Commit Graph

17 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
e5d78fe8df fix issue with excessive mremap syscalls on realloc
CHUNK_SIZE macro was defined incorrectly and shaving off at least one
significant bit in the size of mmapped chunks, resulting in the test
for oldlen==newlen always failing and incurring a syscall. fortunately
i don't think this issue caused any other observable behavior; the
definition worked correctly for all non-mmapped chunks where its
correctness matters more, since their lengths are always multiples of
the alignment.
2011-11-16 23:59:28 -05:00
1c8bead345 use new a_crash() asm to optimize double-free handler.
gcc generates extremely bad code (7 byte immediate mov) for the old
null pointer write approach. it should be generating something like
"xor %eax,%eax ; mov %al,(%eax)". in any case, using a dedicated
crashing opcode accomplishes the same thing in one byte.
2011-08-23 09:43:45 -04:00
ce7c6341d3 simplify and improve double-free check
a valid mmapped block will have an even (actually aligned) "extra"
field, whereas a freed chunk on the heap will always have an in-use
neighbor.

this fixes a potential bug if mmap ever allocated memory below the
main program/brk (in which case it would be wrongly-detected as a
double-free by the old code) and allows the double-free check to work
for donated memory outside of the brk area (or, in the future,
secondary heap zones if support for their creation is added).
2011-08-15 01:59:15 -04:00
f9ed11f3e1 posix_memalign should fail if size is not a multiple of sizeof(void *) 2011-06-29 19:26:30 -04:00
5d0965cb56 eliminate OOB array hacks in malloc 2011-06-26 16:12:43 -04:00
2afebbbcd1 malloc: cast size down to int in bin_index functions
even if size_t was 32-bit already, the fact that the value was
unsigned and that gcc is too stupid to figure out it would be positive
as a signed quantity (due to the immediately-prior arithmetic and
conditionals) results in gcc compiling the integer-to-float conversion
as zero extension to 64 bits followed by an "fildll" (64 bit)
instruction rather than a simple "fildl" (32 bit) instruction on x86.
reportedly fildll is very slow on certain p4-class machines; even if
not, the new code is slightly smaller.
2011-06-12 10:53:42 -04:00
71a80c5767 use volatile pointers for intentional-crash code. 2011-06-06 18:10:43 -04:00
b052f13cd1 namespace fixes for sys/mman.h 2011-04-20 15:55:58 -04:00
b761bd19aa fix rare but nasty under-allocation bug in malloc with large requests
the bug appeared only with requests roughly 2*sizeof(size_t) to
4*sizeof(size_t) bytes smaller than a multiple of the page size, and
only for requests large enough to be serviced by mmap instead of the
normal heap. it was only ever observed on 64-bit machines but
presumably could also affect 32-bit (albeit with a smaller window of
opportunity).
2011-04-04 17:26:41 -04:00
bf8785825a avoid over-allocation of brk on first malloc
if init_malloc returns positive (successful first init), malloc will
retry getting a chunk from the free bins rather than expanding the
heap again. also pass init_malloc a hint for the size of the initial
allocation.
2011-04-01 23:07:03 -04:00
620a134638 rename __simple_malloc.c to lite_malloc.c - yes this affects behavior!
why does this affect behavior? well, the linker seems to traverse
archive files starting from its current position when resolving
symbols. since calloc.c comes alphabetically (and thus in sequence in
the archive file) between __simple_malloc.c and malloc.c, attempts to
resolve the "malloc" symbol for use by calloc.c were pulling in the
full malloc.c implementation rather than the __simple_malloc.c
implementation.

as of now, lite_malloc.c and malloc.c are adjacent in the archive and
in the correct order, so malloc.c should never be used to resolve
"malloc" unless it's already needed to resolve another symbol ("free"
or "realloc").
2011-03-30 09:29:49 -04:00
0958200166 very cheap double-free checks in malloc 2011-03-23 13:24:00 -04:00
aa398f56fa global cleanup to use the new syscall interface 2011-03-20 00:16:43 -04:00
26031da0f8 make malloc(0) return unique pointers rather than NULL
this change is made with some reluctance, but i think it's for the
best. correct programs must handle either behavior, so there is little
advantage to having malloc(0) return NULL. and i managed to actually
make the malloc code slightly smaller with this change.
2011-02-20 16:16:33 -05:00
598a0147cd fix simple_malloc malloc(0) behavior not to return non-unique pointers 2011-02-20 16:12:09 -05:00
a23baf586a fix simple_malloc size restrictions
do not allow allocations that overflow ptrdiff_t; fix some overflow
checks that were not quite right but didn't matter due to address
layout implementation.
2011-02-20 16:10:38 -05:00
0b44a0315b initial check-in, version 0.5.0 2011-02-12 00:22:29 -05:00