nextsize = victim->bk_nextsize = victim; + } + + mark_bin (av, victim_index); + victim->bk = bck; + victim->fd = fwd; + fwd->bk = victim; + bck->fd = victim; + +#if USE_TCACHE + /* If we've processed as many chunks as we're allowed while + filling the cache, return one of the cached ones. */ + ++tcache_unsorted_count; + if (return_cached + && mp_.tcache_unsorted_limit > 0 + && tcache_unsorted_count > mp_.tcache_unsorted_limit) + { + return tcache_get (tc_idx); + } +#endif + +#define MAX_ITERS 10000 + if (++iters >= MAX_ITERS) + break; + } + +#if USE_TCACHE + /* If all the small chunks we found ended up cached, return one now. */ + if (return_cached) + { + return tcache_get (tc_idx); + } +#endif + + /* + If a large request, scan through the chunks of current bin in + sorted order to find smallest that fits. Use the skip list for this. + */ + + if (!in_smallbin_range (nb)) + { + bin = bin_at (av, idx); + + /* skip scan if empty or largest chunk is too small */ + if ((victim = first (bin)) != bin + && (unsigned long) chunksize_nomask (victim) + >= (unsigned long) (nb)) + { + victim = victim->bk_nextsize; + while (((unsigned long) (size = chunksize (victim)) < + (unsigned long) (nb))) + victim = victim->bk_nextsize; + + /* Avoid removing the first entry for a size so that the skip + list does not have to be rerouted. */ + if (victim != last (bin) + && chunksize_nomask (victim) + == chunksize_nomask (victim->fd)) + victim = victim->fd; + + remainder_size = size - nb; + unlink (av, victim, bck, fwd); + + /* Exhaust */ + if (remainder_size < MINSIZE) + { + set_inuse_bit_at_offset (victim, size); + if (av != &main_arena) + set_non_main_arena (victim); + } + /* Split */ + else + { + remainder = chunk_at_offset (victim, nb); + /* We cannot assume the unsorted list is empty and therefore + have to perform a complete insert here. */ + bck = unsorted_chunks (av); + fwd = bck->fd; + if (__glibc_unlikely (fwd->bk != bck)) + malloc_printerr ("malloc(): corrupted unsorted chunks"); + remainder->bk = bck; + remainder->fd = fwd; + bck->fd = remainder; + fwd->bk = remainder; + if (!in_smallbin_range (remainder_size)) + { + remainder->fd_nextsize = NULL; + remainder->bk_nextsize = NULL; + } + set_head (victim, nb | PREV_INUSE | + (av != &main_arena ? NON_MAIN_ARENA : 0)); + set_head (remainder, remainder_size | PREV_INUSE); + set_foot (remainder, remainder_size); + } + check_malloced_chunk (av, victim, nb); + void *p = chunk2mem (victim); + alloc_perturb (p, bytes); + return p; + } + } + + /* + Search for a chunk by scanning bins, starting with next largest + bin. This search is strictly by best-fit; i.e., the smallest + (with ties going to approximately the least recently used) chunk + that fits is selected. + + The bitmap avoids needing to check that most blocks are nonempty. + The particular case of skipping all bins during warm-up phases + when no chunks have been returned yet is faster than it might look. + */ + + ++idx; + bin = bin_at (av, idx); + block = idx2block (idx); + map = av->binmap[block]; + bit = idx2bit (idx); + + for (;; ) + { + /* Skip rest of block if there are no more set bits in this block. */ + if (bit > map || bit == 0) + { + do + { + if (++block >= BINMAPSIZE) /* out of bins */ + goto use_top; + } + while ((map = av->binmap[block]) == 0); + + bin = bin_at (av, (block << BINMAPSHIFT)); + bit = 1; + } + + /* Advance to bin with set bit. There must be one. */ + while ((bit & map) == 0) + { + bin = next_bin (bin); + bit <<= 1; + assert (bit != 0); + } + + /* Inspect the bin. It is likely to be non-empty */ + victim = last (bin); + + /* If a false alarm (empty bin), clear the bit. */ + if (victim == bin) + { + av->binmap[block] = map &= ~bit; /* Write through */ + bin = next_bin (bin); + bit <<= 1; + } + + else + { + size = chunksize (victim); + + /* We know the first chunk in this bin is big enough to use. */ + assert ((unsigned long) (size) >= (unsigned long) (nb)); + + remainder_size = size - nb; + + /* unlink */ + unlink (av, victim, bck, fwd); + + /* Exhaust */ + if (remainder_size < MINSIZE) + { + set_inuse_bit_at_offset (victim, size); + if (av != &main_arena) + set_non_main_arena (victim); + } + + /* Split */ + else + { + remainder = chunk_at_offset (victim, nb); + + /* We cannot assume the unsorted list is empty and therefore + have to perform a complete insert here. */ + bck = unsorted_chunks (av); + fwd = bck->fd; + if (__glibc_unlikely (fwd->bk != bck)) + malloc_printerr ("malloc(): corrupted unsorted chunks 2"); + remainder->bk = bck; + remainder->fd = fwd; + bck->fd = remainder; + fwd->bk = remainder; + + /* advertise as last remainder */ + if (in_smallbin_range (nb)) + av->last_remainder = remainder; + if (!in_smallbin_range (remainder_size)) + { + remainder->fd_nextsize = NULL; + remainder->bk_nextsize = NULL; + } + set_head (victim, nb | PREV_INUSE | + (av != &main_arena ? NON_MAIN_ARENA : 0)); + set_head (remainder, remainder_size | PREV_INUSE); + set_foot (remainder, remainder_size); + } + check_malloced_chunk (av, victim, nb); + void *p = chunk2mem (victim); + alloc_perturb (p, bytes); + return p; + } + } + + use_top: + /* + If large enough, split off the chunk bordering the end of memory + (held in av->top). Note that this is in accord with the best-fit + search rule. In effect, av->top is treated as larger (and thus + less well fitting) than any other available chunk since it can + be extended to be as large as necessary (up to system + limitations). + + We require that av->top always exists (i.e., has size >= + MINSIZE) after initialization, so if it would otherwise be + exhausted by current request, it is replenished. (The main + reason for ensuring it exists is that we may need MINSIZE space + to put in fenceposts in sysmalloc.) + */ + + victim = av->top; + size = chunksize (victim); + + if ((unsigned long) (size) >= (unsigned long) (nb + MINSIZE)) + { + remainder_size = size - nb; + remainder = chunk_at_offset (victim, nb); + av->top = remainder; + set_head (victim, nb | PREV_INUSE | + (av != &main_arena ? NON_MAIN_ARENA : 0)); + set_head (remainder, remainder_size | PREV_INUSE); + + check_malloced_chunk (av, victim, nb); + void *p = chunk2mem (victim); + alloc_perturb (p, bytes); + return p; + } + + /* When we are using atomic ops to free fast chunks we can get + here for all block sizes. */ + else if (atomic_load_relaxed (&av->have_fastchunks)) + { + malloc_consolidate (av); + /* restore original bin index */ + if (in_smallbin_range (nb)) + idx = smallbin_index (nb); + else + idx = largebin_index (nb); + } + + /* + Otherwise, relay to handle system-dependent cases + */ + else + { + void *p = sysmalloc (nb, av); + if (p != NULL) + alloc_perturb (p, bytes); + return p; + } + } +} + +/* + ------------------------------ free ------------------------------ + */ + +static void +_int_free (mstate av, mchunkptr p, int have_lock) +{ + INTERNAL_SIZE_T size; /* its size */ + mfastbinptr *fb; /* associated fastbin */ + mchunkptr nextchunk; /* next contiguous chunk */ + INTERNAL_SIZE_T nextsize; /* its size */ + int nextinuse; /* true if nextchunk is used */ + INTERNAL_SIZE_T prevsize; /* size of previous contiguous chunk */ + mchunkptr bck; /* misc temp for linking */ + mchunkptr fwd; /* misc temp for linking */ + + size = chunksize (p); + + /* Little security check which won't hurt performance: the + allocator never wrapps around at the end of the address space. + Therefore we can exclude some size values which might appear + here by accident or by "design" from some intruder. */ + if (__builtin_expect ((uintptr_t) p > (uintptr_t) -size, 0) + || __builtin_expect (misaligned_chunk (p), 0)) + malloc_printerr ("free(): invalid pointer"); + /* We know that each chunk is at least MINSIZE bytes in size or a + multiple of MALLOC_ALIGNMENT. */ + if (__glibc_unlikely (size < MINSIZE || !aligned_OK (size))) + malloc_printerr ("free(): invalid size"); + + check_inuse_chunk(av, p); + +#if USE_TCACHE + { + size_t tc_idx = csize2tidx (size); + + if (tcache + && tc_idx < mp_.tcache_bins + && tcache->counts[tc_idx] < mp_.tcache_count) + { + tcache_put (p, tc_idx); + return; + } + } +#endif + + /* + If eligible, place chunk on a fastbin so it can be found + and used quickly in malloc. + */ + + if ((unsigned long)(size) <= (unsigned long)(get_max_fast ()) + +#if TRIM_FASTBINS + /* + If TRIM_FASTBINS set, don't place chunks + bordering top into fastbins + */ + && (chunk_at_offset(p, size) != av->top) +#endif + ) { + + if (__builtin_expect (chunksize_nomask (chunk_at_offset (p, size)) + <= 2 * SIZE_SZ, 0) + || __builtin_expect (chunksize (chunk_at_offset (p, size)) + >= av->system_mem, 0)) + { + bool fail = true; + /* We might not have a lock at this point and concurrent modifications + of system_mem might result in a false positive. Redo the test after + getting the lock. */ + if (!have_lock) + { + __libc_lock_lock (av->mutex); + fail = (chunksize_nomask (chunk_at_offset (p, size)) <= 2 * SIZE_SZ + || chunksize (chunk_at_offset (p, size)) >= av->system_mem); + __libc_lock_unlock (av->mutex); + } + + if (fail) + malloc_printerr ("free(): invalid next size (fast)"); + } + + free_perturb (chunk2mem(p), size - 2 * SIZE_SZ); + + atomic_store_relaxed (&av->have_fastchunks, true); + unsigned int idx = fastbin_index(size); + fb = &fastbin (av, idx); + + /* Atomically link P to its fastbin: P->FD = *FB; *FB = P; */ + mchunkptr old = *fb, old2; + + if (SINGLE_THREAD_P) + { + /* Check that the top of the bin is not the record we are going to + add (i.e., double free). */ + if (__builtin_expect (old == p, 0)) + malloc_printerr ("double free or corruption (fasttop)"); + p->fd = old; + *fb = p; + } + else + do + { + /* Check that the top of the bin is not the record we are going to + add (i.e., double free). */ + if (__builtin_expect (old == p, 0)) + malloc_printerr ("double free or corruption (fasttop)"); + p->fd = old2 = old; + } + while ((old = catomic_compare_and_exchange_val_rel (fb, p, old2)) + != old2); + + /* Check that size of fastbin chunk at the top is the same as + size of the chunk that we are adding. We can dereference OLD + only if we have the lock, otherwise it might have already been + allocated again. */ + if (have_lock && old != NULL + && __builtin_expect (fastbin_index (chunksize (old)) != idx, 0)) + malloc_printerr ("invalid fastbin entry (free)"); + } + + /* + Consolidate other non-mmapped chunks as they arrive. + */ + + else if (!chunk_is_mmapped(p)) { + + /* If we're single-threaded, don't lock the arena. */ + if (SINGLE_THREAD_P) + have_lock = true; + + if (!have_lock) + __libc_lock_lock (av->mutex); + + nextchunk = chunk_at_offset(p, size); + + /* Lightweight tests: check whether the block is already the + top block. */ + if (__glibc_unlikely (p == av->top)) + malloc_printerr ("double free or corruption (top)"); + /* Or whether the next chunk is beyond the boundaries of the arena. */ + if (__builtin_expect (contiguous (av) + && (char *) nextchunk + >= ((char *) av->top + chunksize(av->top)), 0)) + malloc_printerr ("double free or corruption (out)"); + /* Or whether the block is actually not marked used. */ + if (__glibc_unlikely (!prev_inuse(nextchunk))) + malloc_printerr ("double free or corruption (!prev)"); + + nextsize = chunksize(nextchunk); + if (__builtin_expect (chunksize_nomask (nextchunk) <= 2 * SIZE_SZ, 0) + || __builtin_expect (nextsize >= av->system_mem, 0)) + malloc_printerr ("free(): invalid next size (normal)"); + + free_perturb (chunk2mem(p), size - 2 * SIZE_SZ); + + /* consolidate backward */ + if (!prev_inuse(p)) { + prevsize = prev_size (p); + size += prevsize; + p = chunk_at_offset(p, -((long) prevsize)); + unlink(av, p, bck, fwd); + } + + if (nextchunk != av->top) { + /* get and clear inuse bit */ + nextinuse = inuse_bit_at_offset(nextchunk, nextsize); + + /* consolidate forward */ + if (!nextinuse) { + unlink(av, nextchunk, bck, fwd); + size += nextsize; + } else + clear_inuse_bit_at_offset(nextchunk, 0); + + /* + Place the chunk in unsorted chunk list. Chunks are + not placed into regular bins until after they have + been given one chance to be used in malloc. + */ + + bck = unsorted_chunks(av); + fwd = bck->fd; + if (__glibc_unlikely (fwd->bk != bck)) + malloc_printerr ("free(): corrupted unsorted chunks"); + p->fd = fwd; + p->bk = bck; + if (!in_smallbin_range(size)) + { + p->fd_nextsize = NULL; + p->bk_nextsize = NULL; + } + bck->fd = p; + fwd->bk = p; + + set_head(p, size | PREV_INUSE); + set_foot(p, size); + + check_free_chunk(av, p); + } + + /* + If the chunk borders the current high end of memory, + consolidate into top + */ + + else { + size += nextsize; + set_head(p, size | PREV_INUSE); + av->top = p; + check_chunk(av, p); + } + + /* + If freeing a large space, consolidate possibly-surrounding + chunks. Then, if the total unused topmost memory exceeds trim + threshold, ask malloc_trim to reduce top. + + Unless max_fast is 0, we don't know if there are fastbins + bordering top, so we cannot tell for sure whether threshold + has been reached unless fastbins are consolidated. But we + don't want to consolidate on each free. As a compromise, + consolidation is performed if FASTBIN_CONSOLIDATION_THRESHOLD + is reached. + */ + + if ((unsigned long)(size) >= FASTBIN_CONSOLIDATION_THRESHOLD) { + if (atomic_load_relaxed (&av->have_fastchunks)) + malloc_consolidate(av); + + if (av == &main_arena) { +#ifndef MORECORE_CANNOT_TRIM + if ((unsigned long)(chunksize(av->top)) >= + (unsigned long)(mp_.trim_threshold)) + systrim(mp_.top_pad, av); +#endif + } else { + /* Always try heap_trim(), even if the top chunk is not + large, because the corresponding heap might go away. */ + heap_info *heap = heap_for_ptr(top(av)); + + assert(heap->ar_ptr == av); + heap_trim(heap, mp_.top_pad); + } + } + + if (!have_lock) + __libc_lock_unlock (av->mutex); + } + /* + If the chunk was allocated via mmap, release via munmap(). + */ + + else { + munmap_chunk (p); + } +} + +/* + ------------------------- malloc_consolidate ------------------------- + + malloc_consolidate is a specialized version of free() that tears + down chunks held in fastbins. Free itself cannot be used for this + purpose since, among other things, it might place chunks back onto + fastbins. So, instead, we need to use a minor variant of the same + code. +*/ + +static void malloc_consolidate(mstate av) +{ + mfastbinptr* fb; /* current fastbin being consolidated */ + mfastbinptr* maxfb; /* last fastbin (for loop control) */ + mchunkptr p; /* current chunk being consolidated */ + mchunkptr nextp; /* next chunk to consolidate */ + mchunkptr unsorted_bin; /* bin header */ + mchunkptr first_unsorted; /* chunk to link to */ + + /* These have same use as in free() */ + mchunkptr nextchunk; + INTERNAL_SIZE_T size; + INTERNAL_SIZE_T nextsize; + INTERNAL_SIZE_T prevsize; + int nextinuse; + mchunkptr bck; + mchunkptr fwd; + + atomic_store_relaxed (&av->have_fastchunks, false); + + unsorted_bin = unsorted_chunks(av); + + /* + Remove each chunk from fast bin and consolidate it, placing it + then in unsorted bin. Among other reasons for doing this, + placing in unsorted bin avoids needing to calculate actual bins + until malloc is sure that chunks aren't immediately going to be + reused anyway. + */ + + maxfb = &fastbin (av, NFASTBINS - 1); + fb = &fastbin (av, 0); + do { + p = atomic_exchange_acq (fb, NULL); + if (p != 0) { + do { + { + unsigned int idx = fastbin_index (chunksize (p)); + if ((&fastbin (av, idx)) != fb) + malloc_printerr ("malloc_consolidate(): invalid chunk size"); + } + + check_inuse_chunk(av, p); + nextp = p->fd; + + /* Slightly streamlined version of consolidation code in free() */ + size = chunksize (p); + nextchunk = chunk_at_offset(p, size); + nextsize = chunksize(nextchunk); + + if (!prev_inuse(p)) { + prevsize = prev_size (p); + size += prevsize; + p = chunk_at_offset(p, -((long) prevsize)); + unlink(av, p, bck, fwd); + } + + if (nextchunk != av->top) { + nextinuse = inuse_bit_at_offset(nextchunk, nextsize); + + if (!nextinuse) { + size += nextsize; + unlink(av, nextchunk, bck, fwd); + } else + clear_inuse_bit_at_offset(nextchunk, 0); + + first_unsorted = unsorted_bin->fd; + unsorted_bin->fd = p; + first_unsorted->bk = p; + + if (!in_smallbin_range (size)) { + p->fd_nextsize = NULL; + p->bk_nextsize = NULL; + } + + set_head(p, size | PREV_INUSE); + p->bk = unsorted_bin; + p->fd = first_unsorted; + set_foot(p, size); + } + + else { + size += nextsize; + set_head(p, size | PREV_INUSE); + av->top = p; + } + + } while ( (p = nextp) != 0); + + } + } while (fb++ != maxfb); +} + +/* + ------------------------------ realloc ------------------------------ +*/ + +void* +_int_realloc(mstate av, mchunkptr oldp, INTERNAL_SIZE_T oldsize, + INTERNAL_SIZE_T nb) +{ + mchunkptr newp; /* chunk to return */ + INTERNAL_SIZE_T newsize; /* its size */ + void* newmem; /* corresponding user mem */ + + mchunkptr next; /* next contiguous chunk after oldp */ + + mchunkptr remainder; /* extra space at end of newp */ + unsigned long remainder_size; /* its size */ + + mchunkptr bck; /* misc temp for linking */ + mchunkptr fwd; /* misc temp for linking */ + + unsigned long copysize; /* bytes to copy */ + unsigned int ncopies; /* INTERNAL_SIZE_T words to copy */ + INTERNAL_SIZE_T* s; /* copy source */ + INTERNAL_SIZE_T* d; /* copy destination */ + + /* oldmem size */ + if (__builtin_expect (chunksize_nomask (oldp) <= 2 * SIZE_SZ, 0) + || __builtin_expect (oldsize >= av->system_mem, 0)) + malloc_printerr ("realloc(): invalid old size"); + + check_inuse_chunk (av, oldp); + + /* All callers already filter out mmap'ed chunks. */ + assert (!chunk_is_mmapped (oldp)); + + next = chunk_at_offset (oldp, oldsize); + INTERNAL_SIZE_T nextsize = chunksize (next); + if (__builtin_expect (chunksize_nomask (next) <= 2 * SIZE_SZ, 0) + || __builtin_expect (nextsize >= av->system_mem, 0)) + malloc_printerr ("realloc(): invalid next size"); + + if ((unsigned long) (oldsize) >= (unsigned long) (nb)) + { + /* already big enough; split below */ + newp = oldp; + newsize = oldsize; + } + + else + { + /* Try to expand forward into top */ + if (next == av->top && + (unsigned long) (newsize = oldsize + nextsize) >= + (unsigned long) (nb + MINSIZE)) + { + set_head_size (oldp, nb | (av != &main_arena ? NON_MAIN_ARENA : 0)); + av->top = chunk_at_offset (oldp, nb); + set_head (av->top, (newsize - nb) | PREV_INUSE); + check_inuse_chunk (av, oldp); + return chunk2mem (oldp); + } + + /* Try to expand forward into next chunk; split off remainder below */ + else if (next != av->top && + !inuse (next) && + (unsigned long) (newsize = oldsize + nextsize) >= + (unsigned long) (nb)) + { + newp = oldp; + unlink (av, next, bck, fwd); + } + + /* allocate, copy, free */ + else + { + newmem = _int_malloc (av, nb - MALLOC_ALIGN_MASK); + if (newmem == 0) + return 0; /* propagate failure */ + + newp = mem2chunk (newmem); + newsize = chunksize (newp); + + /* + Avoid copy if newp is next chunk after oldp. + */ + if (newp == next) + { + newsize += oldsize; + newp = oldp; + } + else + { + /* + Unroll copy of <= 36 bytes (72 if 8byte sizes) + We know that contents have an odd number of + INTERNAL_SIZE_T-sized words; minimally 3. + */ + + copysize = oldsize - SIZE_SZ; + s = (INTERNAL_SIZE_T *) (chunk2mem (oldp)); + d = (INTERNAL_SIZE_T *) (newmem); + ncopies = copysize / sizeof (INTERNAL_SIZE_T); + assert (ncopies >= 3); + + if (ncopies > 9) + memcpy (d, s, copysize); + + else + { + *(d + 0) = *(s + 0); + *(d + 1) = *(s + 1); + *(d + 2) = *(s + 2); + if (ncopies > 4) + { + *(d + 3) = *(s + 3); + *(d + 4) = *(s + 4); + if (ncopies > 6) + { + *(d + 5) = *(s + 5); + *(d + 6) = *(s + 6); + if (ncopies > 8) + { + *(d + 7) = *(s + 7); + *(d + 8) = *(s + 8); + } + } + } + } + + _int_free (av, oldp, 1); + check_inuse_chunk (av, newp); + return chunk2mem (newp); + } + } + } + + /* If possible, free extra space in old or extended chunk */ + + assert ((unsigned long) (newsize) >= (unsigned long) (nb)); + + remainder_size = newsize - nb; + + if (remainder_size < MINSIZE) /* not enough extra to split off */ + { + set_head_size (newp, newsize | (av != &main_arena ? NON_MAIN_ARENA : 0)); + set_inuse_bit_at_offset (newp, newsize); + } + else /* split remainder */ + { + remainder = chunk_at_offset (newp, nb); + set_head_size (newp, nb | (av != &main_arena ? NON_MAIN_ARENA : 0)); + set_head (remainder, remainder_size | PREV_INUSE | + (av != &main_arena ? NON_MAIN_ARENA : 0)); + /* Mark remainder as inuse so free() won't complain */ + set_inuse_bit_at_offset (remainder, remainder_size); + _int_free (av, remainder, 1); + } + + check_inuse_chunk (av, newp); + return chunk2mem (newp); +} + +/* + ------------------------------ memalign ------------------------------ + */ + +static void * +_int_memalign (mstate av, size_t alignment, size_t bytes) +{ + INTERNAL_SIZE_T nb; /* padded request size */ + char *m; /* memory returned by malloc call */ + mchunkptr p; /* corresponding chunk */ + char *brk; /* alignment point within p */ + mchunkptr newp; /* chunk to return */ + INTERNAL_SIZE_T newsize; /* its size */ + INTERNAL_SIZE_T leadsize; /* leading space before alignment point */ + mchunkptr remainder; /* spare room at end to split off */ + unsigned long remainder_size; /* its size */ + INTERNAL_SIZE_T size; + + + + checked_request2size (bytes, nb); + + /* + Strategy: find a spot within that chunk that meets the alignment + request, and then possibly free the leading and trailing space. + */ + + + /* Check for overflow. */ + if (nb > SIZE_MAX - alignment - MINSIZE) + { + __set_errno (ENOMEM); + return 0; + } + + /* Call malloc with worst case padding to hit alignment. */ + + m = (char *) (_int_malloc (av, nb + alignment + MINSIZE)); + + if (m == 0) + return 0; /* propagate failure */ + + p = mem2chunk (m); + + if ((((unsigned long) (m)) % alignment) != 0) /* misaligned */ + + { /* + Find an aligned spot inside chunk. Since we need to give back + leading space in a chunk of at least MINSIZE, if the first + calculation places us at a spot with less than MINSIZE leader, + we can move to the next aligned spot -- we've allocated enough + total room so that this is always possible. + */ + brk = (char *) mem2chunk (((unsigned long) (m + alignment - 1)) & + - ((signed long) alignment)); + if ((unsigned long) (brk - (char *) (p)) < MINSIZE) + brk += alignment; + + newp = (mchunkptr) brk; + leadsize = brk - (char *) (p); + newsize = chunksize (p) - leadsize; + + /* For mmapped chunks, just adjust offset */ + if (chunk_is_mmapped (p)) + { + set_prev_size (newp, prev_size (p) + leadsize); + set_head (newp, newsize | IS_MMAPPED); + return chunk2mem (newp); + } + + /* Otherwise, give back leader, use the rest */ + set_head (newp, newsize | PREV_INUSE | + (av != &main_arena ? NON_MAIN_ARENA : 0)); + set_inuse_bit_at_offset (newp, newsize); + set_head_size (p, leadsize | (av != &main_arena ? NON_MAIN_ARENA : 0)); + _int_free (av, p, 1); + p = newp; + + assert (newsize >= nb && + (((unsigned long) (chunk2mem (p))) % alignment) == 0); + } + + /* Also give back spare room at the end */ + if (!chunk_is_mmapped (p)) + { + size = chunksize (p); + if ((unsigned long) (size) > (unsigned long) (nb + MINSIZE)) + { + remainder_size = size - nb; + remainder = chunk_at_offset (p, nb); + set_head (remainder, remainder_size | PREV_INUSE | + (av != &main_arena ? NON_MAIN_ARENA : 0)); + set_head_size (p, nb); + _int_free (av, remainder, 1); + } + } + + check_inuse_chunk (av, p); + return chunk2mem (p); +} + + +/* + ------------------------------ malloc_trim ------------------------------ + */ + +static int +mtrim (mstate av, size_t pad) +{ + /* Ensure all blocks are consolidated. */ + malloc_consolidate (av); + + const size_t ps = GLRO (dl_pagesize); + int psindex = bin_index (ps); + const size_t psm1 = ps - 1; + + int result = 0; + for (int i = 1; i < NBINS; ++i) + if (i == 1 || i >= psindex) + { + mbinptr bin = bin_at (av, i); + + for (mchunkptr p = last (bin); p != bin; p = p->bk) + { + INTERNAL_SIZE_T size = chunksize (p); + + if (size > psm1 + sizeof (struct malloc_chunk)) + { + /* See whether the chunk contains at least one unused page. */ + char *paligned_mem = (char *) (((uintptr_t) p + + sizeof (struct malloc_chunk) + + psm1) & ~psm1); + + assert ((char *) chunk2mem (p) + 4 * SIZE_SZ <= paligned_mem); + assert ((char *) p + size > paligned_mem); + + /* This is the size we could potentially free. */ + size -= paligned_mem - (char *) p; + + if (size > psm1) + { +#if MALLOC_DEBUG + /* When debugging we simulate destroying the memory + content. */ + memset (paligned_mem, 0x89, size & ~psm1); +#endif + __madvise (paligned_mem, size & ~psm1, MADV_DONTNEED); + + result = 1; + } + } + } + } + +#ifndef MORECORE_CANNOT_TRIM + return result | (av == &main_arena ? systrim (pad, av) : 0); + +#else + return result; +#endif +} + + +int +__malloc_trim (size_t s) +{ + int result = 0; + + if (__malloc_initialized < 0) + ptmalloc_init (); + + mstate ar_ptr = &main_arena; + do + { + __libc_lock_lock (ar_ptr->mutex); + result |= mtrim (ar_ptr, s); + __libc_lock_unlock (ar_ptr->mutex); + + ar_ptr = ar_ptr->next; + } + while (ar_ptr != &main_arena); + + return result; +} + + +/* + ------------------------- malloc_usable_size ------------------------- + */ + +static size_t +musable (void *mem) +{ + mchunkptr p; + if (mem != 0) + { + p = mem2chunk (mem); + + if (__builtin_expect (using_malloc_checking == 1, 0)) + return malloc_check_get_size (p); + + if (chunk_is_mmapped (p)) + { + if (DUMPED_MAIN_ARENA_CHUNK (p)) + return chunksize (p) - SIZE_SZ; + else + return chunksize (p) - 2 * SIZE_SZ; + } + else if (inuse (p)) + return chunksize (p) - SIZE_SZ; + } + return 0; +} + + +size_t +__malloc_usable_size (void *m) +{ + size_t result; + + result = musable (m); + return result; +} + +/* + ------------------------------ mallinfo ------------------------------ + Accumulate malloc statistics for arena AV into M. + */ + +static void +int_mallinfo (mstate av, struct mallinfo *m) +{ + size_t i; + mbinptr b; + mchunkptr p; + INTERNAL_SIZE_T avail; + INTERNAL_SIZE_T fastavail; + int nblocks; + int nfastblocks; + + check_malloc_state (av); + + /* Account for top */ + avail = chunksize (av->top); + nblocks = 1; /* top always exists */ + + /* traverse fastbins */ + nfastblocks = 0; + fastavail = 0; + + for (i = 0; i < NFASTBINS; ++i) + { + for (p = fastbin (av, i); p != 0; p = p->fd) + { + ++nfastblocks; + fastavail += chunksize (p); + } + } + + avail += fastavail; + + /* traverse regular bins */ + for (i = 1; i < NBINS; ++i) + { + b = bin_at (av, i); + for (p = last (b); p != b; p = p->bk) + { + ++nblocks; + avail += chunksize (p); + } + } + + m->smblks += nfastblocks; + m->ordblks += nblocks; + m->fordblks += avail; + m->uordblks += av->system_mem - avail; + m->arena += av->system_mem; + m->fsmblks += fastavail; + if (av == &main_arena) + { + m->hblks = mp_.n_mmaps; + m->hblkhd = mp_.mmapped_mem; + m->usmblks = 0; + m->keepcost = chunksize (av->top); + } +} + + +struct mallinfo +__libc_mallinfo (void) +{ + struct mallinfo m; + mstate ar_ptr; + + if (__malloc_initialized < 0) + ptmalloc_init (); + + memset (&m, 0, sizeof (m)); + ar_ptr = &main_arena; + do + { + __libc_lock_lock (ar_ptr->mutex); + int_mallinfo (ar_ptr, &m); + __libc_lock_unlock (ar_ptr->mutex); + + ar_ptr = ar_ptr->next; + } + while (ar_ptr != &main_arena); + + return m; +} + +/* + ------------------------------ malloc_stats ------------------------------ + */ + +void +__malloc_stats (void) +{ + int i; + mstate ar_ptr; + unsigned int in_use_b = mp_.mmapped_mem, system_b = in_use_b; + + if (__malloc_initialized < 0) + ptmalloc_init (); + _IO_flockfile (stderr); + int old_flags2 = stderr->_flags2; + stderr->_flags2 |= _IO_FLAGS2_NOTCANCEL; + for (i = 0, ar_ptr = &main_arena;; i++) + { + struct mallinfo mi; + + memset (&mi, 0, sizeof (mi)); + __libc_lock_lock (ar_ptr->mutex); + int_mallinfo (ar_ptr, &mi); + fprintf (stderr, "Arena %d:\n", i); + fprintf (stderr, "system bytes = %10u\n", (unsigned int) mi.arena); + fprintf (stderr, "in use bytes = %10u\n", (unsigned int) mi.uordblks); +#if MALLOC_DEBUG > 1 + if (i > 0) + dump_heap (heap_for_ptr (top (ar_ptr))); +#endif + system_b += mi.arena; + in_use_b += mi.uordblks; + __libc_lock_unlock (ar_ptr->mutex); + ar_ptr = ar_ptr->next; + if (ar_ptr == &main_arena) + break; + } + fprintf (stderr, "Total (incl. mmap):\n"); + fprintf (stderr, "system bytes = %10u\n", system_b); + fprintf (stderr, "in use bytes = %10u\n", in_use_b); + fprintf (stderr, "max mmap regions = %10u\n", (unsigned int) mp_.max_n_mmaps); + fprintf (stderr, "max mmap bytes = %10lu\n", + (unsigned long) mp_.max_mmapped_mem); + stderr->_flags2 = old_flags2; + _IO_funlockfile (stderr); +} + + +/* + ------------------------------ mallopt ------------------------------ + */ +static inline int +__always_inline +do_set_trim_threshold (size_t value) +{ + LIBC_PROBE (memory_mallopt_trim_threshold, 3, value, mp_.trim_threshold, + mp_.no_dyn_threshold); + mp_.trim_threshold = value; + mp_.no_dyn_threshold = 1; + return 1; +} + +static inline int +__always_inline +do_set_top_pad (size_t value) +{ + LIBC_PROBE (memory_mallopt_top_pad, 3, value, mp_.top_pad, + mp_.no_dyn_threshold); + mp_.top_pad = value; + mp_.no_dyn_threshold = 1; + return 1; +} + +static inline int +__always_inline +do_set_mmap_threshold (size_t value) +{ + /* Forbid setting the threshold too high. */ + if (value <= HEAP_MAX_SIZE / 2) + { + LIBC_PROBE (memory_mallopt_mmap_threshold, 3, value, mp_.mmap_threshold, + mp_.no_dyn_threshold); + mp_.mmap_threshold = value; + mp_.no_dyn_threshold = 1; + return 1; + } + return 0; +} + +static inline int +__always_inline +do_set_mmaps_max (int32_t value) +{ + LIBC_PROBE (memory_mallopt_mmap_max, 3, value, mp_.n_mmaps_max, + mp_.no_dyn_threshold); + mp_.n_mmaps_max = value; + mp_.no_dyn_threshold = 1; + return 1; +} + +static inline int +__always_inline +do_set_mallopt_check (int32_t value) +{ + return 1; +} + +static inline int +__always_inline +do_set_perturb_byte (int32_t value) +{ + LIBC_PROBE (memory_mallopt_perturb, 2, value, perturb_byte); + perturb_byte = value; + return 1; +} + +static inline int +__always_inline +do_set_arena_test (size_t value) +{ + LIBC_PROBE (memory_mallopt_arena_test, 2, value, mp_.arena_test); + mp_.arena_test = value; + return 1; +} + +static inline int +__always_inline +do_set_arena_max (size_t value) +{ + LIBC_PROBE (memory_mallopt_arena_max, 2, value, mp_.arena_max); + mp_.arena_max = value; + return 1; +} + +#if USE_TCACHE +static inline int +__always_inline +do_set_tcache_max (size_t value) +{ + if (value >= 0 && value <= MAX_TCACHE_SIZE) + { + LIBC_PROBE (memory_tunable_tcache_max_bytes, 2, value, mp_.tcache_max_bytes); + mp_.tcache_max_bytes = value; + mp_.tcache_bins = csize2tidx (request2size(value)) + 1; + } + return 1; +} + +static inline int +__always_inline +do_set_tcache_count (size_t value) +{ + LIBC_PROBE (memory_tunable_tcache_count, 2, value, mp_.tcache_count); + mp_.tcache_count = value; + return 1; +} + +static inline int +__always_inline +do_set_tcache_unsorted_limit (size_t value) +{ + LIBC_PROBE (memory_tunable_tcache_unsorted_limit, 2, value, mp_.tcache_unsorted_limit); + mp_.tcache_unsorted_limit = value; + return 1; +} +#endif + +int +__libc_mallopt (int param_number, int value) +{ + mstate av = &main_arena; + int res = 1; + + if (__malloc_initialized < 0) + ptmalloc_init (); + __libc_lock_lock (av->mutex); + + LIBC_PROBE (memory_mallopt, 2, param_number, value); + + /* We must consolidate main arena before changing max_fast + (see definition of set_max_fast). */ + malloc_consolidate (av); + + switch (param_number) + { + case M_MXFAST: + if (value >= 0 && value <= MAX_FAST_SIZE) + { + LIBC_PROBE (memory_mallopt_mxfast, 2, value, get_max_fast ()); + set_max_fast (value); + } + else + res = 0; + break; + + case M_TRIM_THRESHOLD: + do_set_trim_threshold (value); + break; + + case M_TOP_PAD: + do_set_top_pad (value); + break; + + case M_MMAP_THRESHOLD: + res = do_set_mmap_threshold (value); + break; + + case M_MMAP_MAX: + do_set_mmaps_max (value); + break; + + case M_CHECK_ACTION: + do_set_mallopt_check (value); + break; + + case M_PERTURB: + do_set_perturb_byte (value); + break; + + case M_ARENA_TEST: + if (value > 0) + do_set_arena_test (value); + break; + + case M_ARENA_MAX: + if (value > 0) + do_set_arena_max (value); + break; + } + __libc_lock_unlock (av->mutex); + return res; +} +libc_hidden_def (__libc_mallopt) + + +/* + -------------------- Alternative MORECORE functions -------------------- + */ + + +/* + General Requirements for MORECORE. + + The MORECORE function must have the following properties: + + If MORECORE_CONTIGUOUS is false: + + * MORECORE must allocate in multiples of pagesize. It will + only be called with arguments that are multiples of pagesize. + + * MORECORE(0) must return an address that is at least + MALLOC_ALIGNMENT aligned. (Page-aligning always suffices.) + + else (i.e. If MORECORE_CONTIGUOUS is true): + + * Consecutive calls to MORECORE with positive arguments + return increasing addresses, indicating that space has been + contiguously extended. + + * MORECORE need not allocate in multiples of pagesize. + Calls to MORECORE need not have args of multiples of pagesize. + + * MORECORE need not page-align. + + In either case: + + * MORECORE may allocate more memory than requested. (Or even less, + but this will generally result in a malloc failure.) + + * MORECORE must not allocate memory when given argument zero, but + instead return one past the end address of memory from previous + nonzero call. This malloc does NOT call MORECORE(0) + until at least one call with positive arguments is made, so + the initial value returned is not important. + + * Even though consecutive calls to MORECORE need not return contiguous + addresses, it must be OK for malloc'ed chunks to span multiple + regions in those cases where they do happen to be contiguous. + + * MORECORE need not handle negative arguments -- it may instead + just return MORECORE_FAILURE when given negative arguments. + Negative arguments are always multiples of pagesize. MORECORE + must not misinterpret negative args as large positive unsigned + args. You can suppress all such calls from even occurring by defining + MORECORE_CANNOT_TRIM, + + There is some variation across systems about the type of the + argument to sbrk/MORECORE. If size_t is unsigned, then it cannot + actually be size_t, because sbrk supports negative args, so it is + normally the signed type of the same width as size_t (sometimes + declared as "intptr_t", and sometimes "ptrdiff_t"). It doesn't much + matter though. Internally, we use "long" as arguments, which should + work across all reasonable possibilities. + + Additionally, if MORECORE ever returns failure for a positive + request, then mmap is used as a noncontiguous system allocator. This + is a useful backup strategy for systems with holes in address spaces + -- in this case sbrk cannot contiguously expand the heap, but mmap + may be able to map noncontiguous space. + + If you'd like mmap to ALWAYS be used, you can define MORECORE to be + a function that always returns MORECORE_FAILURE. + + If you are using this malloc with something other than sbrk (or its + emulation) to supply memory regions, you probably want to set + MORECORE_CONTIGUOUS as false. As an example, here is a custom + allocator kindly contributed for pre-OSX macOS. It uses virtually + but not necessarily physically contiguous non-paged memory (locked + in, present and won't get swapped out). You can use it by + uncommenting this section, adding some #includes, and setting up the + appropriate defines above: + + *#define MORECORE osMoreCore + *#define MORECORE_CONTIGUOUS 0 + + There is also a shutdown routine that should somehow be called for + cleanup upon program exit. + + *#define MAX_POOL_ENTRIES 100 + *#define MINIMUM_MORECORE_SIZE (64 * 1024) + static int next_os_pool; + void *our_os_pools[MAX_POOL_ENTRIES]; + + void *osMoreCore(int size) + { + void *ptr = 0; + static void *sbrk_top = 0; + + if (size > 0) + { + if (size < MINIMUM_MORECORE_SIZE) + size = MINIMUM_MORECORE_SIZE; + if (CurrentExecutionLevel() == kTaskLevel) + ptr = PoolAllocateResident(size + RM_PAGE_SIZE, 0); + if (ptr == 0) + { + return (void *) MORECORE_FAILURE; + } + // save ptrs so they can be freed during cleanup + our_os_pools[next_os_pool] = ptr; + next_os_pool++; + ptr = (void *) ((((unsigned long) ptr) + RM_PAGE_MASK) & ~RM_PAGE_MASK); + sbrk_top = (char *) ptr + size; + return ptr; + } + else if (size < 0) + { + // we don't currently support shrink behavior + return (void *) MORECORE_FAILURE; + } + else + { + return sbrk_top; + } + } + + // cleanup any allocated memory pools + // called as last thing before shutting down driver + + void osCleanupMem(void) + { + void **ptr; + + for (ptr = our_os_pools; ptr < &our_os_pools[MAX_POOL_ENTRIES]; ptr++) + if (*ptr) + { + PoolDeallocate(*ptr); + * ptr = 0; + } + } + + */ + + +/* Helper code. */ + +extern char **__libc_argv attribute_hidden; + +static void +malloc_printerr (const char *str) +{ + __libc_message (do_abort, "%s\n", str); + __builtin_unreachable (); +} + +/* We need a wrapper function for one of the additions of POSIX. */ +int +__posix_memalign (void **memptr, size_t alignment, size_t size) +{ + void *mem; + + /* Test whether the SIZE argument is valid. It must be a power of + two multiple of sizeof (void *). */ + if (alignment % sizeof (void *) != 0 + || !powerof2 (alignment / sizeof (void *)) + || alignment == 0) + return EINVAL; + + + void *address = RETURN_ADDRESS (0); + mem = _mid_memalign (alignment, size, address); + + if (mem != NULL) + { + *memptr = mem; + return 0; + } + + return ENOMEM; +} +weak_alias (__posix_memalign, posix_memalign) + + +int +__malloc_info (int options, FILE *fp) +{ + /* For now, at least. */ + if (options != 0) + return EINVAL; + + int n = 0; + size_t total_nblocks = 0; + size_t total_nfastblocks = 0; + size_t total_avail = 0; + size_t total_fastavail = 0; + size_t total_system = 0; + size_t total_max_system = 0; + size_t total_aspace = 0; + size_t total_aspace_mprotect = 0; + + + + if (__malloc_initialized < 0) + ptmalloc_init (); + + fputs ("\n", fp); + + /* Iterate over all arenas currently in use. */ + mstate ar_ptr = &main_arena; + do + { + fprintf (fp, "\n\n", n++); + + size_t nblocks = 0; + size_t nfastblocks = 0; + size_t avail = 0; + size_t fastavail = 0; + struct + { + size_t from; + size_t to; + size_t total; + size_t count; + } sizes[NFASTBINS + NBINS - 1]; +#define nsizes (sizeof (sizes) / sizeof (sizes[0])) + + __libc_lock_lock (ar_ptr->mutex); + + for (size_t i = 0; i < NFASTBINS; ++i) + { + mchunkptr p = fastbin (ar_ptr, i); + if (p != NULL) + { + size_t nthissize = 0; + size_t thissize = chunksize (p); + + while (p != NULL) + { + ++nthissize; + p = p->fd; + } + + fastavail += nthissize * thissize; + nfastblocks += nthissize; + sizes[i].from = thissize - (MALLOC_ALIGNMENT - 1); + sizes[i].to = thissize; + sizes[i].count = nthissize; + } + else + sizes[i].from = sizes[i].to = sizes[i].count = 0; + + sizes[i].total = sizes[i].count * sizes[i].to; + } + + + mbinptr bin; + struct malloc_chunk *r; + + for (size_t i = 1; i < NBINS; ++i) + { + bin = bin_at (ar_ptr, i); + r = bin->fd; + sizes[NFASTBINS - 1 + i].from = ~((size_t) 0); + sizes[NFASTBINS - 1 + i].to = sizes[NFASTBINS - 1 + i].total + = sizes[NFASTBINS - 1 + i].count = 0; + + if (r != NULL) + while (r != bin) + { + size_t r_size = chunksize_nomask (r); + ++sizes[NFASTBINS - 1 + i].count; + sizes[NFASTBINS - 1 + i].total += r_size; + sizes[NFASTBINS - 1 + i].from + = MIN (sizes[NFASTBINS - 1 + i].from, r_size); + sizes[NFASTBINS - 1 + i].to = MAX (sizes[NFASTBINS - 1 + i].to, + r_size); + + r = r->fd; + } + + if (sizes[NFASTBINS - 1 + i].count == 0) + sizes[NFASTBINS - 1 + i].from = 0; + nblocks += sizes[NFASTBINS - 1 + i].count; + avail += sizes[NFASTBINS - 1 + i].total; + } + + size_t heap_size = 0; + size_t heap_mprotect_size = 0; + size_t heap_count = 0; + if (ar_ptr != &main_arena) + { + /* Iterate over the arena heaps from back to front. */ + heap_info *heap = heap_for_ptr (top (ar_ptr)); + do + { + heap_size += heap->size; + heap_mprotect_size += heap->mprotect_size; + heap = heap->prev; + ++heap_count; + } + while (heap != NULL); + } + + __libc_lock_unlock (ar_ptr->mutex); + + total_nfastblocks += nfastblocks; + total_fastavail += fastavail; + + total_nblocks += nblocks; + total_avail += avail; + + for (size_t i = 0; i < nsizes; ++i) + if (sizes[i].count != 0 && i != NFASTBINS) + fprintf (fp, " \ + \n", + sizes[i].from, sizes[i].to, sizes[i].total, sizes[i].count); + + if (sizes[NFASTBINS].count != 0) + fprintf (fp, "\ + \n", + sizes[NFASTBINS].from, sizes[NFASTBINS].to, + sizes[NFASTBINS].total, sizes[NFASTBINS].count); + + total_system += ar_ptr->system_mem; + total_max_system += ar_ptr->max_system_mem; + + fprintf (fp, + "\n\n" + "\n" + "\n" + "\n", + nfastblocks, fastavail, nblocks, avail, + ar_ptr->system_mem, ar_ptr->max_system_mem); + + if (ar_ptr != &main_arena) + { + fprintf (fp, + "\n" + "\n" + "\n", + heap_size, heap_mprotect_size, heap_count); + total_aspace += heap_size; + total_aspace_mprotect += heap_mprotect_size; + } + else + { + fprintf (fp, + "\n" + "\n", + ar_ptr->system_mem, ar_ptr->system_mem); + total_aspace += ar_ptr->system_mem; + total_aspace_mprotect += ar_ptr->system_mem; + } + + fputs ("\n", fp); + ar_ptr = ar_ptr->next; + } + while (ar_ptr != &main_arena); + + fprintf (fp, + "\n" + "\n" + "\n" + "\n" + "\n" + "\n" + "\n" + "\n", + total_nfastblocks, total_fastavail, total_nblocks, total_avail, + mp_.n_mmaps, mp_.mmapped_mem, + total_system, total_max_system, + total_aspace, total_aspace_mprotect); + + return 0; +} +weak_alias (__malloc_info, malloc_info) + + +strong_alias (__libc_calloc, __calloc) weak_alias (__libc_calloc, calloc) +strong_alias (__libc_free, __free) strong_alias (__libc_free, free) +strong_alias (__libc_malloc, __malloc) strong_alias (__libc_malloc, malloc) +strong_alias (__libc_memalign, __memalign) +weak_alias (__libc_memalign, memalign) +strong_alias (__libc_realloc, __realloc) strong_alias (__libc_realloc, realloc) +strong_alias (__libc_valloc, __valloc) weak_alias (__libc_valloc, valloc) +strong_alias (__libc_pvalloc, __pvalloc) weak_alias (__libc_pvalloc, pvalloc) +strong_alias (__libc_mallinfo, __mallinfo) +weak_alias (__libc_mallinfo, mallinfo) +strong_alias (__libc_mallopt, __mallopt) weak_alias (__libc_mallopt, mallopt) + +weak_alias (__malloc_stats, malloc_stats) +weak_alias (__malloc_usable_size, malloc_usable_size) +weak_alias (__malloc_trim, malloc_trim) + +#if SHLIB_COMPAT (libc, GLIBC_2_0, GLIBC_2_26) +compat_symbol (libc, __libc_free, cfree, GLIBC_2_0); +#endif + +/* ------------------------------------------------------------ + History: + + [see ftp://g.oswego.edu/pub/misc/malloc.c for the history of dlmalloc] + + */ +/* + * Local variables: + * c-basic-offset: 2 + * End: + */ -- cgit v1.2.3