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Top Forums Programming calloc fails: 'Cannot allocate memory' Post 302601252 by jim mcnamara on Thursday 23rd of February 2012 07:29:32 AM
Old 02-23-2012
Think of process heap memory as a chessboard - one area made up of 64 small blocks.
suppose each one of those is 1 MB.

You make 64 calls to calloc, get 64 pointers to 1MB each. Next you free 10 of them at random.
How many will contiguous? Probably none. Will you have four adjacent squares. Very probably: No.

Now what happens when you want to calloc 4MB? You have 10MB free but it is not contiguous. Some versions of malloc will barf on this, some will call brk() to get an additional n MB from the OS. This is heap fragmentation. You now know that there are several different versions of malloc code. When you have malloc problems like you are having:
1. Try a malloc debugger
2. See what malloc you are using, change it if need be.


sysadmins can control during system installation and later system setup which version(s) of malloc are on a system, and which version of malloc is used by default during linking. So can other programmers.

Different versions of gcc also have different malloc implementations.

This is hypothesis you get to test with dmalloc. And other tools.

Code:
# show if there is library interposition

echo $LD_PRELOAD  # during runtime

# see what .so files you are really linked against
ldd compiled_program

# gcc version - note: this tells you how gcc was compiled which affects your problem.
gcc --version

Each of these results suggests a different workaround.
Your problem box may show something different than what you see elsewhere.

Did you compile locally or port the executable directly?

Last edited by jim mcnamara; 02-23-2012 at 08:36 AM..
This User Gave Thanks to jim mcnamara For This Post:
 

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MALLOC(3)						     Linux Programmer's Manual							 MALLOC(3)

NAME
calloc, malloc, free, realloc - Allocate and free dynamic memory SYNOPSIS
#include <stdlib.h> void *calloc(size_t nmemb, size_t size); void *malloc(size_t size); void free(void *ptr); void *realloc(void *ptr, size_t size); DESCRIPTION
calloc() allocates memory for an array of nmemb elements of size bytes each and returns a pointer to the allocated memory. The memory is set to zero. malloc() allocates size bytes and returns a pointer to the allocated memory. The memory is not cleared. free() frees the memory space pointed to by ptr, which must have been returned by a previous call to malloc(), calloc() or realloc(). Oth- erwise, or if free(ptr) has already been called before, undefined behaviour occurs. If ptr is NULL, no operation is performed. realloc() changes the size of the memory block pointed to by ptr to size bytes. The contents will be unchanged to the minimum of the old and new sizes; newly allocated memory will be uninitialized. If ptr is NULL, the call is equivalent to malloc(size); if size is equal to zero, the call is equivalent to free(ptr). Unless ptr is NULL, it must have been returned by an earlier call to malloc(), calloc() or realloc(). RETURN VALUE
For calloc() and malloc(), the value returned is a pointer to the allocated memory, which is suitably aligned for any kind of variable, or NULL if the request fails. free() returns no value. realloc() returns a pointer to the newly allocated memory, which is suitably aligned for any kind of variable and may be different from ptr, or NULL if the request fails. If size was equal to 0, either NULL or a pointer suitable to be passed to free() is returned. If real- loc() fails the original block is left untouched - it is not freed or moved. CONFORMING TO
ANSI-C SEE ALSO
brk(2), posix_memalign(3) NOTES
The Unix98 standard requires malloc(), calloc(), and realloc() to set errno to ENOMEM upon failure. Glibc assumes that this is done (and the glibc versions of these routines do this); if you use a private malloc implementation that does not set errno, then certain library routines may fail without having a reason in errno. Crashes in malloc(), free() or realloc() are almost always related to heap corruption, such as overflowing an allocated chunk or freeing the same pointer twice. Recent versions of Linux libc (later than 5.4.23) and GNU libc (2.x) include a malloc implementation which is tunable via environment vari- ables. When MALLOC_CHECK_ is set, a special (less efficient) implementation is used which is designed to be tolerant against simple errors, such as double calls of free() with the same argument, or overruns of a single byte (off-by-one bugs). Not all such errors can be protected against, however, and memory leaks can result. If MALLOC_CHECK_ is set to 0, any detected heap corruption is silently ignored; if set to 1, a diagnostic is printed on stderr; if set to 2, abort() is called immediately. This can be useful because otherwise a crash may happen much later, and the true cause for the problem is then very hard to track down. Linux follows an optimistic memory allocation strategy. This means that when malloc() returns non-NULL there is no guarantee that the mem- ory really is available. In case it turns out that the system is out of memory, one or more processes will be killed by the infamous OOM killer. GNU
1993-04-04 MALLOC(3)
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