removed the limitation of the next field

This commit is contained in:
ceriel 1987-08-03 09:07:25 +00:00
parent 84bce837a0
commit 3b038786ad
4 changed files with 28 additions and 24 deletions

View file

@ -67,8 +67,7 @@ All these routines use \fImalloc\fR and \fIrealloc\fR.
\fIFree\fR can be used on pointers returned by these routines.
.PP
\fISt_alloc\fR and \fIst_free\fR provide a mechanism for maintaining free lists
of structures, whose first field is a pointer called \fBnext\fR.
This field is used to chain free structures together.
of structures.
\fISt_alloc\fR takes three parameters: \fIphead\fR is a pointer to a field
containing the head of the free list, \fIsize\fR contains the size of the
structures, and \fIcount\fR indicates how many new structures must be allocated
@ -93,3 +92,12 @@ malloc(3)
call a routine \fINo_Mem\fR if there is no memory available. This routine
is not supposed to return. A default one, that
gives an error message and stops execution, is provided.
.SH BUGS
The
.I st_alloc
mechanism only works for structures that are large enough to contain one
pointer.
Also,
.I st_free
actually is a macro, and references its arguments more than once, so they
better not have side-effects.

View file

@ -20,9 +20,17 @@ extern char *malloc(), *realloc();
/* S T R U C T U R E - S T O R A G E D E F I N I T I O N S */
typedef struct _ALLOC_ {
struct _ALLOC_ *_A_next;
} *_PALLOC_;
#define _A_st_free(ptr, phead, size) (((_PALLOC_)ptr)->_A_next = \
(_PALLOC_)(*phead), \
*((_PALLOC_ *)phead) = \
(_PALLOC_) ptr)
#ifndef BOTCH_FREE
#define st_free(ptr, phead, size) (ptr->next = *phead, *phead = ptr)
#define st_free(ptr, phead, size) _A_st_free(ptr, phead, size)
#else def BOTCH_FREE
#define st_free(ptr, phead, size) (botch((char *)(ptr), size), \
ptr->next = *phead, *phead = ptr)
_A_st_free(ptr, phead, size))
#endif BOTCH_FREE

View file

@ -4,18 +4,12 @@
* See the copyright notice in the ACK home directory, in the file "Copyright".
*/
/* st_alloc - get a structure from a free list. If no structures left,
create new ones. The structures for which this works are
supposed to have as their first tag the string "next", which
should be a pointer type.
create new ones.
The counterpart, st_free, is a macro, defined in alloc.h
*/
#include "alloc.h"
struct xxx {
char *next;
};
char *
st_alloc(phead, size, count)
char **phead;
@ -28,15 +22,15 @@ st_alloc(phead, size, count)
if (*phead == 0) {
p = Malloc(size * count);
((struct xxx *) p)->next = 0;
((_PALLOC_) p)->_A_next = 0;
while (--count) {
p += size;
((struct xxx *) p)->next = p - size;
((_PALLOC_) p)->_A_next = p - size;
}
*phead = p;
}
else p = *phead;
*phead = ((struct xxx *)p)->next;
*phead = ((_PALLOC_)p)->_A_next;
retval = p;
if (size >= sizeof(long)) {
q = (long *) p;

View file

@ -4,18 +4,12 @@
* See the copyright notice in the ACK home directory, in the file "Copyright".
*/
/* st_alloc - get a structure from a free list. If no structures left,
create new ones. The structures for which this works are
supposed to have as their first tag the string "next", which
should be a pointer type.
create new ones.
The counterpart, st_free, is a macro, defined in alloc.h
*/
#include "alloc.h"
struct xxx {
char *next;
};
char *
std_alloc(phead, size, count, pcnt)
char **phead;
@ -28,15 +22,15 @@ std_alloc(phead, size, count, pcnt)
p = Malloc(size * count);
*pcnt += count;
((struct xxx *) p)->next = 0;
((_PALLOC_) p)->_A_next = 0;
while (--count) {
p += size;
((struct xxx *) p)->next = p - size;
((_PALLOC_) p)->_A_next = p - size;
}
*phead = p;
}
else p = *phead;
*phead = ((struct xxx *) p)->next;
*phead = ((_PALLOC_) p)->_A_next;
p += size;
while (size--) *--p = 0;
return p;