hi,
I have made a small C program that make use of malloc and free for processing bitmap images. when i try to run the program, I am getting a error something like
*** glibc detected *** free(): invalid next size (normal): 0x0000000000503e70 ***
I am not sure of which free() is causing this... (1 Reply)
I am using a structure defined as follows
struct gene_square
{
double *x;
double *y;
};I have class, with a member function which is a pointer of this type:
gene_square* m_Genes;I am allocating memory in the constructors like this:
m_Genes = new gene_square;
for (ii=0;... (1 Reply)
there seems not to be error in this segment. In some computers, it can work well. But in others, it will give a failure.
why it ocurrs and how to deal with it?
in a function:
if( *ver == NULL ) {
*ver = (vertex *) malloc(sizeof(vertex)); //this line
... (17 Replies)
Hi,
I am having a hell of a time getting this to work. So basically, I have opened a popen to run a program that is going to prompt an action to occur half way through, when it gets to this I need to create a separate process and do some stuff, then return to the original process. This works... (0 Replies)
*** glibc detected *** ./a.out: malloc(): memory corruption (fast):
Posted A minute ago
M trying to make multiway tree and dont know what happend when this part of code get executed:
01void ins(NODE *ptr)
02{
03 //working
04 if(ptr!=NULL)
05 {
06 SNODE *var=NULL;
07 var=(SNODE... (3 Replies)
Hello.
I'm looking for a quite "interesting" bug I'm using fortran 90, compiler gfortran and the main idea is for every time step I build a bin structure for search contact between particles, for this at the begining
TYPE :: circle_index
INTEGER(kind = 4) :: ind_p
TYPE(circle_index),... (1 Reply)
I am facing a problem of memory corruption. The loop runs for the first time but does not go through the second time. What could be the problem?
for(int z=0;z<2;z++)
{
fp=fopen("poly.dat","r");
/*do something which reads this file into a 2D array*/
fclose(fp);
... (10 Replies)
Currently I test a shared library vendor provided in linux , the following is the simple source :
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
extern int test1();
extern int test2();
int main()
{
cout << "hello world" << endl ;
return 0 ;
cout << "Test 1" << endl;
... (6 Replies)
Use and complete the template provided. The entire template must be completed. If you don't, your post may be deleted!
1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data:
I'm doing aproximation of derivative called five-point stencil. For every value of x, in interval , in step... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: antonija
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
attemptckrealloc
Tcl_Alloc(3) Tcl Library Procedures Tcl_Alloc(3)__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________NAME
Tcl_Alloc, Tcl_Free, Tcl_Realloc, Tcl_AttemptAlloc, Tcl_AttemptRealloc, ckalloc, ckfree, ckrealloc, attemptckalloc, attemptckrealloc -
allocate or free heap memory
SYNOPSIS
#include <tcl.h>
char *
Tcl_Alloc(size)
void
Tcl_Free(ptr)
char *
Tcl_Realloc(ptr, size)
char *
Tcl_AttemptAlloc(size)
char *
Tcl_AttemptRealloc(ptr, size)
char *
ckalloc(size)
void
ckfree(ptr)
char *
ckrealloc(ptr, size)
char *
attemptckalloc(size)
char *
attemptckrealloc(ptr, size)
ARGUMENTS
unsigned int size (in) Size in bytes of the memory block to allocate.
char *ptr (in) Pointer to memory block to free or realloc.
_________________________________________________________________DESCRIPTION
These procedures provide a platform and compiler independent interface for memory allocation. Programs that need to transfer ownership of
memory blocks between Tcl and other modules should use these routines rather than the native malloc() and free() routines provided by the C
run-time library.
Tcl_Alloc returns a pointer to a block of at least size bytes suitably aligned for any use.
Tcl_Free makes the space referred to by ptr available for further allocation.
Tcl_Realloc changes the size of the block pointed to by ptr to size bytes and returns a pointer to the new block. The contents will be
unchanged up to the lesser of the new and old sizes. The returned location may be different from ptr. If ptr is NULL, this is equivalent
to calling Tcl_Alloc with just the size argument.
Tcl_AttemptAlloc and Tcl_AttemptRealloc are identical in function to Tcl_Alloc and Tcl_Realloc, except that Tcl_AttemptAlloc and
Tcl_AttemptRealloc will not cause the Tcl interpreter to panic if the memory allocation fails. If the allocation fails, these functions
will return NULL. Note that on some platforms, but not all, attempting to allocate a zero-sized block of memory will also cause these
functions to return NULL.
The procedures ckalloc, ckfree, ckrealloc, attemptckalloc, and attemptckrealloc are implemented as macros. Normally, they are synonyms for
the corresponding procedures documented on this page. When Tcl and all modules calling Tcl are compiled with TCL_MEM_DEBUG defined, how-
ever, these macros are redefined to be special debugging versions of these procedures. To support Tcl's memory debugging within a module,
use the macros rather than direct calls to Tcl_Alloc, etc.
KEYWORDS
alloc, allocation, free, malloc, memory, realloc, TCL_MEM_DEBUG
Tcl 7.5 Tcl_Alloc(3)