The address of a block returned by malloc
or realloc
in
GNU systems is always a multiple of eight (or sixteen on 64-bit
systems). If you need a block whose address is a multiple of a higher
power of two than that, use aligned_alloc
or posix_memalign
.
aligned_alloc
and posix_memalign
are declared in
stdlib.h.
void *
aligned_alloc (size_t alignment, size_t size)
¶Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Unsafe lock | AC-Unsafe lock fd mem | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
The aligned_alloc
function allocates a block of size bytes whose
address is a multiple of alignment. The alignment must be a
power of two.
The aligned_alloc
function returns a null pointer on error and sets
errno
to one of the following values:
ENOMEM
There was insufficient memory available to satisfy the request.
EINVAL
alignment is not a power of two.
This function was introduced in ISO C11 and hence may have better
portability to modern non-POSIX systems than posix_memalign
.
void *
memalign (size_t boundary, size_t size)
¶Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Unsafe lock | AC-Unsafe lock fd mem | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
The memalign
function allocates a block of size bytes whose
address is a multiple of boundary. The boundary must be a
power of two! The function memalign
works by allocating a
somewhat larger block, and then returning an address within the block
that is on the specified boundary.
The memalign
function returns a null pointer on error and sets
errno
to one of the following values:
ENOMEM
There was insufficient memory available to satisfy the request.
EINVAL
boundary is not a power of two.
The memalign
function is obsolete and aligned_alloc
or
posix_memalign
should be used instead.
int
posix_memalign (void **memptr, size_t alignment, size_t size)
¶Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Unsafe lock | AC-Unsafe lock fd mem | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
The posix_memalign
function is similar to the memalign
function in that it returns a buffer of size bytes aligned to a
multiple of alignment. But it adds one requirement to the
parameter alignment: the value must be a power of two multiple of
sizeof (void *)
.
If the function succeeds in allocation memory a pointer to the allocated
memory is returned in *memptr
and the return value is zero.
Otherwise the function returns an error value indicating the problem.
The possible error values returned are:
ENOMEM
There was insufficient memory available to satisfy the request.
EINVAL
alignment is not a power of two multiple of sizeof (void *)
.
This function was introduced in POSIX 1003.1d. Although this function is
superseded by aligned_alloc
, it is more portable to older POSIX
systems that do not support ISO C11.
void *
valloc (size_t size)
¶Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe init | AS-Unsafe init lock | AC-Unsafe init lock fd mem | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
Using valloc
is like using memalign
and passing the page size
as the value of the first argument. It is implemented like this:
void * valloc (size_t size) { return memalign (getpagesize (), size); }
How to get information about the memory subsystem? for more information about the memory subsystem.
The valloc
function is obsolete and aligned_alloc
or
posix_memalign
should be used instead.