+++ /dev/null
-/* Licensed under LGPLv2.1+ - see LICENSE file for details */
-#ifndef ALLOC_H
-#define ALLOC_H
-#include <stdio.h>
-#include <stdbool.h>
-
-/**
- * alloc_init - initialize a pool of memory for the allocator.
- * @pool: the contiguous bytes for the allocator to use
- * @poolsize: the size of the pool
- *
- * This stores all the setup state required to perform allocation within the
- * pool (there is no external state). Any previous contents of @pool is
- * discarded.
- *
- * The same @pool and @poolsize arguments must be handed to the other alloc
- * functions after this.
- *
- * If the pool is too small for meaningful allocations, alloc_get will fail.
- *
- * Example:
- * void *pool = malloc(32*1024*1024);
- * if (!pool)
- * err(1, "Failed to allocate 32MB");
- * alloc_init(pool, 32*1024*1024);
- */
-void alloc_init(void *pool, unsigned long poolsize);
-
-/**
- * alloc_get - allocate some memory from the pool
- * @pool: the contiguous bytes for the allocator to use
- * @poolsize: the size of the pool
- * @size: the size of the desired allocation
- * @align: the alignment of the desired allocation (0 or power of 2)
- *
- * This is "malloc" within an initialized pool.
- *
- * It will return a unique pointer within the pool (ie. between @pool
- * and @pool+@poolsize) which meets the alignment requirements of
- * @align. Note that the alignment is relative to the start of the pool,
- * so of @pool is not aligned, the pointer won't be either.
- *
- * Returns NULL if there is no contiguous room.
- *
- * Example:
- * #include <ccan/alignof/alignof.h>
- * ...
- * double *d = alloc_get(pool, 32*1024*1024,
- * sizeof(*d), ALIGNOF(*d));
- * if (!d)
- * err(1, "Failed to allocate a double");
- */
-void *alloc_get(void *pool, unsigned long poolsize,
- unsigned long size, unsigned long align);
-
-/**
- * alloc_free - free some allocated memory from the pool
- * @pool: the contiguous bytes for the allocator to use
- * @poolsize: the size of the pool
- * @p: the non-NULL pointer returned from alloc_get.
- *
- * This is "free" within an initialized pool. A pointer should only be
- * freed once, and must be a pointer returned from a successful alloc_get()
- * call.
- *
- * Example:
- * alloc_free(pool, 32*1024*1024, d);
- */
-void alloc_free(void *pool, unsigned long poolsize, void *free);
-
-/**
- * alloc_size - get the actual size allocated by alloc_get
- * @pool: the contiguous bytes for the allocator to use
- * @poolsize: the size of the pool
- * @p: the non-NULL pointer returned from alloc_get.
- *
- * alloc_get() may overallocate, in which case you may use the extra
- * space exactly as if you had asked for it.
- *
- * The return value will always be at least the @size passed to alloc_get().
- *
- * Example:
- * printf("Allocating a double actually got me %lu bytes\n",
- * alloc_size(pool, 32*1024*1024, d));
- */
-unsigned long alloc_size(void *pool, unsigned long poolsize, void *p);
-
-/**
- * alloc_check - check the integrity of the allocation pool
- * @pool: the contiguous bytes for the allocator to use
- * @poolsize: the size of the pool
- *
- * alloc_check() can be used for debugging suspected pool corruption. It may
- * be quite slow, but provides some assistance for hard-to-find overruns or
- * double-frees. Unlike the rest of the code, it will not crash on corrupted
- * pools.
- *
- * There is an internal function check_fail() which this calls on failure which
- * is useful for placing breakpoints and gaining more insight into the type
- * of the corruption detected.
- *
- * Example:
- * #include <assert.h>
- * ...
- * assert(alloc_check(pool, 32*1024*1024));
- */
-bool alloc_check(void *pool, unsigned long poolsize);
-
-/**
- * alloc_visualize - dump information about the allocation pool
- * @pool: the contiguous bytes for the allocator to use
- * @poolsize: the size of the pool
- *
- * When debugging the allocator itself, it's often useful to see how
- * the pool is being used. alloc_visualize() does that, but makes
- * assumptions about correctness (like the rest of the code) so if you
- * suspect corruption call alloc_check() first.
- *
- * Example:
- * d = alloc_get(pool, 32*1024*1024, sizeof(*d), ALIGNOF(*d));
- * if (!d) {
- * fprintf(stderr, "Allocation failed!\n");
- * if (!alloc_check(pool, 32*1024*1024))
- * errx(1, "Allocation pool is corrupt");
- * alloc_visualize(stderr, pool, 32*1024*1024);
- * exit(1);
- * }
- */
-void alloc_visualize(FILE *out, void *pool, unsigned long poolsize);
-#endif /* ALLOC_H */