xref: /freebsd/contrib/mandoc/mandoc_malloc.3 (revision b077aed33b7b6aefca7b17ddb250cf521f938613)
1.\"	$Id: mandoc_malloc.3,v 1.3 2021/09/17 18:50:21 schwarze Exp $
2.\"
3.\" Copyright (c) 2014 Ingo Schwarze <schwarze@openbsd.org>
4.\"
5.\" Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software for any
6.\" purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above
7.\" copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies.
8.\"
9.\" THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES
10.\" WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
11.\" MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR
12.\" ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES
13.\" WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN
14.\" ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF
15.\" OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
16.\"
17.Dd $Mdocdate: September 17 2021 $
18.Dt MANDOC_MALLOC 3
19.Os
20.Sh NAME
21.Nm mandoc_malloc ,
22.Nm mandoc_realloc ,
23.Nm mandoc_reallocarray ,
24.Nm mandoc_calloc ,
25.Nm mandoc_recallocarray ,
26.Nm mandoc_strdup ,
27.Nm mandoc_strndup ,
28.Nm mandoc_asprintf
29.Nd memory allocation function wrappers used in the mandoc library
30.Sh SYNOPSIS
31.In sys/types.h
32.In mandoc_aux.h
33.Ft "void *"
34.Fo mandoc_malloc
35.Fa "size_t size"
36.Fc
37.Ft "void *"
38.Fo mandoc_realloc
39.Fa "void *ptr"
40.Fa "size_t size"
41.Fc
42.Ft "void *"
43.Fo mandoc_reallocarray
44.Fa "void *ptr"
45.Fa "size_t nmemb"
46.Fa "size_t size"
47.Fc
48.Ft "void *"
49.Fo mandoc_calloc
50.Fa "size_t nmemb"
51.Fa "size_t size"
52.Fc
53.Ft "void *"
54.Fo mandoc_recallocarray
55.Fa "void *ptr"
56.Fa "size_t oldnmemb"
57.Fa "size_t nmemb"
58.Fa "size_t size"
59.Fc
60.Ft "char *"
61.Fo mandoc_strdup
62.Fa "const char *s"
63.Fc
64.Ft "char *"
65.Fo mandoc_strndup
66.Fa "const char *s"
67.Fa "size_t maxlen"
68.Fc
69.Ft int
70.Fo mandoc_asprintf
71.Fa "char **ret"
72.Fa "const char *format"
73.Fa "..."
74.Fc
75.Sh DESCRIPTION
76These functions call the libc functions of the same names, passing
77through their return values when successful.
78In case of failure, they do not return, but instead call
79.Xr err 3 .
80They can be used both internally by any code in the mandoc libraries
81and externally by programs using that library, for example
82.Xr mandoc 1 ,
83.Xr man 1 ,
84.Xr apropos 1 ,
85.Xr makewhatis 8 ,
86and
87.Xr man.cgi 8 .
88.Pp
89The function
90.Fn mandoc_malloc
91allocates one new object, leaving the memory uninitialized.
92The functions
93.Fn mandoc_realloc ,
94.Fn mandoc_reallocarray ,
95and
96.Fn mandoc_recallocarray
97change the size of an existing object or array, possibly moving it.
98When shrinking the size, existing data is truncated; when growing,
99only
100.Fn mandoc_recallocarray
101initializes the new elements to zero.
102The function
103.Fn mandoc_calloc
104allocates a new array, initializing it to zero.
105.Pp
106The argument
107.Fa size
108is the size of each object.
109The argument
110.Fa nmemb
111is the new number of objects in the array.
112The argument
113.Fa oldnmemb
114is the number of objects in the array before the call.
115The argument
116.Fa ptr
117is a pointer to the existing object or array to be resized; if it is
118.Dv NULL ,
119a new object or array is allocated.
120.Pp
121The functions
122.Fn mandoc_strdup
123and
124.Fn mandoc_strndup
125copy a string into newly allocated memory.
126For
127.Fn mandoc_strdup ,
128the string pointed to by
129.Fa s
130needs to be NUL-terminated.
131For
132.Fn mandoc_strndup ,
133at most
134.Fa maxlen
135bytes are copied.
136The function
137.Fn mandoc_asprintf
138writes output formatted according to
139.Fa format
140into newly allocated memory and returns a pointer to the result in
141.Fa ret .
142For all three string functions, the result is always NUL-terminated.
143.Pp
144When the objects and strings are no longer needed,
145the pointers returned by these functions can be passed to
146.Xr free 3 .
147.Sh RETURN VALUES
148The function
149.Fn mandoc_asprintf
150always returns the number of characters written, excluding the
151final NUL byte.
152It never returns -1.
153.Pp
154The other functions always return a valid pointer; they never return
155.Dv NULL .
156.Sh FILES
157These functions are implemented in
158.Pa mandoc_aux.c .
159.Sh SEE ALSO
160.Xr asprintf 3 ,
161.Xr err 3 ,
162.Xr malloc 3 ,
163.Xr strdup 3
164.Sh STANDARDS
165The functions
166.Fn malloc ,
167.Fn realloc ,
168and
169.Fn calloc
170are required by
171.St -ansiC .
172The functions
173.Fn strdup
174and
175.Fn strndup
176are required by
177.St -p1003.1-2008 .
178The function
179.Fn asprintf
180is a widespread extension that first appeared in the GNU C library.
181.Pp
182The function
183.Fn reallocarray
184is an extension that first appeared in
185.Ox 5.6 ,
186and
187.Fn recallocarray
188in
189.Ox 6.1 .
190If these two are not provided by the operating system,
191the mandoc build system uses bundled portable implementations.
192.Sh HISTORY
193The functions
194.Fn mandoc_malloc ,
195.Fn mandoc_realloc ,
196.Fn mandoc_calloc ,
197and
198.Fn mandoc_strdup
199have been available since mandoc 1.9.12,
200.Fn mandoc_strndup
201since 1.11.5,
202.Fn mandoc_asprintf
203since 1.12.4,
204.Fn mandoc_reallocarray
205since 1.13.0, and
206.Fn mandoc_recallocarray
207since 1.14.2.
208.Sh AUTHORS
209.An Kristaps Dzonsons Aq Mt kristaps@bsd.lv
210.An Ingo Schwarze Aq Mt schwarze@openbsd.org
211