home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
Atari FTP
/
ATARI_FTP_0693.zip
/
ATARI_FTP_0693
/
Mint
/
mntlib32.zoo
/
purec
/
alloca2.c
< prev
next >
Wrap
C/C++ Source or Header
|
1992-09-03
|
4KB
|
116 lines
/*
This implementation of the PWB library alloca() function,
which is used to allocate space off the run-time stack so
that it is automatically reclaimed upon procedure exit,
was inspired by discussions with J. Q. Johnson of Cornell.
It should work under any C implementation that uses an
actual procedure stack (as opposed to a linked list of
frames). There are some preprocessor constants that can
be defined when compiling for your specific system, for
improved efficiency; however, the defaults should be okay.
The general concept of this implementation is to keep
track of all alloca()-allocated blocks, and reclaim any
that are found to be deeper in the stack than the current
invocation. This heuristic does not reclaim storage as
soon as it becomes invalid, but it will do so eventually.
As a special case, alloca(0) reclaims storage without
allocating any. It is a good idea to use alloca(0) in
your main control loop, etc. to force garbage collection.
*/
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
typedef void *pointer; /* generic pointer type */
void *xmalloc(size_t n)
{
void *block;
block = calloc(n,1);
if (block == NULL)
{
fprintf(stderr, "alloca: memory exhausted\n");
exit(1);
}
return (block);
}
void *mallocate(unsigned n)
{
return xmalloc(n);
}
static int stack_dir=-1;
/*
An "alloca header" is used to:
(a) chain together all alloca()ed blocks;
(b) keep track of stack depth.
It is very important that sizeof(header) agree with malloc()
alignment chunk size. The following default should work okay.
*/
#ifndef ALIGN_SIZE
#define ALIGN_SIZE sizeof(double)
#endif
typedef union hdr
{
char align[ALIGN_SIZE]; /* to force sizeof(header) */
struct
{
union hdr *next; /* for chaining headers */
char *deep; /* for stack depth measure */
} h;
} header;
/*
alloca( size ) returns a pointer to at least `size' bytes of
storage which will be automatically reclaimed upon exit from
the procedure that called alloca(). Originally, this space
was supposed to be taken from the current stack frame of the
caller, but that method cannot be made to work for some
implementations of C, for example under Gould's UTX/32.
*/
static header *last_alloca_header = NULL; /* -> last alloca header */
pointer alloca(size_t size)
{
auto char probe; /* probes stack depth: */
register char *depth = &probe;
/* Reclaim garbage, defined as all alloca()ed storage that
was allocated from deeper in the stack than currently. */
{
register header *hp; /* traverses linked list */
for (hp = last_alloca_header; hp != NULL;)
if (stack_dir > 0 && hp->h.deep > depth
|| stack_dir < 0 && hp->h.deep < depth) {
register header *np = hp->h.next;
free ((pointer) hp); /* collect garbage */
hp = np; /* -> next header */
} else break; /* rest are not deeper */
last_alloca_header = hp; /* -> last valid storage */
}
if (size == 0) return NULL; /* no allocation required */
/* Allocate combined header + user data storage. */
{
register pointer new = xmalloc (sizeof (header) + size);
/* address of header */
((header *)new)->h.next = last_alloca_header;
((header *)new)->h.deep = depth;
last_alloca_header = (header *)new;
/* User storage begins just after header. */
return (pointer)((char *)new + sizeof(header));
}
}