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- /*
- * malloc.h: safe wrappers around malloc, realloc, free, strdup
- */
- #ifndef UMLWRAP_MALLOC_H
- #define UMLWRAP_MALLOC_H
- #include <stddef.h>
- /*
- * smalloc should guarantee to return a useful pointer - Halibut
- * can do nothing except die when it's out of memory anyway.
- */
- void *smalloc(size_t size);
- /*
- * srealloc should guaranteeably be able to realloc NULL
- */
- void *srealloc(void *p, size_t size);
- /*
- * sfree should guaranteeably deal gracefully with freeing NULL
- */
- void sfree(void *p);
- /*
- * dupstr is like strdup, but with the never-return-NULL property
- * of smalloc (and also reliably defined in all environments :-)
- */
- char *dupstr(const char *s);
- /*
- * snew allocates one instance of a given type, and casts the
- * result so as to type-check that you're assigning it to the
- * right kind of pointer. Protects against allocation bugs
- * involving allocating the wrong size of thing.
- */
- #define snew(type) \
- ( (type *) smalloc (sizeof (type)) )
- /*
- * snewn allocates n instances of a given type, for arrays.
- */
- #define snewn(number, type) \
- ( (type *) smalloc ((number) * sizeof (type)) )
- /*
- * sresize wraps realloc so that you specify the new number of
- * elements and the type of the element, with the same type-
- * checking advantages. Also type-checks the input pointer.
- */
- #define sresize(array, number, type) \
- ( (void)sizeof((array)-(type *)0), \
- (type *) srealloc ((array), (number) * sizeof (type)) )
- #endif /* UMLWRAP_MALLOC_H */
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