#[repr(C)]pub struct GhosttyAllocatorVtable {
pub alloc: Option<unsafe extern "C" fn(ctx: *mut c_void, len: usize, alignment: u8, ret_addr: usize) -> *mut c_void>,
pub resize: Option<unsafe extern "C" fn(ctx: *mut c_void, memory: *mut c_void, memory_len: usize, alignment: u8, new_len: usize, ret_addr: usize) -> bool>,
pub remap: Option<unsafe extern "C" fn(ctx: *mut c_void, memory: *mut c_void, memory_len: usize, alignment: u8, new_len: usize, ret_addr: usize) -> *mut c_void>,
pub free: Option<unsafe extern "C" fn(ctx: *mut c_void, memory: *mut c_void, memory_len: usize, alignment: u8, ret_addr: usize)>,
}Expand description
Function table for custom memory allocator operations.
This vtable defines the interface for a custom memory allocator. All function pointers must be valid and non-NULL.
@ingroup allocator
If you’re not going to use a custom allocator, you can ignore all of this. All functions that take an allocator pointer allow NULL to use a default allocator.
The interface is based on the Zig allocator interface. I’ll say up front
that it is easy to look at this interface and think “wow, this is really
overcomplicated”. The reason for this complexity is well thought out by
the Zig folks, and it enables a diverse set of allocation strategies
as shown by the Zig ecosystem. As a consolation, please note that many
of the arguments are only needed for advanced use cases and can be
safely ignored in simple implementations. For example, if you look at
the Zig implementation of the libc allocator in lib/std/heap.zig
(search for CAllocator), you’ll see it is very simple.
We chose to align with the Zig allocator interface because:
-
It is a proven interface that serves a wide variety of use cases in the real world via the Zig ecosystem. It’s shown to work.
-
Our core implementation itself is Zig, and this lets us very cheaply and easily convert between C and Zig allocators.
NOTE(mitchellh): In the future, we can have default implementations of resize/remap and allow those to be null.
Fields§
§alloc: Option<unsafe extern "C" fn(ctx: *mut c_void, len: usize, alignment: u8, ret_addr: usize) -> *mut c_void>Return a pointer to len bytes with specified alignment, or return
NULL indicating the allocation failed.
@param ctx The allocator context @param len Number of bytes to allocate @param alignment Required alignment for the allocation. Guaranteed to be a power of two between 1 and 16 inclusive. @param ret_addr First return address of the allocation call stack (0 if not provided) @return Pointer to allocated memory, or NULL if allocation failed
resize: Option<unsafe extern "C" fn(ctx: *mut c_void, memory: *mut c_void, memory_len: usize, alignment: u8, new_len: usize, ret_addr: usize) -> bool>Attempt to expand or shrink memory in place.
memory_len must equal the length requested from the most recent
successful call to alloc, resize, or remap. alignment must
equal the same value that was passed as the alignment parameter to
the original alloc call.
new_len must be greater than zero.
@param ctx The allocator context @param memory Pointer to the memory block to resize @param memory_len Current size of the memory block @param alignment Alignment (must match original allocation) @param new_len New requested size @param ret_addr First return address of the allocation call stack (0 if not provided) @return true if resize was successful in-place, false if relocation would be required
remap: Option<unsafe extern "C" fn(ctx: *mut c_void, memory: *mut c_void, memory_len: usize, alignment: u8, new_len: usize, ret_addr: usize) -> *mut c_void>Attempt to expand or shrink memory, allowing relocation.
memory_len must equal the length requested from the most recent
successful call to alloc, resize, or remap. alignment must
equal the same value that was passed as the alignment parameter to
the original alloc call.
A non-NULL return value indicates the resize was successful. The
allocation may have same address, or may have been relocated. In either
case, the allocation now has size of new_len. A NULL return value
indicates that the resize would be equivalent to allocating new memory,
copying the bytes from the old memory, and then freeing the old memory.
In such case, it is more efficient for the caller to perform the copy.
new_len must be greater than zero.
@param ctx The allocator context @param memory Pointer to the memory block to remap @param memory_len Current size of the memory block @param alignment Alignment (must match original allocation) @param new_len New requested size @param ret_addr First return address of the allocation call stack (0 if not provided) @return Pointer to resized memory (may be relocated), or NULL if manual copy is needed
free: Option<unsafe extern "C" fn(ctx: *mut c_void, memory: *mut c_void, memory_len: usize, alignment: u8, ret_addr: usize)>Free and invalidate a region of memory.
memory_len must equal the length requested from the most recent
successful call to alloc, resize, or remap. alignment must
equal the same value that was passed as the alignment parameter to
the original alloc call.
@param ctx The allocator context @param memory Pointer to the memory block to free @param memory_len Size of the memory block @param alignment Alignment (must match original allocation) @param ret_addr First return address of the allocation call stack (0 if not provided)
Trait Implementations§
Source§impl Clone for GhosttyAllocatorVtable
impl Clone for GhosttyAllocatorVtable
Source§fn clone(&self) -> GhosttyAllocatorVtable
fn clone(&self) -> GhosttyAllocatorVtable
1.0.0 · Source§fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)
fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)
source. Read more