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Often you do not know for certain how big a block you will ultimately need at the time you must begin to use the block. For example, the block might be a buffer that you use to hold a line being read from a file; no matter how long you make the buffer initially, you may encounter a line that is longer.
You can make the block longer by calling realloc
or
reallocarray
. These functions are declared in stdlib.h.
Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Unsafe lock | AC-Unsafe lock fd mem | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
The realloc
function changes the size of the block whose address is
ptr to be newsize.
Since the space after the end of the block may be in use, realloc
may find it necessary to copy the block to a new address where more free
space is available. The value of realloc
is the new address of the
block. If the block needs to be moved, realloc
copies the old
contents.
If you pass a null pointer for ptr, realloc
behaves just
like ‘malloc (newsize)’. This can be convenient, but beware
that older implementations (before ISO C) may not support this
behavior, and will probably crash when realloc
is passed a null
pointer.
Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Unsafe lock | AC-Unsafe lock fd mem | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
The reallocarray
function changes the size of the block whose address
is ptr to be long enough to contain a vector of nmemb elements,
each of size size. It is equivalent to ‘realloc (ptr,
nmemb * size)’, except that reallocarray
fails safely if
the multiplication overflows, by setting errno
to ENOMEM
,
returning a null pointer, and leaving the original block unchanged.
reallocarray
should be used instead of realloc
when the new size
of the allocated block is the result of a multiplication that might overflow.
Portability Note: This function is not part of any standard. It was first introduced in OpenBSD 5.6.
Like malloc
, realloc
and reallocarray
may return a null
pointer if no memory space is available to make the block bigger. When this
happens, the original block is untouched; it has not been modified or
relocated.
In most cases it makes no difference what happens to the original block
when realloc
fails, because the application program cannot continue
when it is out of memory, and the only thing to do is to give a fatal error
message. Often it is convenient to write and use a subroutine,
conventionally called xrealloc
, that takes care of the error message
as xmalloc
does for malloc
:
void * xrealloc (void *ptr, size_t size) { void *value = realloc (ptr, size); if (value == 0) fatal ("Virtual memory exhausted"); return value; }
You can also use realloc
or reallocarray
to make a block
smaller. The reason you would do this is to avoid tying up a lot of memory
space when only a little is needed.
In several allocation implementations, making a block smaller sometimes
necessitates copying it, so it can fail if no other space is available.
If the new size you specify is the same as the old size, realloc
and
reallocarray
are guaranteed to change nothing and return the same
address that you gave.
Next: Allocating Cleared Space, Previous: Freeing after Malloc, Up: Unconstrained Allocation [Contents][Index]